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A flexible and easy way to connect and extend enterprise applications in a cloud-native world

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Overview

Kyma /kee-ma/ is a platform for extending applications with microservices and serverless Functions. It provides CLI and UI through which you can connect your application to a Kubernetes cluster. You can also expose the application's API or events securely thanks to the built-in Application Connector. You can then implement the business logic you require by creating microservices or serverless Functions. Trigger them to react to particular events or calls to your application's API.

To limit the time spent on coding, use the built-in cloud services from Service Management from such cloud providers as GCP, Azure, and AWS.

Go to the Kyma project website to learn more about our project, its features, and components.

Installation

Install Kyma locally or on a cluster. See the Installation guides for details.

NOTE: Make sure to install the latest Kyma version and keep it up to date by upgrading Kyma.

Usage

Kyma comes with the ready-to-use code snippets that you can use to test the extensions and the core functionality. See the list of existing examples in the examples repository.

Development

Develop on your remote repository forked from the original repository in Go. Read also the CONTRIBUTING.md document that includes the contributing rules specific for this repository.

Follow these steps:

NOTE: The example assumes you have the $GOPATH already set.

  1. Fork the repository in GitHub.

  2. Clone the fork to your $GOPATH workspace. Use this command to create the folder structure and clone the repository under the correct location:

    git clone [email protected]:{GitHubUsername}/kyma.git $GOPATH/src/github.com/kyma-project/kyma

    Follow the steps described in the git-workflow.md document to configure your fork.

  3. Build the project.

    Every project runs differently. Follow instructions in the main README.md document of the given project to build it.

  4. Create a branch and start to develop.

    Do not forget about creating unit and acceptance tests if needed. For the unit tests, follow the instructions specified in the main README.md document of the given project. For the details concerning the acceptance tests, go to the corresponding directory inside the tests directory. Find the information on how to run changes on the cluster without a Docker image in the Develop a service locally without using Docker document.

  5. Test your changes.

Kyma users

Read how these companies use Kyma:

SAP Accenture NETCONOMY neteleven

ARITHNEA Digital Lights FAIR FAIR

Arineo dotSource

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A flexible and easy way to connect and extend enterprise applications in a cloud-native world

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