Open Service Mesh (OSM) is a lightweight, extensible, Cloud Native service mesh that allows users to uniformly manage, secure, and get out-of-the-box observability features for highly dynamic microservice environments.
The OSM project builds on the ideas and implementations of many cloud native ecosystem projects including Linkerd, Istio, Consul, Envoy, Kuma, Helm, and the SMI specification.
OSM runs an Envoy based control plane on Kubernetes, can be configured with SMI APIs, and works by injecting an Envoy proxy as a sidecar container next to each instance of your application. The proxy contains and executes rules around access control policies, implements routing configuration, and captures metrics. The control plane continually configures proxies to ensure policies and routing rules are up to date and ensures proxies are healthy.
- Simple to understand and contribute to
- Effortless to install, maintain, and operate
- Painless to troubleshoot
- Easy to configure via Service Mesh Interface (SMI)
- Easily and transparently configure traffic shifting for deployments
- Secure service to service communication by enabling mTLS
- Define and execute fine grained access control policies for services
- Observability and insights into application metrics for debugging and monitoring services
- Integrate with external certificate management services/solutions with a pluggable interface
- Onboard applications onto the mesh by enabling automatic sidecar injection of Envoy proxy
OSM is under active development and is NOT ready for production workloads.
OSM is an open source project that is not covered by the Microsoft Azure support policy. Please search open issues here, and if your issue isn't already represented please open a new one. The OSM project maintainers will respond to the best of their abilities.
Specification Component | Supported Release | Comments |
---|---|---|
Traffic Access Control | v1alpha2 | |
Traffic Specs | v1alpha3 | |
Traffic Split | v1alpha2 | |
Traffic Metrics | v1alpha1 | 🚧 In Progress #379 🚧 |
Read more about OSM's high level goals, design, and architecture.
- Kubernetes cluster running Kubernetes v1.15.0 or greater
- kubectl current context is configured for the target cluster install
kubectl config current-context
The simplest way of installing Open Service Mesh on a Kubernetes cluster is by using the osm
CLI.
Download the osm
binary from the Releases page. Unpack the osm
binary and add it to $PATH
to get started.
sudo mv ./osm /usr/local/bin/osm
$ osm install
See the installation guide for more detailed options.
We have provided two demos for you to experience OSM.
- The automated demo is a set of scripts anyone can run and shows how OSM can manage, secure and provide observability for microservice environments.
- The manual demo is a step-by-step walkthrough set of instruction of the automated demo.
After installing OSM, onboard a microservice application to the service mesh.
Connect with the Open Service Mesh community:
- GitHub issues and pull requests in this repo
- OSM Slack: Join the CNCF Slack for related discussions in #openservicemesh
- Public Community Call: OSM Community calls take place on the second Tuesday of each month, 10:30am-11am Pacific in the CNCF OSM Zoom room - notes available in Open Service Mesh (OSM) Community Meeting Notes
- Mailing list
If you would like to contribute to OSM, check out the development guide.
This project has adopted the CNCF Code of Conduct. See CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md for further details.
This software is covered under the MIT license. You can read the license here.