Flux is a CNCF Incubation project

The Cloud Native Computing Foundation promoted Flux to Incubation status. We celebrate all the great work that turned Flux into a GitOps family of projects.

Incubation

The Flux community is proud to announce that the CNCF Technical Oversight Committee just promoted the Flux project to Incubating status! 🎉

For us as a project, this is proof not only of the wide-spread use of Flux (and Helm Operator) v1, but also of our big strides into becoming a GitOps family of projects and bringing a toolkit approach to Continuous and Progressive Delivery.

We are particularly happy about the support from our community, the project maintainers, contributors and end-users who helped us through this process. Thanks to our friends at Deutsche Telekom, Lunar, MediaMarktSaturn and Sortlist who spoke in favour of Flux and explained their GitOps implementation in user interviews with the CNCF.

Incubation Infographics

As a project we have come quite far in the last 5 years. From the time when it was a Weaveworks-internal project to make simple deployments happen to a buzzing and healthy project with maintainers from various companies, hundreds of contributors and a regular release cycle. Thanks a lot to everyone who made Flux possible!

“We created Flux as an open source project because we believe that is the best environment in which to develop software. Since then I have continually been shown that trusting your users and contributors is rewarded. Although it is still a modest project, there is a loyal and growing community around Flux and the methodology it engendered, GitOps. I see the acceptance of Flux into CNCF incubation status as validation of that community as much as the software itself.”

-- Michael Bridgen, Flux co-creator

What’s next for Flux

For 10 months we have been working on the new iteration of Flux. It is based on modern tooling, very composable and we were able to add long-requested features in next to no time.

Flux as a project has been on this trajectory for a longer time already: Flux was started in 2016, the Helm Operator was added in 2018, kustomize support added in 2019. 2020 was the year in which re-started the project to turn Flux into a GitOps family of projects, where simple and focused controllers can naturally be composed. 2021 saw Flagger being moved into the Flux organization and will see the GA release of Flux v2 in the coming months.

Flux v2 getting closer to GA

Flux v2 work

We are very proud of where Flux v2 is at now, and are carefully working toward a GA release, at which point we’ll recommend that all Flux v1 users migrate to Flux v2.

Now is the perfect time to familiarise yourself with Flux v2 - the Get Started guide only takes a couple of minutes to complete. If you prefer a video, check out our resources section.

Migrating from v1 will require some work, but it will definitely be worth it: in this iteration you are going to get

  • Support for multiple Git repositories
  • Operational insight through health checks, events and alerts
  • Multi-tenancy capabilities
  • Better performance
  • And lots of other new features

We’ve taken our time to ensure that Flux v2 has feature parity with Flux v1, and that end users have the best experience possible migrating to Flux v2. Stay tuned for our upcoming announcement about the Flux v2 migration and support timeline.

Get started today

If you have been waiting to start your GitOps journey, today is a good time to start! Check out the following upcoming events

Video Replay: Migrating from Flux v1 to Flux v2 with Leigh Capili

22 Mar 2021 - Hands-On GitOps Patterns for Helm Users with Scott Rigby

25 Mar 2021 - CNCF On-Demand Webinar: Flux is Incubating + The Road Ahead

5 Apr 2021 - Flux v2 on Azure with Leigh Capili

19 Apr 2021 - Setting up Notifications, Alerts, & Webhook with Flux v2 by Alison Dowdney

Or dive straight into our Get Started guide to get started with the next generation of Flux today.