Define the new internet.
Look up the words people use online, add the ones we missed, and help make the internet easier to understand.
Look up the words people use online, add the ones we missed, and help make the internet easier to understand.
1,322 definitions
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.”
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.”
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.”
Image Automation is a GitOps term for updating deployment source when an allowed image version is available. 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 Image Automation before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Semver Image Policy is a GitOps term for an image selection rule based on semantic version ranges. 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 Semver Image Policy before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Image Tag Drift is a GitOps term for a mismatch between the image tag in source and the running image evidence. 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 Image Tag Drift before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Immutable Artifact is a GitOps term for a build or package that should not change after publication. 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: OpenGitOps principles.
“The team used Immutable Artifact before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Manifest Digest is a GitOps term for a content hash that identifies a specific manifest or artifact. 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: OpenGitOps principles.
“The team used Manifest Digest before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”
Registry Mirror is a GitOps term for a trusted copy of image or artifact storage used for speed or resilience. 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: OpenGitOps principles.
“The team used Registry Mirror before lunch, so the release did not sprint into production wearing untied shoes.”