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project-charlie/docs/strategy.md
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Strategy

Pattern

Pull-based GitOps via Gitea Actions runners on the owner host.

dev box ── git push ──► Gitea (Charlie/<stack>) ── webhook ──► runner on owner host
                                                                   │
                                                                   ▼
                                          git -C /mnt/nas/stacks/<stack> pull --ff-only
                                          docker compose pull && docker compose up -d

The git working tree at /mnt/nas/stacks/<stack>/ is the deployment. Runtime state lives separately under /mnt/nas/data/<stack>/ (see layout.md).

Rules

  • One owner host per stack (singleton stacks). Only that host's runner ever touches the working tree.
  • Shared stacks (run on multiple hosts — see Shared stacks) follow the same NFS-shared-tree model but each host runs its own docker compose up -d against host-specific overrides.
  • No hand-edits on the host once a stack is repo-managed. git pull --ff-only will refuse to clobber.
  • Runtime state never enters git. Compose files bind into /mnt/nas/data/<stack>/, not into the working tree.
  • .env ignored, .env.example tracked. Secrets stay out.
  • Image tags pinned. No :latest.
  • Cross-host self-update: the runner that deploys Charlie/gitea lives on morgott; the runner that updates morgott's runner lives on melina. A runner never redeploys itself mid-job.

Repo types

Three. (We dropped upstream+overrides — see Why no upstream cloning.)

init

Stack is currently just a NAS folder. git init in the new /mnt/nas/stacks/<stack>/, push to Charlie/<name>. Recipe: migration.md.

rewrite

Code we author, currently a clone of a github.com repo. Move to /mnt/nas/stacks/<stack>/, git remote set-url origin to Charlie. Recipe: migration.md.

mirror

Pull-mirror of an upstream we don't customise (or want as offline backup). Configured via Gitea's pull-mirror feature. Read-only, never deployed from. Naming: Charlie/<name>-mirror.

Shared stacks

Some stacks run on multiple hosts with the same image but slightly different configuration (e.g. otelcollector, portainer-agent). The pattern, borrowed from Ansible inventories + Kustomize overlays + Kubernetes DaemonSets:

Charlie/<stack>/
├── docker-compose.yml             # the "what" — default, used by hosts without an override
├── docker-compose.<host>.yml      # full per-host compose (when the delta is structural)
├── envs/
│   ├── morgott.env                # per-host env (Ansible host_vars equivalent)
│   ├── melina.env
│   ├── mohg.env
│   └── miquella.env
├── overrides/                     # additive overlay deltas (when env can't express it)
│   └── <host>.yml
├── deploy.sh                      # picks env + compose file based on `hostname -s`
└── README.md

Resolution order in deploy.sh (per host)

  1. If docker-compose.<host>.yml exists → use only that (full per-host compose).
  2. Else docker-compose.yml + (if present) overrides/<host>.yml layered on top.
  3. If envs/<host>.env exists → loaded with --env-file in either case.

Hostname is lowercased (hostname -s | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]').

When to use which

Delta type Use
Different scalar value (port, env var, URL) envs/<host>.env
Add an extra service or scalar field overrides/<host>.yml (compose merges additively)
Replace a list (volumes, command, networks) docker-compose.<host>.yml (full file)
Different image docker-compose.<host>.yml

Compose's !override and !reset YAML tags exist for list-replacement, but support is uneven across compose versions (notably broken on Synology DSM's bundled compose). Prefer the full-file approach when replacing lists.

Canonical deploy.sh

#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
cd "$(dirname "$0")"
HOST=$(hostname -s | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]')

if [ -f "docker-compose.$HOST.yml" ]; then
  args=(-f "docker-compose.$HOST.yml")
else
  args=(-f docker-compose.yml)
  [ -f "overrides/$HOST.yml" ] && args+=(-f "overrides/$HOST.yml")
fi
[ -f "envs/$HOST.env" ] && args=(--env-file "envs/$HOST.env" "${args[@]}")

exec sudo docker compose "${args[@]}" "$@"

Mental model

  • "What" = docker-compose.yml (or per-host file).
  • "Where" = the host running ./deploy.sh (no inventory file; the host knows its own name).
  • Per-host vars = envs/<host>.env.
  • Per-host structural deltas = overrides/<host>.yml for additive, docker-compose.<host>.yml for replacement.
  • Group defaults = compose env-var defaults (${VAR:-default}).

Once runners exist (Phase 2)

Workflow declares a host matrix; one job per host, all parallel:

strategy:
  matrix:
    host: [morgott, melina, mohg, miquella]
runs-on: [self-hosted, "${{ matrix.host }}"]
steps:
  - run: cd /mnt/nas/stacks/<stack> && ./deploy.sh up -d

That's a Kubernetes DaemonSet shape adapted to compose + Gitea Actions.

Why no upstream cloning

Previously we considered cloning upstream's source on the host and layering a docker-compose.override.yml. Dropped because:

  • For every "upstream image" stack (invidious, searxng, victoriametrics, mealie, paperless-ngx), we only ever ran the published image. Their source tree is dead weight on the host.
  • Override-on-template means the upstream's compose can change under us silently.
  • Two-remote / rebase / force-push dance was the price for dubious value.

Instead: our docker-compose.yml references the published image directly. It is the only compose. Upstream's compose is a reference document we read in their mirror repo when we want to see what changed.

Image-update flow (Phase 3)

Diun watches registries; on a tag/digest change it POSTs to a Gitea webhook that triggers a redeploy workflow with force-pull: true on the owner host. Replaces watchtower.

Secrets

Open question. Candidate: vaultwarden as the source, with a runner-side fetch step that materialises .env per job. Decided when we design the runner stack.

Why not Portainer/Komodo/Dockge

  • Portainer Stacks-from-Git: works, but no submodule support, opinionated about working-tree location, adds a control plane on top of git.
  • Komodo: nice, also pull-based, also relocates working trees. Reconsider if we ever want a UI.
  • Dockge: file mgmt only, no git wiring.

The runner-driven pattern keeps us in plain git + docker compose and adds nothing the team doesn't already understand.