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
5.2 Project Settings
Orbnetes deployment and release orchestration documentation for operators and platform teams.
Project settings define identity, access scope, and operational defaults.
Typical fields and controls:
- project name and slug,
- description,
- enabled/disabled state,
- allowed agents mapping,
- members list,
- optional project-level notification switches.
Operational behavior:
- Disabled project should not be used for new operational launches.
- Settings changes should be auditable and minimal during active incidents.
- Project context selection in UI should always be explicit before running releases.
Best practices:
- Treat project settings as production configuration.
- Document intended purpose and ownership in description.
- Keep settings stable; avoid frequent structural changes during rollout windows.