Configuring canary app deployments

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You can use Cloud Foundry Command Line Interface (cf CLI) commands or the Cloud Foundry API (CAPI) to push your apps to Cloud Foundry using a canary deployment.

For information about the traditional method for addressing app downtime while pushing app updates, see Using blue-green deployment to reduce downtime and risk.

For more information about CAPI, see the Cloud Foundry API (CAPI) documentation.

Canary deployments will allow users to deploy a single instance of a new version of an application and check if it is running as expected, before continuing the rolling deployment of the rest of the instances. If the new version of the application is not running as expected, the canary deployment can be cancelled.

The expected workflow for this feature is: 1. Deploy a single canary instance with the changed code 1. Manually verify that canary instance with new code runs as expected 1. Continue the rolling deployment for the remaining instances.

Prerequisites

The procedures in this topic require one of the following:

  • cf CLI v8.8.0 or later

  • CAPI V3.173.0 or later: If you use CAPI V3, you must install the cf CLI version 8+.

Commands

This section describes the commands for working with canary app deployments.

Deploy an app

To deploy a canary version of an app:

Caution Review the limitations of this feature before running the command. For more information, see Limitations.

  • For CF CLI v8: cf push APP-NAME --strategy canary --max-in-flight MAX_IN_FLIGHT Where APP-NAME is the name that you want to give your app. Where MAX_IN_FLIGHT applies after the single canary instance is successful and specifies the maximum number of new instances to start simultaneous until the deployment is complete. Optional and defaults to 1.

    Note cf CLI will exit when the canary instance is healthy. It also includes a --no-wait flag on push for users who don’t want to wait for the operation to complete.

    To cancel, see Cancel a canary deployment.

  • For CAPI V3:

    1. Log in to the cf CLI.

      cf login
      
    2. Create an empty app by running the following curl command with POST /v3/apps. Record the app GUID from the output.

      cf curl /v3/apps \
        -X POST \
        -H "Content-type: application/json" \
        -d '{
          "name": "APP-NAME",
          "relationships": {
            "space": {
              "data": {
                "guid": "SPACE-GUID"
              }
            }
          }
        }'
      

      Where:

      • APP-NAME is the name that you want to give your app.
      • SPACE-GUID is the space identifier that you want to associate with your app.

    3. Create a package with the following curl command with POST /v3/packages. Record the package GUID from the output.

      cf curl /v3/packages \
        -X POST \
        -H "Content-type: application/json" \
        -d '{
          "type": "bits",
          "relationships": {
            "app": {
              "data": {
                "guid": "APP-GUID"
              }
            }
          }
        }'
      

      Where APP-GUID is the app GUID that you recorded in an earlier step. This app GUID is a unique identifier for your app.

    4. Upload the package bits by running the following curl command with POST /v3/packages/PACKAGE-GUID/upload.

      cf curl /v3/packages/PACKAGE-GUID/upload \
      -X POST \
      -F bits=@"PACKAGED-APP" \
      

      Where:

      • PACKAGE-GUID is the package GUID that you recorded in an earlier step.
      • PACKAGED-APP is your app packaged in a file such as .zip.

    5. Create the build by running the following curl command with POST /v3/builds. Record the droplet GUID from the output.

      cf curl /v3/builds \
        -X POST \
        -H "Content-type: application/json" \
        -d '{
          "package": {
             "guid": PACKAGE-GUID"
          }
        }'
      

      Where PACKAGE-GUID is the package GUID that you recorded in an earlier step.

    6. Deploy your app by running the following curl command with POST /v3/deployments. To verify the status of the deployment or take action on the deployment, record the deployment GUID from the output.

      cf curl /v3/deployments \
      -X POST \
      -H "Content-type: application/json" \
      -d '{
        "droplet": {
          "guid": "DROPLET-GUID"
        },
        "options": {
          "max_in_flight": MAX_IN_FLIGHT
        },
        "strategy": "canary",
        "relationships": {
          "app": {
            "data": {
              "guid": "APP-GUID"
            }
          }
        }
      }'
      

      Where DROPLET-GUID and APP-GUID are the GUIDs that you recorded in earlier steps. Where MAX_IN_FLIGHT is an integer that applies after the single canary instance is successful and specifies the maximum number of new instances to start simultaneous until the deployment is complete. Optional and defaults to 1.

For more information about this command, see How it works.

Continue the canary deployment

To finish the deployment after validating the canary:

  • For cf CLI v8+, run:

    cf continue-deployment APP-NAME
    

    Where APP-NAME is the name of the app.

  • For CAPI V3, run:

    cf curl /v3/deployments/DEPLOYMENT-GUID/actions/continue" -X POST
    

    Where DEPLOYMENT-GUID is the GUID of the deployment that you recorded after following the CAPI procedure in Deploy an app.

This continues the rolling deployment of the app.

Cancel a canary deployment

To stop the deployment of an app that you pushed:

  • For cf CLI v8+, run:

    cf cancel-deployment APP-NAME
    

    Where APP-NAME is the name of the app.

  • For CAPI V3, run:

    cf curl /v3/deployments/DEPLOYMENT-GUID/actions/cancel" -X POST
    

    Where DEPLOYMENT-GUID is the GUID of the deployment that you recorded after following the CAPI procedure in Deploy an app.

This reverts the app to its state from before the deployment started by: * Removing any deployment artifacts * Resetting the current_droplet on the app

Note The cancel command is designed to remove the canary instance of the app.

If this command is used after continue-deployment it will behave like a cancelation of a rolling deployment.

How it works

This section describes the canary deployments and their limitations.

Canary deployment

This section describes pushing an app with a canary deployment strategy.

  1. The cf push APP-NAME --strategy canary command:

    1. Stages the updated app package.
    2. Creates a droplet with the updated app package.
    3. Creates a deployment with the new droplet and any new configuration.
      • This starts a new process with one instance that shares the route with the old process.
      • Now, if you run cf app on your app, you see multiple web processes.
        For more information about the deployment object, see the Deployments section of the CAPI V3 documentation.
  2. After the command creates the deployment, the cc_deployment_updater BOSH job runs in the background, updating deployments as follows:

    1. Adds another instance of the new web process and removes an instance from the old web process. This step repeats until the new web process reaches the required number of instances.

      Important This happens only if all instances of the new web process are running.

    2. Removes the old web process. The new web process now fully replaces the old web process.
    3. Restarts all non-web processes of the app.
    4. Sets the deployment to PAUSED.
  3. After validating that the canary instance is running as expected execute the command cf continue-deployment APP-NAME:

    1. Changes the deployment reason to DEPLOYING and starts doing a rolling deployment
  4. After the command changes the status of the deployment, the cc_deployment_updater BOSH job runs in the background, updating deployments as follows:

    1. Adds MaxInFlight number of instances (by default it is 1) of the new web process and removes MaxInFlight number of instance from the old web process. This step repeats until the new web process reaches the required number of instances.

      Important This happens only if all instances of the new web process are running.

    2. Removes the old web process. The new web process now fully replaces the old web process.
    3. Restarts all non-web processes of the app.
    4. Sets the deployment to DEPLOYED.

Limitations

The following table describes the limitations of when using canary deployments.

Limitation Description
Multiple app versions During a deployment, Cloud Foundry serves both the old and new version of your app at the same route. This can lead to user issues if you push backwards-incompatible API changes.
Database migrations Deployments do not handle database migrations. Migrating an app database when the existing app is not compatible with the migration can result in downtime.
Non-web processes Canary deployment will only create an instance of the web process.
Quotas Pushing updates to your app using a deployment strategy creates up to `max_in_flight` new instances (defaults to 1) . If you lack sufficient quota, the deployment fails. Administrators might need to increase quotas to accommodate deployments.
Simultaneous apps when interrupting a push If you push app before your previous push command for the same app has completed, your first push gets interrupted. Until the last deployment completes, there might be many versions of the app running at the same time. Eventually, the app runs the code from your most recent push.
V3 APIs During a canary deploy for an app, requests to the V3 APIs for scaling or updating a process fail with an error message like Cannot scale this process while a deployment is in flight.. For more information, see Scale a process or Update a process in the CAPI V3 documentation.
Evaluating the Canary Instance Because the current processes share the same route, the best way to validate that traffic is reaching the canary instance by looking at the logs. If app revision logging is enabled, the logs for all instances will be tagged with `process_id` and `revision_version` values. e.g. `APP/REV/4/PROC/WEB/1` Retrieve the logs by running the cf CLI command `cf logs APP_NAME`.
New or stopped applications When pushing an application for the first time, or if the app is stopped, no deployment strategy is used and all application instances are started immediately.

View the status of canary deployments

You can use CAPI to view the status of canary deployment.

To view the status of a canary deployment:

  1. Log in to the cf CLI:

    cf login
    
  2. Find the GUID of your app by running:

    cf app APP-NAME --guid
    

    Where APP-NAME is the name of the app.

  3. Find the deployment for that app by running:

    cf curl GET /v3/deployments?app_guids=APP-GUID&status_values=ACTIVE
    

    Where APP-GUID is the GUID of the app. Deployments are listed in chronological order, with the latest deployment displayed as the last in a list.

  4. Run:

    cf curl GET /v3/deployments/DEPLOYMENT-GUID
    

    Where DEPLOYMENT-GUID is the GUID of the canary deployment.

cf curl GET /v3/deployments/DEPLOYMENT-GUID returns these status properties for canary deployments:

  • status.value: Indicates if the deployment is ACTIVE or FINALIZED.

  • status.reason: Provides detail about the deployment status.

  • status.details: Provides the timestamp for the most recent successful health check. The value of the status.details property can be nil with no successful health check for the deployment. For example, there might be no successful health check if the deployment was cancelled.

The following table describes the possible values for the status.value and status.reason properties:

status.value status.reason Description
ACTIVE DEPLOYING The deployment is deploying.
ACTIVE PAUSED The deployment is paused waiting for the user to continue with the deployment.
ACTIVE CANCELLING The deployment is cancelling.
FINALIZED DEPLOYED The deployment was deployed.
FINALIZED CANCELLED The deployment was cancelled.
FINALIZED SUPERSEDED The deployment was stopped and did not finish deploying because there was another deployment created for the app.
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