Octopus Deploy Documentation

Deploy a Java application to Payara using Octopus and GitHub Actions

In this tutorial, we show you how to build a fully-functional continuous delivery pipeline for a simple Java web application and deploy it to Payara. We use GitHub Actions to build the code and run tests, and we use Octopus Deploy to deploy and promote releases.

To get up and running quickly, the TestDrive VMs provide preconfigured environments demonstrating various continuous delivery pipelines documented in these guides.

Introduction

The application we'll deploy is called Random Quotes, which is a simple web application that randomly displays a famous quote each time the page loads. It consists of a web front end and a database that contains the quotes. We'll build a complete Continuous Integration/Continuous Delivery (CI/CD) pipeline with automated builds, deployments to a dev environment, and sign offs for production deployments.

Deployment pipeline

For this tutorial, we assume you use Git for version controlling changes to your source code and GitHub Actions to compile code and run unit tests. Octopus Deploy will take care of the deployment. Here is what the full continuous integration and delivery pipeline will look like when we are finished:

Git C# C# C# TeamCity Artifactory create release DEV TEST PRODUCTION Release 1.1

The development team's workflow is:

  1. Developers commit code changes to Git.
  2. GitHub Actions detects the change and performs the continuous integration build, this includes resolving any dependencies and running unit tests.
  3. When the GitHub Actions build completes, the change will be deployed to the Dev environment.
  4. When one of your team members (perhaps a tester) wants to see what's in a particular release, they can use Octopus to manually deploy a release to the Test environment.
  5. When the team is satisfied with the quality of the release and they are ready for it to go to production, they use Octopus to promote the release from the Test environment to the Production environment.

Since Octopus is designed to be used by teams, in this tutorial we also set up some simple rules:

  • Anyone can deploy to the dev or test environments.
  • Only specific people can deploy to production.
  • Production deployments require sign off from someone in our project stakeholders group.
  • We'll send an email to the team after any test or production deployment has succeeded or failed.

This tutorial makes use of the following tools:

Octopus is an extremely powerful deployment automation tool, and there are numerous ways to model a development team's workflow in Octopus Deploy, but this tends to be the most common for small teams. If you're not sure how to configure Octopus, we recommend following this guide to learn the basics. You'll then know how to adjust Octopus to suit your team's workflow.

This tutorial takes about an hour to complete. That sounds like a long time, but keep in mind, at the end of the tutorial, you'll have a fully-functional CI/CD environment for your entire team, and you'll be ready to deploy to production at the click of a button. It's worth the effort!

Build vs. deployment

For any non-trivial application, you're going to deploy the software to multiple environments. For this tutorial, we're using the environments Dev, Test, and Prod. This means you need to choose between building your application once or building it before each deployment? To reduce the risk of a failed production deployment, Octopus strongly encourages the practice of building once, and deploying multiple times.

The following activities are a build time concern, so they will happen in GitHub Actions after any change to code is committed to Git:

  1. Check out the latest changes from Git.
  2. Resolve and install any dependencies from Maven.
  3. Run unit tests.
  4. Package the application by bundling all the files it needs to run into a WAR file.

This results in a green CI build and a file that contains the application and everything it needs to run. Any configuration files will have their default values, but they won't know anything about dev vs. production settings just yet.

Lastly, it's very important that we give this artifact a unique version number. We will produce a new artifact file every time our CI build runs, and we don't want to accidentally deploy a previous version of the artifact.

An example of a package that is ready to be deployed is:

randomquotes.1.0.0.war

At this point, we have a single artifact that contains all the files our application needs to run, ready to be deployed. We can deploy it over and over, using the same artifact in each environment. If we deploy a bad release, we can go and find the older version of the artifact and re-deploy it.

The following activities happen at deployment time by Octopus Deploy:

  1. Changing any configuration files to include settings appropriate for the environment, e.g., database connection strings, API keys, etc.
  2. Running tasks that need to be performed during the deployment such as database migrations or taking the application temporarily offline.

Prerequisites

There are a number of tools you need to install to implement a complete CI/CD workflow. These include the GitHub Actions and Octopus servers, some command-line tools, and Payara to host the final deployment.

Git

The source code for the sample application is hosted on GitHub. To access the code, you need the Git client. The Git documentation has instructions to download and install the Git client.

GitHub Actions

GitHub Actions are available for free on public GitHub repsoitories and with paid options for private repositories.

Java

The Java Developer Kit (JDK) is required to be installed to build and test Java applications. OpenJDK builds are freely available for all platforms.

Maven

The Java application is built using Maven. Maven is available via Chocolatey for Windows, and it can be installed via the appropriate package manager for Linux.

Getting Started with Octopus Cloud

Before you can start an Octopus Cloud trial, you'll need an Octopus account.

You can sign up for an account at: octopus.com/register.

Create an Octopus Account

An Octopus account lets you manage your instances of Octopus Cloud.

  1. Enter your name.
  2. Provide your email address and click Create a password. Please note, these credentials are for your Octopus Account. You will also create credentials for your Octopus Cloud instance, when you create it.
  3. On the next screen, provide your company name.
  4. Chose a secure password and enter it twice.
  5. Click Create my Octopus account.

Create a Cloud Instance

  1. From the instances screen, click Create cloud instance.
  2. Enter an instance name for your Octopus Cloud instance.
  3. Choose a URL for the instance.
  4. Select the Cloud region for your instance. Currently the only option is US - Oregon.
  5. Click Enter account details.
  6. Create your first user for Octopus Cloud.
  7. Enter the username the user will use to log into Octopus Cloud.
  8. Create a password for the user and confirm the password.
  9. Click Continue to Confirmation.
  10. Confirm the details you've provided, agree to the terms, and click Looks good. Deploy my Octopus!.

You will be taken to the account provisioning screen. Please note it can take five to ten minutes for your Octopus Cloud instance to be ready. You will receive an email when the instance is ready to use.

When the instance is ready, you will see it (and any other instances you have access to) the next time you log in to your Octopus account at https://account.octopus.com/account/signin.

Payara

Payara is a Java EE application server. It offers a free community server from the download page.

Clone source code

The source code for the random quotes application is hosted in GitHub. The code can be cloned from https://github.com/OctopusSamples/RandomQuotes-Java.git with the command:

git clone https://github.com/OctopusSamples/RandomQuotes-Java.git

Octopus API key

In order to allow GitHub Actions to communicate with Octopus, we need to generate an API key. This is done in the Octopus web portal. The web portal can be opened from the Browse link in the Octopus Manager:

Screenshot of the Octopus Manager

From the Octopus Deploy web portal, sign in, and view your profile:

Screenshot of the Octopus profile drop down menu

Go to the API keys tab. This lists any previous API keys that you have created. Click on New API key:

Screenshot of the Octopus profile API keys page

Give the API key a name so that you remember what the key is for, and click Generate New:

Screenshot of the new API key dialog

Copy the new API key to your clipboard:

Screenshot of new API key

Continuous integration

GitHub Actions supports Node.js, Python, Java, Ruby, PHP, Go, Rust, .NET, and more. Build, test, and deploy applications in your language of choice. In this tutorial, we rely on GitHub Actions to do the following:

  • Clone the code from Git.
  • Resolve and install any dependencies from Maven.
  • Run unit tests.
  • Package the application by bundling all the files it needs to run into a WAR file.
  • Push the package to the Octopus (built-in) package repository.

At a high level, GitHub Actions workflows are YAML documents committed to a GitHub repsository that define the runner that the steps are executed on, the triggers that execute the workflow, and the steps to be run.

GitHub Actions workflows have access to encrypted secrets. Two secrets are defined called:

  • OCTOPUS_SERVER_URL, which defines the URL of the Octopus server (for example, https://myserver.octopus.app for hosted Octopus instances)
  • OCTOPUS_API_TOKEN, which defines the API key used to access the Octopus instance.

The YAML document below is saved to a file called .github/workflows/build.yaml. It is configured to be triggered on a git push and defines steps to build, test, package, and publish the sample application:

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v3
      with:
        fetch-depth: '0'
    - name: Install GitVersion
      uses: gittools/actions/gitversion/setup@v0.9.14
      with:
        versionSpec: 5.x
    - id: determine_version
      name: Determine Version
      uses: gittools/actions/gitversion/execute@v0.9.14
      with:
        additionalArguments: /overrideconfig mode=Mainline
    - name: Install Octopus Deploy CLI
      uses: OctopusDeploy/install-octopus-cli-action@v1
      with:
        version: latest
    - name: Set up JDK 1.17
      uses: actions/setup-java@v2
      with:
        java-version: '17'
        distribution: adopt
    - name: Set Version
      run: ./mvnw --batch-mode versions:set -DnewVersion=${{ steps.determine_version.outputs.semVer }}
      shell: bash
    - name: Test
      run: ./mvnw --batch-mode test
      shell: bash
    - if: always()
      name: Report
      uses: dorny/test-reporter@v1
      with:
        name: Maven Tests
        path: target/surefire-reports/*.xml
        reporter: java-junit
        fail-on-error: 'false'
    - name: Package
      run: ./mvnw --batch-mode -DskipTests=true package
      shell: bash
    - id: get_artifact
      name: Get Artifact Path
      run: |-
        # Find the largest WAR or JAR, and assume that was what we intended to build.
        echo "::set-output name=artifact::$(find target -type f \( -iname \*.jar -o -iname \*.war \) -printf "%p\n" | sort -n | head -1)"
      shell: bash
    - id: get_artifact_name
      name: Get Artifact Name
      run: |-
        # Get the filename without a path
        path="${{ steps.get_artifact.outputs.artifact }}"
        echo "::set-output name=artifact::${path##*/}"
      shell: bash
    - id: get_octopus_artifact
      name: Create Octopus Artifact
      run: |-
        # Octopus expects artifacts to have a specific file format
        file="${{ steps.get_artifact.outputs.artifact }}"
        extension="${file##*.}"
        octofile="randomquotes.${{ steps.determine_version.outputs.semVer }}.${extension}"
        cp ${file} ${octofile}
        echo "::set-output name=artifact::${octofile}"
        # The version used when creating a release is the package id, colon, and version
        octoversion="randomquotes:${{ steps.determine_version.outputs.semVer }}"
        echo "::set-output name=octoversion::${octoversion}"
        ls -la
      shell: bash
    - name: Push packages to Octopus Deploy 🐙
      uses: OctopusDeploy/push-package-action@v2
      env:
        OCTOPUS_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.OCTOPUS_API_TOKEN }}
        OCTOPUS_HOST: ${{ secrets.OCTOPUS_SERVER_URL }}
      with:
        overwrite_mode: OverwriteExisting
        packages: ${{ steps.get_octopus_artifact.outputs.artifact }}
name: Java Maven Build
'on':
  workflow_dispatch: {}
  push: {}
    

There is a lot of work being performed by this workflow, so let's break it down.

The job called build is run on an Ubuntu runner:

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    

The first step checks out the source code from the git repository. Setting the fetch-depth option to 0 means all the history for all branches and tags is fetched. This is required by the GitVersion action used in later steps:

    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v3
      with:
        fetch-depth: '0'

GitVersion builds meaningful version strings based on the commits to git.

This step installs GitVersion:

    - name: Install GitVersion
      uses: gittools/actions/gitversion/setup@v0.9.14
      with:
        versionSpec: 5.x

This step calls GitVersion which outputs many different variables representing different parts of a SemVer version string generated from the commits to the git repository. Later steps use these output values as the version of the package generated by this workflow:

    - id: determine_version
      name: Determine Version
      uses: gittools/actions/gitversion/execute@v0.9.14
      with:
        additionalArguments: /overrideconfig mode=Mainline

This step installs the Octopus CLI, which is used by the subsequent Octopus GitHub Actions:

    - name: Install Octopus Deploy CLI
      uses: OctopusDeploy/install-octopus-cli-action@v1
      with:
        version: latest
    

This step sets up Java 17:

    - name: Set up JDK 1.17
      uses: actions/setup-java@v2
      with:
        java-version: '17'
        distribution: adopt
    

This step sets the project version to the SemVer version determined by GitVersion:

    - name: Set Version
      run: ./mvnw --batch-mode versions:set -DnewVersion=${{ steps.determine_version.outputs.semVer }}
      shell: bash

This step runs the unit tests:

    - name: Test
      run: ./mvnw --batch-mode test
      shell: bash
    

This step publishes the results of the test against the workflow run. The if parameter is set to always() to ensure that the results are published even if the tests fail:

    - if: always()
      name: Report
      uses: dorny/test-reporter@v1
      with:
        name: Maven Tests
        path: target/surefire-reports/*.xml
        reporter: java-junit
        fail-on-error: 'false'

This step packages the application, skipping tests, as those have already been run:

    - name: Package
      run: ./mvnw --batch-mode -DskipTests=true package
      shell: bash

This step finds the largest war or jar file in the target directory. We assume the largest file is the one we wish to deploy:

    - id: get_artifact
      name: Get Artifact Path
      run: |-
        # Find the largest WAR or JAR, and assume that was what we intended to build.
        echo "::set-output name=artifact::$(find target -type f \( -iname \*.jar -o -iname \*.war \) -printf "%p\n" | sort -n | head -1)"
      shell: bash

The filename (without the path) of the jar or war to be packaged is output as a variable called artifact:

    - id: get_artifact_name
      name: Get Artifact Name
      run: |-
        # Get the filename without a path
        path="${{ steps.get_artifact.outputs.artifact }}"
        echo "::set-output name=artifact::${path##*/}"
      shell: bash

Java packages are saved with filenames like randomquotes-1.0.0.war, with a dash between the package name and the version. Octopus requires file names like randomquotes.1.0.0.war, with a period between the package name and version.

This step builds two output variables. The first, artifact, is the Java package filename reformatted to conform to the format expected by Octopus. The second, octoversion, is the package ID and version in a format expected by the create release step (which will be defined later):

    - id: get_octopus_artifact
      name: Create Octopus Artifact
      run: |-
        # Octopus expects artifacts to have a specific file format
        file="${{ steps.get_artifact.outputs.artifact }}"
        extension="${file##*.}"
        octofile="randomquotes.${{ steps.determine_version.outputs.semVer }}.${extension}"
        cp ${file} ${octofile}
        echo "::set-output name=artifact::${octofile}"
        # The version used when creating a release is the package id, colon, and version
        octoversion="randomquotes:${{ steps.determine_version.outputs.semVer }}"
        echo "::set-output name=octoversion::${octoversion}"
      shell: bash

The package files are then pushed to Octopus:

    - name: Push packages to Octopus Deploy 🐙
      uses: OctopusDeploy/push-package-action@v2
      env:
        OCTOPUS_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.OCTOPUS_API_TOKEN }}
        OCTOPUS_HOST: ${{ secrets.OCTOPUS_SERVER_URL }}
      with:
        overwrite_mode: OverwriteExisting
        packages: ${{ steps.get_octopus_artifact.outputs.artifact }}

The workflow is triggered on each push to the git repository. The workflow can also be triggered manually with the workflow_dispatch event:

name: Java Maven Build
'on':
  workflow_dispatch: {}
  push: {}

Commit the file and push it to the GitHub repository with the command:

git add .; git commit -m "Added workflow file"; git push

GitHub Actions then runs the workflow.

Deploying with Octopus Deploy

Now that GitHub Actions has successfully built the application, we need to configure Octopus to deploy it into our environments.

Create the environments

Environments represent the stages that a deployment must move through as part of the deployment pipeline. We'll create three environments: Dev, Test, and Prod.

Log into Octopus, and click the Infrastructure link, then the Environments link, and click ADD ENVIRONMENT:

A screenshot of the Octopus environments page

Enter Dev as the New environment name, and click SAVE:

A screenshot of the new environment dialog creating an environment called Dev

Repeat the process for the Test and Prod environments:

A screenshot of the new environment dialog creating an environment called Test A screenshot of the new environment dialog creating an environment called Prod

Create the Octopus deployment project

With the environments defined and a target created, we now need to create a deployment project in Octopus.

Log into Octopus, click the Projects link, and click ADD PROJECT:

A screenshot of the ADD PROJECT button

Enter Random Quotes for the project name, and click SAVE:

A screenshot of the Add New Project dialog

We start by defining a variable that will be injected into the application.yml. Click the Variables link:

Add a variable called spring:profiles:active with the value #{Octopus.Environment.Name}. Then click the SAVE button:

We will now define the deployment process. Click the Deployments link, click Overview, and then click DEFINE YOUR DEPLOYMENT PROCESS:

Click ADD STEP:

Enter Deploy java archive into the search box:

Click ADD on the Deploy Java Archive tile:

We want to take advantage of a feature in Octopus that will replace values in the application.yml file, which will set the Spring profile to the name of the environment that is being deployed to. To do this, we enable a feature on the deployment.

Click CONFIGURATION FEATURES:

Enable the Structured Configuration Variables option, and click OK:

Enter Deploy to WebSphere as the Step Name:

Enter web as the Role:

Select the randomquotes package:

Enter randomquotes-#{Octopus.Environment.Name | ToLower}.war as the Deployed package file name:

Select the Use custom deployment directory option:

Enter /opt/payara5/glassfish/domains/domain1/autodeploy for the Deploy Directory option:

In the Structured Configuration Variables section, enter **/application.yml as the Target files value. Click Save.

The slash in the filename is operating system specific. The pattern **/application.yml (with a forward slash) is for Linux targets, while **\application.yml (with a backslash) is for Windows targets.

The contents of the application.yml file is shown below. The spring:profiles:active variable we defined earlier will overwrite the Spring active profile in this YAML file:

server:
  port : 5555

spring:
  profiles:
    active: Dev
  h2:
    console:
      enabled: true
  jpa:
    database-platform: org.hibernate.dialect.H2Dialect
  datasource:
    url: jdbc:h2:mem:testdb
    dbcp2:
      driver-class-name: org.h2.Driver
  flyway:
    locations: classpath:db/migration/{vendor}

Deploy!

Now we have a deployment project in Octopus ready to deploy our Java application to our Dev, Test, and Prod environments. The next step is to create and deploy a release.

Click CREATE RELEASE.

The release creation screen provides an opportunity to review the packages that will be included and to add any release notes. By default, the latest package is selected automatically. Click SAVE:

This screen allows you to select the environment that will be deployed into. Lifecycles can be used to customize the progression of deployments through environments (this is demonstrated later in the guide), however, we will accept the default option to deploy to the Dev environment by clicking DEPLOY TO DEV...:

Click DEPLOY to deploy the application into the Dev environment:

The application is then deployed:

Congratulations! You have now built and deployed your first application. Visit http://localhost:9080/randomquotes-dev in a browser (replacing localhost:9080 with the IP address and port of your WebSphere instance) to view a random quote. Note the context path matches the templated value of the context path that we deployed the application to. Ensuring each environment deploys to a unique context path is how we can use a single WebSphere instance to host multiple environments:

Continuous deployments

The process of deploying a successful build to the Dev environment is currently a manual one; GitHub Actions pushes the file to Octopus, and we must trigger the initial deployment to the Dev environment from within Octopus. Typically though, deployments to the Dev environment will be performed automatically if a build and all of its tests succeed.

To trigger the initial deployment to the Dev environment after a successful build, we will go back to the project we created in GitHub Actions and add an additional step to create an Octopus release and then deploy it to the Dev environment.

When added to the workflow file, the YAML below creates a new release in Octopus with each build and deploys it to the development environment.

Note that the package versions are explicitly defined via the output variable called octoversion generated in previous steps:

    - name: Create Octopus Release
      uses: OctopusDeploy/create-release-action@v1.1.1
      with:
        api_key: ${{ secrets.OCTOPUS_API_TOKEN }}
        project: Random Quotes
        server: ${{ secrets.OCTOPUS_SERVER_URL }}
        deploy_to: Dev
        packages: ${{ steps.get_octopus_artifact.outputs.octoversion }}

Additional configuration

Now we will explore some of the more advanced features of Octopus that allow us to customize the deployment progression through environments, secure deployments to production environments, add deployment sign offs, view the audit logs, and add notifications.

Lifecycles

Our project currently uses the default lifecycle, which defines a progression through all the environments in the order they were created.

A custom lifecycle allows the progression of a deployment to be further refined, by defining only a subset of environments that can be deployed to, allowing some environments to be skipped entirely, or requiring that a minimum number of environments are successfully deployed to before moving onto the next environment.

Here we will create a custom lifecycle that makes deployments to the Dev environment optional. This means that initial deployments can be made to the Dev or Test environments, but a successful deployment must be made to the Test environment before it can be progressed to the Prod environment.

Skipping the Dev environment like this may be useful for promoting a release candidate build directly to the Test environment for product owners or testers to review.

Click the Library link, click the Lifecycles link, and click ADD LIFECYCLE:

A screenshot showing the Octopus lifecycles page

Set the lifecycle name to Dev, Test, and Prod, and the description to Progression from the Dev to the Prod environments:

A screenshot showing the new lifecycle name and description

Phases are used to group environments that can accept a deployment. Simple lifecycles, such as the lifecycle we are creating, have a one-to-one relationship between phases and environments.

Click ADD PHASE:

A screenshot showing the ADD PHASE button

Enter Dev as the phase name, and select the Optional phase option. This means that deployments can skip this phase and any environments defined in it, and deploy directly to the next phase.

Because we are mapping each environment to its own phase, the name of the phase matches the name of the environment:

A screenshot showing the new lifecycle phase

Click ADD ENVIRONMENT:

A screenshot showing the ADD ENVIRONMENT button

Click the dropdown arrow, select the Dev environment, and click OK:

A screenshot showing the selection of the Dev environment

Repeat the process to add a new phase for the Test and Prod environments, leaving the default All must complete option selected:

A screenshot showing the selection of the Test environment A screenshot showing the selection of the Prod environment

Click SAVE:

A screenshot showing the SAVE button

Now, we need to switch the deployment project from the Default Lifecycle to the newly created lifecycle.

Click the Projects link, and click the Random Quotes project tile:

A screenshot showing the Random Quotes project

Click the Process link, and click CHANGE:

A screenshot showing the lifecycle CHANGE button in the project's process screen

Select the Dev, Test, and Prod lifecycle. Notice the Dev environment is shown as optional.

Click SAVE:

A screenshot showing the lifecycle selection dialog

Click CREATE RELEASE, and click SAVE to save the new release:

A screenshot showing the release creation screen

Because the Dev environment has been configured as optional, the initial release can be made to either the Dev or Test environments. We'll skip the Dev environment and deploy straight to Test.

Click DEPLOY TO..., and select the Test environment:

A screenshot showing the Test environment selected to deploy to

Click DEPLOY to deploy the application to the Test environment:

A screenshot of the DEPLOY button

The deployment is then performed directly in the Test environment, skipping the Dev environment:

A screenshot of the deployment being performed to the Test environment

Approvals

It's a common business requirement to have testers or product owners manually verify that a particular build meets the requirements before a deployment can be considered successful.

Octopus supports this workflow through the use of manual intervention steps. We'll add a manual intervention step to the end of the deployment process, which requires a responsible party to verify the build meets the requirements.

Open the Random Quotes project, click the Process link, and click the ADD STEP button:

A screenshot of the Random Quotes process page

Search for the Manual Intervention Required step, and add it to the process:

A screenshot of the Manual Intervention Required step

Enter Deployment Sign Off for the Step Name:

A screenshot of the new step name field

Enter the following for the Instructions:

Open the application and confirm it meets all the requirements.
A screenshot of the instructions field

Because every build is automatically deployed to the Dev environment, it doesn't make sense to force someone to manually approve all those deployments. To accommodate this, we do not enable the manual intervention step for deployments to the Dev environment.

Expand the Environments section under the Conditions heading, select the Skip specific environments option, and select the Dev environment.

Click SAVE to save the step:

A screenshot of the step environment conditions and SAVE button

When this application is deployed to the Test or Prod environments, a prompt will be displayed requiring manual sign off. Click ASSIGN TO ME to assign the task to yourself:

A screenshot of the ASSIGN TO ME button

Add a note in the provided text box, and click PROCEED to complete the deployment:

A screenshot of the manual intervention message and PROCEED button

The deployment will then complete successfully:

A screenshot of the deployment process

Email notifications

Octopus has native support for sending email notifications as part of the deployment process. We will add a step to the deployment process to let people know when a release has been deployed to an environment.

To start, we need to configure an SMTP server to send our emails. For this guide, we'll use the free SMTP server provided by Google.

Click the Configuration link:

A screenshot of the Configuration link

Click the SMTP link:

A screenshot of the SMTP link
  • Enter smtp.gmail.com as the SMTP Host.
  • Enter 587 as the SMTP Port.
  • Enable the Use SSL/TLS option.
  • Enter your Gmail address as the From Address.
  • Enter your Gmail address and password in the credentials.

You will enable the Less secure apps option on your Google account for Octopus to send emails via the Google SMTP server.

A screenshot of the SMTP configuration

Open the Random Quotes project, click the Process link, and click ADD STEP:

A screenshot of the ADD STEP button

Search for the Send an Email step, and add it to the process:

A screenshot of the Send an Email step

Enter Random quotes deployment status for the Step Name:

A screenshot of the Step Name field

Enter the email address to receive the notification in the To field:

A screenshot of the email To field

Enter Random quotes deployment status as the Subject:

A screenshot of the email Subject field

Enter the following as the Body:

Deployment to #{Octopus.Environment.Name}
#{each step in Octopus.Step}
StepName: #{step}
Status: #{step.Status.Code}
#{/each}

Here we use the #{Octopus.Environment.Name} variable provided by Octopus to add the name of the environment that was deployed to, and then loop over the status codes in the #{Octopus.Step} variable to return the status of each individual step.

The complete list of system variables can be found in the Octopus documentation.

A screenshot of the email Body field

We want to be notified of the status of this deployment regardless of whether the deployment succeeded or failed. Click the Run Conditions section to expand it.

Select the Always run option, which ensures the notification email is sent even when the deployment or the manual intervention fail:

A screenshot of the Run Condition options

Given every change to the source code will result in a deployment to the Dev environment, we do not want to generate reports for deployments to this environment.

Click the Environments section to expand it. Select the Skip specific environments option, and select the Dev environment to skip it.

This is the last piece of configuration for the step, so click SAVE to save the changes:

A screenshot of the Conditions Environments options and SAVE button

Deploy the project to the Test or Prod environments. When the deployment succeeds, the notification email will be sent:

A screenshot of the sample email

Permissions

One of the strengths of Octopus is that it models environments as first-class entities. This means the security layer can apply rules granting access only to specific environments. We'll take advantage of this ability to model and secure environments to create two users, an internal deployer who can deploy to the Dev and Test environments, and a production deployer who can deploy to the Prod environment.

We start by creating the users. Click the Configuration link:

A screenshot of the Configuration link

Click the Users link:

A screenshot of the Users link

Click ADD USER:

A screenshot of the ADD USER button

Enter internaldeployer as the Username:

A screenshot of the Username field

Enter Internal Deployer as the Display Name:

A screenshot of the Display Name field

Enter the user's email address. We have used a dummy address of internaldeployer@example.org here:

A screenshot of the Email Address field

Enter a password and confirm it. Then click SAVE to create the user:

A screenshot of the password field and SAVE button

Repeat the process for a user called productiondeployer. The summary for the productiondeployer user is shown below:

A screenshot of the user's details

The newly created users are not assigned to any teams and have no permissions to do anything. To grant them permissions, we must first create two teams. The internal deployment team will grant access to deploy to the Dev and Test environments, while the production deployment team will grant access to deploy to the Prod environment.

Click the Configuration link:

A screenshot of the Configuration link

Click the Teams link:

A screenshot of the Teams link

Click ADD TEAM:

A screenshot of the ADD TEAM button

Enter Internal Deployers for the New team name, and Grants access to perform a deployment to the internal environments for the Team description. Click SAVE to create the team:

A screenshot of the Add New Team dialog

We need to add the internaldeployer user to this team. Click ADD MEMBER:

A screenshot of the ADD MEMBER button

Select the Internal Deployer user from the dropdown list, and click ADD:

A screenshot of the Add Member dialog

The team does not grant any permissions yet. To add permissions click the USER ROLES tab, and click INCLUDE USER ROLE:

A screenshot of the INCLUDE USER ROLE button

Select the Deployment creator role from the dropdown list. As the name suggests, this role allows a user to create a deployment, which results in the deployment process being executed.

Click DEFINE SCOPE:

A screenshot of the Include User Role dialog

We only want to allow the internal deployer to deploy to the internal environments. Select the Dev and Test environments, and click APPLY:

A screenshot of the APPLY button

The permissions are then applied. We need a second permission to allow the internal deployer to view the projects dashboard. Click INCLUDE USER ROLE again:

A screenshot of the INCLUDE USER ROLE button

Select the Project viewer role. This role does not need to be scoped, so click the APPLY button:

A screenshot of the Include User Role dialog

Here are the final set of roles applied to the team:

A screenshot of the team's USER ROLES tab

Repeat the process to create a team called Production Deployers that includes the productiondeployer user, and grants the Deployment creator role scoped to the Prod environment:

A screenshot of the team's USER ROLES tab

When we log in as the internaldeployer user, we see that the Random Quotes project dashboard shows DEPLOY... buttons for the Dev and Test environments. Any deployments in the production environment will be visible, but they cannot be created by this user:

A screenshot of the Projects page

When we log in as the productiondeployer user, we see that the Random Quotes project dashboard shows DEPLOY... buttons only for the Prod environment. Also note that the lifecycle rules still apply, and only successful deployments to the Test environment are available to be promoted to the Prod environment:

A screenshot of the Projects page

Audit Log

Important interactions in Octopus are tracked in the audit log. This is useful for teams that have security or legislative requirements to track the changes and deployments made to their infrastructure.

To view the audit log, click the Configuration link:

A screenshot of the Configuration link

Click the Audit link:

A screenshot of the Audit link

A complete list of records are shown, with filtering available to help find specific events:

A screenshot of the Audit page

Conclusion

In this guide we ran through the process of building a complete CI/CD pipeline with:

  • GitHub Actions building and testing the source code and pushing the package to Octopus.
  • Octopus deploying the package to the Dev, Test, and Prod environments.
  • Email notifications generated when deployments succeed or fail.
  • Manual sign off for deployments to the Test and Prod environments.
  • Users with limited access to create releases in a subset of environments.

This is a solid starting point for any development team, but Octopus offers so much more! Below are more resources you can access to learn about the advanced functionality provided by Octopus:

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