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Organizing Pulumi projects & stacks

    Projects and stacks are intentionally flexible so that they can accommodate diverse needs across a spectrum of team, application, and infrastructure scenarios. This is very much like how Git repos work and, much like Git repos, there are varying approaches to organizing your code within them. That said, there are some clear best practices that, when followed, will ensure Pulumi works seamlessly for your situation. This guide describes some of the most common approaches and when to choose one over another.

    Tradeoffs

    Everything described within this guide is on a spectrum of tradeoffs. Remember that each project is a collection of code, and that each stack is a unit of deployment. Each stack has its own separate configuration and secrets, role-based access controls (RBAC) and policies, and concurrent deployments.

    Monolithic

    It’s very common to start with a monolithic project/stack structure. In this model, a single project defines the infrastructure and application resources for an entire vertical service.

    Each stack typically corresponds to a distinct environment for that service, such as production, staging, and many testing and development instances. There might even be multiple environments within each of these dimensions, such as a production environment in each of the US east coast, west coast, Europe, and Asia.

    Most users will start a monolithic structure, for a few good reasons:

    • Simplicity. Having a single project and collection of stacks is the easiest thing you could possibly do. Pulumi diffs edits to your application and infrastructure code, and so this approach leaves the hard work of doing incremental deployments and tracking dependencies to the Pulumi engine.

    • Versioning. By placing all code in one project, it’s easier to share and version logic within your project. Of course, Pulumi supports package managers, so sharing across projects is also possible, but it entails dealing with packages which means introducing a loosely-coupled versioning boundary with distinct update cadences.

    • Agility. Simplicity and versioning means that using a monolithic approach will almost always lead to the best productivity and therefore agility. For small projects or teams, this is usually the right place to start.

    Although a monolithic structure is where most users begin their Pulumi journey, we find that most will ultimately migrate to a finer grained decomposition of projects and stacks.

    Micro-Stacks

    At the other end of the spectrum is a pattern we call micro-stacks. This is equivalent to microservices, only in project and stack form. In this model, a project is broken into separately managed smaller projects, often across different dimensions. This approach has several advantages:

    • Independence. Although Pulumi can diff changes and make only those updates mandated by a code edit, certain projects sometimes deploy at radically different cadences and it makes sense to enforce this separation in the project structure. For instance, a service that revs every day may not be appropriate to live in the same project as critical infrastructure that changes infrequently and which demands intense scrutiny whenever it does.

    • Security. In large organizations, it’s important to use RBAC to secure access to individual aspects of your cloud infrastructure and applications. Perhaps you want to ensure your DevOps Architect is the only person who can approve changes to fundamental networking and clustering infrastructure, for example.

    • Complexity and Performance. For many real-world services, there are a multitude of build artifacts. This includes traditional software builds (in Java, .NET, C++, etc), Docker image builds, and serverless function packaging. Putting all of these in one place may increase build times unless a hermetic build system with excellent caching has been used (and, even then, caching across CI/CD machines can be difficult). Breaking apart pieces that can be built independently can increase agility and improve performance, particularly when they evolve at different rates and/or are managed by different teams.

    Using Stack References with Micro-Stacks

    If using the micro-stacks approach you will need a way to share information between stacks. Stack references are the Pulumi concepts you will want to use. Stack references allow you to access the outputs of one stack from another stack. Inter-Stack Dependencies allow one stack to reference the outputs of another stack.

    To reference values from another stack, create an instance of the StackReference type using the fully qualified name of the stack as an input, and then read exported stack outputs by their name.

    Moving from a Monolithic Project Structure to Micro-Stacks

    Here are a few (non-exhaustive) examples of how one might go about splitting up a monolithic project structure:

    • Each micro-service in your architecture might get its own project.

    • Application container images may be rebuilt and published independent of infrastructure projects.

    • Similarly, application concepts like containers and serverless functions may be deployed independently.

    • Core, low-level infrastructure – like networks and cluster orchestrators – may be independent from other infrastructure and applications resources.

    • You may have one or more data tiers that are deployed and independently backed up.

    Even with this alternative breakdown, it’s likely your stack structure will mirror a monolithic structure. For each project, you are apt to have multiple environments such as production, staging, testing, etc. And, indeed, you may have inter-dependencies between your stacks – something that Pulumi supports in a first-class manner with stack references.

    Aligning to Git Repos

    Because Pulumi is a natural choice for enabling GitOps-style continuous deployment, many users opt to align their project structure to their Git repo structure. Organizations that prefer mono-repos often prefer monolithic project structures, and organizations that prefer fine-grained repos tend to prefer micro-project structures.

    This alignment is not a requirement, of course. We have many users who have chosen to have multiple projects in a single Git repo – or the reverse, using Git submodules, they might deploy code from multiple Git repos in a single Pulumi project. However, most users find that a close alignment between Git repo structure and Pulumi project structure enables seamless continuous deployment.

    In this model, there is a rough correspondence between a Git repo and a Pulumi project, and a Git branch and its associated Pulumi stack. Read more about Continuous Delivery.

    Tagging Stacks

    Stacks have associated metadata in the form of name/value stack tags. You can assign custom tags to stacks (when logged into the Pulumi Cloud backend to enable grouping stacks in the Pulumi Cloud. For example, if you have many projects with separate stacks for production, staging, and testing environments, it may be useful to group stacks by environment instead of by project. To do this, you could assign a custom environment tag to each stack, assigning a value of production to each production stack, staging to each staging stack, etc. Then in the Pulumi Cloud, you’ll be able to group stacks by Tag: environment.

    Examples

    Monorepo with base infrastructure project

    Let’s build an example of an organizational setup that leverages several different approaches to provide the most functionality and flexibility possible.

    We start with a central base “infrastructure” project, which contains things that are common across multiple services (or perhaps even your entire organization!). This project can include resources like Azure Resource Groups or AWS VPCs.

    Within this project, we create stacks for each unique configuration (often times stacks are related to SDLC environments like dev, staging, and production). These stacks are often deployed independently of each other and are often deployed in different regions. To use a metaphor, our Pulumi program code defines the shape of a dial, and the configuration in the different stack configuration files (e.g., Pulumi.dev.yaml, Pulumi.staging.yaml, Pulumi.prod.yaml) defines an actual dial setting. These “dial settings” might include things like subscription IDs, regions, etc. that are specific to that environment.

    This project looks a bit like this:

    ├─ infrastructure
      ├── index.ts
      ├── Pulumi.yaml
      ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
      ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
      └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    
    ├─ infrastructure
      ├── main.go
      ├── Pulumi.yaml
      ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
      ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
      └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    

    A diagram showing how the different stacks in a project overlay with the program

    Now that we have our base infrastructure, we can create a separate Pulumi project per application or service for each one’s deployment and configuration that will include all the resources that the service needs, which are not provided by the base infrastructure project.

    These projects can be part of the same monorepo as the infrastructure project, or they can be separate repos, depending upon your organizational needs. One of the advantages to keeping the infrastructure project in a separate repo/project is that there is likely a limited number of users we want to be able to deploy these things; not every individual team needs to be able to do this. In this example, we will use a monorepo, however.

    Our example service is made up of an API and a database (RDS, CosmosDB, etc.). Our Pulumi program for the project defines the resources for the API and the database, and it can also deploy the actual code, as well. When we add our example service, our monorepo starts to look like this:

    ├── infrastructure
    │   ├── index.ts
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── myApp
    │   ├── index.ts
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    └── ...
    
    ├── infrastructure
    │   ├── main.go
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── myApp
    │   ├── main.go
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    └── ...
    

    It’s generally a good practice to keep our projects on the smaller side as this helps reduce the effect and impact of a deployment. If you have applications that require different rates of change, it may be useful to split them up into separate repos, aka micro-stacks.

    As we consider making our approach even more accessible and robust across teams, we bring in the idea of Component Resources, which are a way to group affiliated resources together according the standard practices of the organization.

    Back to our example, our service needs a database and a subnet (or other networking). We can template these resources by creating a component resource, which abstracts these details away from the rest of the program. So now, any time someone needs to use Pulumi to add a standard application, they can call a resource called Application with its associated parameters (e.g., the container, parcel, folder). Behind the scenes, everything is being set up according to your organization’s standards.

    A diagram showing how the different stacks in a project overlay with the program

    These component resources can be packaged up and stored alongside all of your other package management, so consumers in your organization can access them like any other library or package. If we want to add component resources to our monorepo example, it will look like this:

    ├── infrastructure
    │   ├── index.ts
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── myApp
    │   ├── index.ts
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── pkg
    │   └──application
    │     └── app.ts
    └── ...
    
    ├── infrastructure
    │   ├── main.go
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── myApp
    │   ├── main.go
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── pkg
    │   └──application
    │     └── app.go
    └── ...
    

    To be clear, each of the applications/services inside our monorepo (including the infrastructure project) are a separate Pulumi project, with their own stacks, and their own Pulumi.yaml. Given that each service is a separate Pulumi project, they can all use different programming languages. Let’s take a look at how it might look if the infrastructure team prefers to write in Go, and the myApp team prefers TypeScript:

    ├── infrastructure
    │   ├── main.go
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── myApp
    │   ├── index.ts
    │   ├── package.json
    │   ├── Pulumi.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.dev.yaml
    │   ├── Pulumi.staging.yaml
    │   └── Pulumi.prod.yaml
    ├── pkg
    │   └──application
    │     └── app.go
    └── .etc
    

    Other examples

    See also the use of multiple projects and stacks in Crosswalk for Kubernetes, which contains a tutorial, reference architecture, and collection of prod-first code examples that demonstrate industry best-practices for using Kubernetes in contexts where an organization of people must ship production applications.

    Organizing your project code

    Within your Pulumi project, there are good practices to consider to help keep your code organized, maintainable, and understandable.

    Organize your code in a way that makes it easy to understand and maintain. One way to do this in Typescript is to break out your code into separate files, and then import them into your main file. In this example, the entrypoint for our Pulumi program is index.ts, but we use the utils.ts file for supporting functions.

    // index.ts
    import * as utils from "./utils";
    ...
    const forwarderHandle = utils.forwardPrometheusService(p8sService, p8sDeployment, {
        localPort,
    });
    
    // utils.ts
    import * as k8s from "@pulumi/kubernetes";
    import * as pulumi from "@pulumi/pulumi";
    
    export function forwardPrometheusService(
        service: pulumi.Input<k8s.core.v1.Service>,
        deployment: pulumi.Input<k8s.extensions.v1beta1.Deployment>,
        opts: PromPortForwardOpts,
    ): pulumi.Output<() => void> {
        if (pulumi.runtime.isDryRun()) {
            return pulumi.output(() => undefined);
        }
    
        return pulumi.all([service, deployment]).apply(([s, d]) => pulumi.all([s.metadata, d.urn])).apply(([meta]) => {
            return new Promise<() => void>((resolve, reject) => {
                const forwarderHandle = spawn("kubectl", [
                    "port-forward",
                    `service/${meta.name}`,
                    `${opts.localPort}:${opts.targetPort || 80}`,
                ]);
    
                forwarderHandle.stdout.on("data", data => resolve(() => forwarderHandle.kill()));
                forwarderHandle.stderr.on("data", data => reject());
            });
        });
    }
    

    Organize your code in a way that makes it easy to understand and maintain. One way to do this in Go is to break out your code into separate files, and then import them into your main file. In this example, the entrypoint for our Pulumi program is main.go, but we use the utils.go file for supporting functions.

    // main.go
    package main
    import (
      "github.com/pulumi/pulumi/sdk/v3/go/pulumi"
    )
    
    func main() {
      pulumi.Run(func(ctx *pulumi.Context) error {
        _, err := forwardPrometheusService(ctx)
          if err != nil {
            return err
          }
      }
    }
    
    // utils.go
    package main
    import (
      appsv1 "github.com/pulumi/pulumi-kubernetes/sdk/v3/go/kubernetes/apps/v1"
      corev1 "github.com/pulumi/pulumi-kubernetes/sdk/v3/go/kubernetes/core/v1"
      metav1 "github.com/pulumi/pulumi-kubernetes/sdk/v3/go/kubernetes/meta/v1"
      "github.com/pulumi/pulumi/sdk/v3/go/pulumi"
      "github.com/pulumi/pulumi/sdk/v3/go/pulumi/config"
    )
    
    func forwardPrometheusService(ctx *pulumi.Context)  {
    ...
    
      return nil
    }
    

    There are a couple of reasons that this pattern is helpful. One, in this particular case, is that the forwardPrometheusService function exists to forward the Prometheus service to localhost, so we can check it. If you are running in-cluster, we probably don’t need it! So we could add a conditional to determine if we need to run that function - which makes our code a lot clearer.

    Additionally, by breaking out the function, we can easily reuse it in other places in our code. For example, if we wanted to forward the Prometheus service to a different port, we could change the localPort parameter.

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