An awesome user interface for an awesome scheduler, plain and simple :-)
Download the latest release from the Github repository and start it with:
./nomad-ui-<os>-<arch>
This will start the nomad-ui server that will try to connect to local
nomad server. The frontend can be accessed on port 3000
by default.
You can override this with the -web.listen-address
.
Another way to run nomad-ui is through Docker. Run the following command to start a webserver that will serve the application.
docker run -e NOMAD_ADDR=... -p 8000:3000 iverberk/nomad-ui:0.1.0
Check the releases page on Github to see which version is current.
The user interface will be accessible on localhost, port 8000
. Adjust the Docker
run parameters as needed. If you need to change the port that Nomad is listening
on, you should do it with -e NOMAD_ADDR
environment variable that contains
both hostname and port.
NOMAD_ADDR
(IP or DNS name) should point to the correct location of your Nomad server.
If you have a Node and Go environment you can also build the production version yourself.
You need a running nomad server to try nomad ui:
nomad agent -server -client -bootstrap-expect 1 -data-dir /tmp/nomad
Now you can run nomad ui in other terminal (we assume you have it in PATH):
nomad-ui-<os>-<arch>
Open browser and visit http://127.0.0.1:3000.
Project is built using make:
make
The resulting files will be stored in build/
folder:
build/webpack - frontend webapp that can be served by any webserver
build/nomad-ui-<os>-<arch> - nomad-ui binary containing both the backend server and frontend webapp
By default it builds binary for host system. You can cross-compile and build binaries for different systems and architectures as well:
GOBUILD='linux-amd64 windows-386 <GOOS>-<GOARCH>' make
See docs for the whole list of available GOOS
and GOARCH
values.
Just run npm install
and npm start
and start developing. Hot reloading is enabled, so any
changes will be visible in the browser immediately. Unfortunately there are no tests yet.
If you would like to contribute please open a pull-request.
The awesome dashboard theme is created by Creative Tim and can be found here