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
14.5 Rollback Traceability and Linked Releases
Orbnetes deployment and release orchestration documentation for operators and platform teams.
Rollback should never be a hidden side effect. Orbnetes models rollback as linked release entities.
Traceability expectations:
- failed/source release remains preserved,
- rollback release is created as a separate release record,
- linkage indicates rollback parent/child relationship,
- statuses, timestamps, actor context, and comments remain queryable.
Why linked releases matter:
- incident timeline is clear,
- postmortem evidence is complete,
- teams can answer what failed, what was rolled back to, and when.
Operational benefit: recovery actions are first-class audited operations, not detached terminal commands.