Add a Kubernetes Account Deployment Target in Spinnaker
Learn what Spinnaker does when it deploys to Kubernetes targets and then add a Kubernetes Service Account to Spinnaker.
Learn what Spinnaker does when it deploys to Kubernetes targets and then add a Kubernetes Service Account to Spinnaker.
This section contains guides for configuring Spinnaker integration with Cloud Foundry.
This section contains guides for administering a Spinnaker or Armory deployment on AWS infrastructure.
Configure a Spinnaker Manual Judgment pipeline stage to propagate authentication.
Configure Spinnaker to share an Amazon Machine Image (AMI) when Spinnaker and the deployment target share the same AWS account.
Clouddriver caching agents discover your infrastructure elements and cache the data for use by Spinnaker.
Learn how to configure caching agents in Spinnaker™ to improve Clouddriver performance.
Learn how to configure Kayenta using the Armory Operator.
Configure Spinnaker’s Clouddriver service to use MySQL-compatible database.
Use Spinnaker’s External Account Configuration feature to manage Kubernetes accounts.
Simplify DNS and Ingress management by deploying Gate and Deck to the same host.
Configure GitHub and Spinnaker to use GitHub as an OAuth2 authenticator.
This guide describes how to enable mutual TLS (mTLS) between Spinnaker services. Adding mTLS provides additional security for your Spinnaker services since only validated clients can interact with services when mTLS is enabled.
Configure Okta for authentication and authorization in Spinnaker.
Configure Spinnaker’s Orca service to use an RDBMS to store its pipeline execution.
Learn how to configure Spinnaker to send Slack notifications.
Spinnaker services communicate with each other and can exchange potentially sensitive data. Enabling TLS between services ensures that this data is encrypted and that a service will only communicate with another service that has a valid certificate.
Learn how to configure Spinnaker to access a Docker registry.
Use the Armory Operator to configure Spinnaker to access to your Jenkins instance.
Configure Spinnaker to access a GitHub repo as a source of artifacts.
Manually create a Kubernetes Service Account to use with Spinnaker.
Configure your infrastructure so users can access your Spinnaker instance.
Learn how to configure and enable Armory CD’s Pipelines-as-Code feature.
Enable the Evaluate Artifacts Stage plugin to add it to Armory Continuous Deployment. The stage gives pipeline creators the ability to create base64 artifacts from text saved within a pipeline. The contents of the new artifact include the results of any SpEL expressions that are evaluated.
Learn how to configure the Terraform Integration stage so that app developers can provision infrastructure using Terraform as part of their delivery pipelines.
Set up x509 certificate authentication to expose Spinnaker API endpoints when you have third-party authentication configured.
Use OpenSSL to generate certificates for Spinnaker.
Create ServiceNow integrations through a generic webhook stage or a custom webhook stage.
Diagnostics, logging, and metrics in your Armory Continuous Deployment environment.
Configure Spinnaker to avoid cloud providers such as AWS, GCP, and Azure from throttling your Spinnaker traffic.
Configure Fiat, the Spinnaker microservice responsible for authorization (authz), to control which users can create applications by using the prefix
parameter.
This section contains guides for using secrets stored outside of Spinnaker in products such as Hashicorp Vault, Google Cloud Storage, AWS S3, and the AWS Secrets Manager.
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