Skip to content
/ istio Public
forked from istio/istio

An open platform to connect, manage, and secure microservices.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

lusenoot/istio

 
 

Repository files navigation

Istio

CircleCI Go Report Card GoDoc codecov.io

An open platform to connect, manage, and secure microservices.

In addition, here are some other documents you may wish to read:

You'll find many other useful documents on our Wiki.

Introduction

Istio is an open platform for providing a uniform way to integrate microservices, manage traffic flow across microservices, enforce policies and aggregate telemetry data. Istio's control plane provides an abstraction layer over the underlying cluster management platform, such as Kubernetes, Mesos, etc.

Visit istio.io for in-depth information about using Istio.

Istio is composed of these components:

  • Envoy - Sidecar proxies per microservice to handle ingress/egress traffic between services in the cluster and from a service to external services. The proxies form a secure microservice mesh providing a rich set of functions like discovery, rich layer-7 routing, circuit breakers, policy enforcement and telemetry recording/reporting functions.

    Note: The service mesh is not an overlay network. It simplifies and enhances how microservices in an application talk to each other over the network provided by the underlying platform.

  • Mixer - Central component that is leveraged by the proxies and microservices to enforce policies such as authorization, rate limits, quotas, authentication, request tracing and telemetry collection.

  • Pilot - A component responsible for configuring the proxies at runtime.

  • Citadel - A centralized component responsible for certificate issuance and rotation.

  • Node Agent - A per-node component responsible for certificate issuance and rotation.

  • Broker - A component implementing the Open Service Broker API for Istio-based services. (Under development)

Istio currently supports Kubernetes, Consul, and Eureka-based environments. We plan support for additional platforms such as Cloud Foundry, and Mesos in the near future.

Repositories

The Istio project is divided across a few GitHub repositories.

  • istio/istio. This is the main repository that you are currently looking at. It hosts Istio's core components and also the sample programs and the various documents that govern the Istio open source project. It includes:

    • security. This directory contains security related code, including Citadel (acting as Certificate Authority), node agent, etc.
    • pilot. This directory contains platform-specific code to populate the abstract service model, dynamically reconfigure the proxies when the application topology changes, as well as translate routing rules into proxy specific configuration.
    • istioctl. This directory contains code for the istioctl command line utility.
    • mixer. This directory contains code to enforce various policies for traffic passing through the proxies, and collect telemetry data from proxies and services. There are plugins for interfacing with various cloud platforms, policy management services, and monitoring services.
    • broker. This directory contains code for Istio's implementation of the Open Service Broker API.
  • istio/api. This repository defines component-level APIs and common configuration formats for the Istio platform.

  • istio/mixerclient. Client libraries (currently supports C++) for Mixer's API.

  • istio/proxy. The Istio proxy contains extensions to the Envoy proxy (in the form of Envoy filters), that allow the proxy to delegate policy enforcement decisions to Mixer.

Issue management

We use GitHub combined with ZenHub to track all of our bugs and feature requests. Each issue we track has a variety of metadata:

  • Epic. An epic represents a feature area for Istio as a whole. Epics are fairly broad in scope and are basically product-level things. Each issue is ultimately part of an epic.

  • Milestone. Each issue is assigned a milestone. This is 0.1, 0.2, ..., or 'Nebulous Future'. The milestone indicates when we think the issue should get addressed.

  • Priority/Pipeline. Each issue has a priority which is represented by the Pipeline field within GitHub. Priority can be one of P0, P1, P2, or >P2. The priority indicates how important it is to address the issue within the milestone. P0 says that the milestone cannot be considered achieved if the issue isn't resolved.

We don't annotate issues with Releases; Milestones are used instead. We don't use GitHub projects at all, that support is disabled for our organization.

About

An open platform to connect, manage, and secure microservices.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Go 90.3%
  • Shell 3.8%
  • HTML 3.2%
  • Python 0.9%
  • Makefile 0.7%
  • JavaScript 0.5%
  • Other 0.6%