#flux
11 approved public terms with this tag.
Flux Kustomization is a GitOps term for a Flux object that builds and applies manifests from a source. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used Flux Kustomization before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
GitRepository Source is a GitOps term for a Flux source object that points to a Git repository. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used GitRepository Source before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Helm Controller is a GitOps term for a Flux controller that manages Helm releases declaratively. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used Helm Controller before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
HelmRelease is a GitOps term for a declarative Flux object for managing a Helm chart release. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used HelmRelease before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
HelmRepository Source is a GitOps term for a Flux source object that points to Helm chart storage. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used HelmRepository Source before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
ImagePolicy is a GitOps term for a Flux image automation rule that selects an image version. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used ImagePolicy before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
ImageUpdateAutomation is a GitOps term for a Flux workflow that writes selected image updates back to Git. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used ImageUpdateAutomation before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Kustomize Controller is a GitOps term for a Flux controller that applies Kustomize-based configuration. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used Kustomize Controller before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Notification Controller is a GitOps term for a Flux controller that sends events to external systems. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used Notification Controller before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
OCIRepository Source is a GitOps term for a Flux source object that points to an OCI artifact repository. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used OCIRepository Source before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Source Controller is a GitOps term for a Flux controller that fetches and exposes source artifacts. It helps teams, humans, and agents compare declared source state with running systems, then act without pretending a deployment did more than the evidence shows. Source context: Flux documentation.
“The team used Source Controller before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”