Note: This project is a work in progress, expect dragons. Join our Matrix room if you're interesting in deploying DISCO for production.
Decentralized Infrastructure for Serverless Computing Operations (DISCO) is a secure, scalable, standardized software stack for developing, delivering, and debugging decentralized networks.
Check out this announcement post about DISCO.
If you would like to get started using DISCO with some defaults (Packet for servers, Cloudflare for routing), check out our Getting Started guide!
DISCO is a methodology and a framework for deploying modern, scalable and secure services.
- Composable: Infrastructure components should be simple to compose. Each service should be functional in design, meaning a well-defined set of inputs and outputs. Services should use declarative formats for setup automation, to minimize time and cost for service operators deploying the project.
- Configurable: All configuration variables should be explicitly declared and should be set using operating systems standards (such as Environment variables). Each variable should be well documented.
- Explicit Dependencies: Dependencies should be explicitly declared and isolated. Services should never rely on the implicit existence of system-wide packages.
- Hackable: Use commonly available scripting frameworks (such as Make) to allow operators to easily make changes. DISCO is entirely made with make.
DISCO’s secure, scalable and modular design offers below features:
- Kubernetes on Baremetal: Plug-and-Play Kubernetes with k3s and k3sup on Bare Metal Servers with support of Packet (Join our chat if you’d like us to hook you up with a key).
- Secure Configuration Store: DISCO offers configuration DB built on Keybase, an end-to-end encrypted private git repository to securely collaborate with team members and simplify automation.
- Observability: DISCO offers observability with Industry-standard cloud-native toolsets such as Prometheus and Graphana.
To get started, check out setup guide
A notable majority of blockchain nodes are deployed on three providers (Amazon, Google, and Microsoft) -- contrary to their values of decentralization. Over 60% of the Ethereum nodes run on Amazon alone.
Our priority at Akash is to help the broader community retain core values without compromising convenience by offering them a platform that's far richer than the cloud providers.
- Layer 0: Bare metal servers on Packet, provisioned using Terraform.
- Layer 1: Kubernetes Cluster with Helm, and Container Storage Interfaces (CSI).
- Layer 2: Observabilty (Prometheus and Graphana) and Key Management (Vault).
- Layer 3: Akash Suite.
- Layer 4: Services (Blockchains such as Cosmos Hub and NuCypher)
- Sanity Check: Cluster readiness checks for Akash.
Below is a high-level roadmap planned, checkout Akash Roadmap for current progress on the Roadmap. If you’d like to contribute, please check out our contributing guide.
- SGX Services: SGX wrappers for Vault, Tendermint, and others. Possibly, generic container wrappers.
- Kata Containers: Kata Containers are a secure container runtime with lightweight virtual machines that feel and perform like containers, but provide stronger workload isolation using hardware virtualization technology as a second layer of defense.
- GitHub Actions: Integration for CI/CD workflow automation using GitHub actions.
- Cosmos Hub: Support for deploying Gaia Full node and validators.
- Interledger Connectors: Interledger is an open protocol suite for sending payments across different ledgers. Support for deploying Interledger Connectors.
- NuCypher: NyCypher provides cryptographic infrastructure for privacy-preserving applications.
- Your Blockchain?: If you would like to add your blockchain, get in touch.
In the past ten years, my focus has been designing, building and managing distributed systems that scale to millions of individuals across the globe. From designing Kaiser’s first cloud platform in 2010 (long before the term “cloud” was coined) to deploying planetary-scale infrastructure at various hyper-growth technology companies in silicon valley.
I created the Akash Network to help bring that expertise to the masses. Prior to Akash, I co-founded AngelHack, the world’s largest hackathon organization with over 100,000 developers across 50 cities worldwide and helped launch several developer companies including Firebase (acquired by Google).
I've been deeply involved with the cloud-native revolution from its nascency as an active open source contributor and have authored libraries adopted by widely adopted organizations such as Ubuntu, HashiCorp, and Kubernetes.