Kubernetes powered PaaS that runs in your own cloud. https://porter.run
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| README.md | 656ea667c4 Update README.md | 5 jaren geleden |
| docker-compose.dev.yaml | a5c69a1bda stream ephemeral provisioning logs (no XACK) | 5 jaren geleden |
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Porter is a Kubernetes-powered PaaS that runs in your own cloud provider. Porter brings the Heroku experience to Kubernetes without compromising its flexibility. Get started on Porter without the overhead of DevOps and fully customize your infra later when you need to.
A traditional PaaS like Heroku is great for minimizing unnecessary DevOps work but doesn't offer enough flexibility as your applications grow. Custom network rules, resource constraints, and cost are common reasons developers move their applications off Heroku beyond a certain scale.
Porter brings the simplicity of a traditional PaaS to your own cloud provider while preserving the configurability of Kubernetes. Porter is built on top of a popular Kubernetes package manager called Helm and is compatible with standard Kubernetes management tools like kubectl, preparing your infra for mature DevOps work from day one.
One-click provisioning of a Kubernetes cluster in your own cloud console
Simple deploy of any public or private Docker image
Heroku-like GUI to monitor application status, logs, and history
Marketplace for one click add-ons (e.g. MongoDB, Redis, PostgreSQL)
Application rollback to previously deployed versions
Native CI/CD with buildpacks (Coming Soon)
For those who are familiar with Kubernetes and Helm:
values.yamlvalues.yamlRun the following command to grab the latest binary:
{
name=$(curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/porter-dev/porter/releases/latest | grep "browser_download_url.*/porter_.*_Darwin_x86_64\.zip" | cut -d ":" -f 2,3 | tr -d \")
name=$(basename $name)
curl -L https://github.com/porter-dev/porter/releases/latest/download/$name --output $name
unzip -a $name
rm $name
}
Then move the file into your bin:
chmod +x ./porter
sudo mv ./porter /usr/local/bin/porter
For Linux and Windows installation, see our Docs.
Sign up and log into Porter Dashboard.
Create a Project and select a cloud provider you want to provision a Kubernetes cluster in.
Put in your credentials, then Porter will automatically provision a cluster and an image registry in your own cloud account.
Build and push your Docker image to the provisioned registry with the CLI.
From the Templates tab on the Dashboard, select the Docker template. Click on the image you have just pushed, configure the port, then hit deploy.
We welcome all contributions. Submit an issue or a pull request to help us improve Porter!



