we had the inspect container here for 3 reasons: 1) get exit code 2) see if container is still running (debugging madness) 3) see if docker thinks it was an OOM 1) is something wait returns, but due to 2) and 3) we just delayed it until inspection 2) was really just for debugging since we had 3) 3) seems unnecessary. to me, an OOM is an OOM is an OOM. so why have a whole docker inspect call just to find out? (we could move this down, since it's a sad path, and make the call only when necessary, but are we really getting any value from this distinction anyway? i've never ran into it, myself) inspect was actually causing tasks to time out, since the call to inspect could put us over our task timeout, even though our container ran to completion. we could have fixed this by checking the context earlier, but we don't really need inspect either, which will reduce the docker calls we make, which will make more unicorn puppers. now tasks should have more 'true' timeouts. tried to boy scout, but tracing patch also cleans this block up too.
Oracle Functions 
Oracle Functions is an event-driven, open source, functions-as-a-service compute platform that you can run anywhere. Some of it's key features:
- Write once
- Run anywhere
- Public, private and hybrid cloud
- Import functions directly from Lambda and run them wherever you want
- Easy to use for developers
- Easy to manage for operators
- Written in Go
- Simple yet powerful extensibility
Prequisites
- Docker 17.05 or later installed and running
- Logged into Docker Hub (
docker login)
Usage
Installation (if running locally)
NOTE: The following instructions apply while the project is a private repo. This will build the Functions server and the CLI tool directly from the repo instead of using pre-built containers. Once the project is public, these steps will be unnecessary.
# Build and Install CLI tool
cd fn
make dep # just once
make install
# Build and Run Functions Server
cd ..
make dep # just once
make run # will build as well
Installation (if using internal alpha service)
Set your system to point to the internal service on BMC:
export API_URL=http://129.146.10.253:80
Download the pre-built CLI binary:
- Visit: https://gitlab-odx.oracle.com/odx/functions/tree/master/fn/releases/download/0.3.2
- Download the CLI for your platform
- Put in /usr/local/bin
- chmod +x
Your First Function
Functions are small but powerful blocks of code that generally do one simple thing. Forget about monoliths when using functions, just focus on the task that you want the function to perform.
The following is a simple Go program that outputs a string to STDOUT. Copy and paste the code below into a file called func.go. Currently the function must be named func.your_language_extention (ie func.go, func.js, etc.)
package main
import (
"fmt"
)
func main() {
fmt.Println("Hello from Oracle Functions!")
}
Now run the following CLI commands:
# Initialize your function
# This detects your runtime from the code above and creates a func.yaml
fn init <DOCKERHUB_USERNAME>/hello
# Test your function
# This will run inside a container exactly how it will on the server
fn run
# Deploy your functions to the Oracle Functions server (default localhost:8080)
# This will create a route to your function as well
fn deploy myapp
Now you can call your function:
curl http://localhost:8080/r/myapp/hello
Or in a browser: http://localhost:8080/r/myapp/hello
That's it! You just deployed your first function and called it. Now to update your function
you can update your code and run fn deploy myapp again.
To Learn More
- Visit our Functions Tutorial Series
- See our full documentation
- View all of our examples
- You can also write your functions in AWS Lambda format
Get Involved
- TODO: Slack or Discord community
- Learn how to contribute
- See milestones for detailed issues
User Interface
This is the graphical user interface for Oracle Functions. It is currently not buildable.
docker run --rm -it --link functions:api -p 4000:4000 -e "API_URL=http://api:8080" treeder/functions-ui
For more information, see: https://github.com/treeder/functions-ui
Next up
Check out the Tutorial Series.
It will demonstrate some of Oracle Functions capabilities through a series of exmaples. We'll try to show examples in most major languages. This is a great place to start!