3.1 Control Plane vs Agent Execution Plane
3.2 Project Scope Model
3.3 Data Flow: Source -> Release -> Pipeline -> Logs/Artifacts
3.4 Runtime Configuration Layers (global / project / environment)
3.5 Pipeline Execution Semantics
3.6 Release Governance Path
3.7 Rollback Architecture (Policy-driven)
3.8 Security and Trust Boundaries
3.9 State and Persistence Model
3.10 Scalability Model
3.11 Failure Modes and Recovery Patterns
3.12 Why This Architecture Works in Practice
12.4 Launch Inputs in Release Context
Orbnetes deployment and release orchestration documentation for operators and platform teams.
Launch Inputs are blueprint-defined parameters collected at release creation.
How they work in release context:
- Inputs are validated before launch.
- Required inputs must be present.
- Values are stored in release metadata for traceability.
- Runtime jobs use provided values during execution.
Why this matters:
- avoids editing YAML for per-release differences,
- supports operator-driven controlled variation (for example target service mode),
- keeps release intent explicit and reviewable.
Best practice:
- make critical operational toggles typed inputs (choice/boolean),
- keep input names clear and stable across blueprint versions.