This is a minimal implementation that closes #7463. It doesn’t include true support for moving around within the command to edit using arrow keys because it gets too complex when managing wrapping at the edge of the terminal. Instead, arrow keys are ignored. It also ignores ^A and ^E, which are cursor manipulations that pose similar problems to arrow keys. It does support ^U, which deletes the entire command. It also allows a command to be pasted, which was previously unsupported. This is accomplished by migrating from Xterm.js’s onKey handler to onData, which is recommended here: https://github.com/xtermjs/xterm.js/issues/2673#issuecomment-574897733 onData is a higher-level handler that issues events with the final interpreted data instead of the individual key events. That means the processing in this PR has changed from inspecting DOM key events to inspecting their ASCII equivalents, which I’ve extracted into a utility dictionary for use in tests and implementation. One consequence of ignoring most control characters is that if you paste a string that includes a control character, that character will be stripped. It’s somewhat strange for compound sequences like arrow keys; if you run copy('/bin/b' + '\x1b[D' + 'ash') in a Javascript console and paste what’s on the clipboard, you get "/bin/b[Dash". That’s because the left arrow key, as in that centre portion of the string, is represented by the escape character and a coded sequence. Stripping the control character leaves the coded sequence as part of the paste. That seems like an acceptable compromise vs either ignoring any pasted string with control characters (confusing UX) or trying to interpret and strip all such compound control sequences (difficult to be exhaustive).
Nomad

Overview
Nomad is an easy-to-use, flexible, and performant workload orchestrator that deploys:
Nomad enables developers to use declarative infrastructure-as-code for deploying their applications (jobs). Nomad uses bin packing to efficiently schedule jobs and optimize for resource utilization. Nomad is supported on macOS, Windows, and Linux.
Nomad is widely adopted and used in production by PagerDuty, Target, Citadel, Trivago, SAP, Pandora, Roblox, eBay, Deluxe Entertainment, and more.
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Deploy Containers and Legacy Applications: Nomad’s flexibility as an orchestrator enables an organization to run containers, legacy, and batch applications together on the same infrastructure. Nomad brings core orchestration benefits to legacy applications without needing to containerize via pluggable task drivers.
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Simple & Reliable: Nomad runs as a single 75MB binary and is entirely self contained - combining resource management and scheduling into a single system. Nomad does not require any external services for storage or coordination. Nomad automatically handles application, node, and driver failures. Nomad is distributed and resilient, using leader election and state replication to provide high availability in the event of failures.
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Device Plugins & GPU Support: Nomad offers built-in support for GPU workloads such as machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI). Nomad uses device plugins to automatically detect and utilize resources from hardware devices such as GPU, FPGAs, and TPUs.
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Federation for Multi-Region, Multi-Cloud: Nomad was designed to support infrastructure at a global scale. Nomad supports federation out-of-the-box and can deploy jobs across multiple regions and clouds.
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Proven Scalability: Nomad is optimistically concurrent, which increases throughput and reduces latency for workloads. Nomad has been proven to scale to clusters of 10K+ nodes in real-world production environments.
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HashiCorp Ecosystem: Nomad integrates seamlessly with Terraform, Consul, Vault for provisioning, service discovery, and secrets management.
Getting Started
Get started with Nomad quickly in a sandbox environment on the public cloud or on your computer.
- Local
- AWS
- Azure
These methods are not meant for production.
Documentation & Guides
- Installing Nomad for Production
- Advanced Job Scheduling on Nomad with Affinities
- Increasing Nomad Fault Tolerance with Spread
- Load Balancing on Nomad with Fabio & Consul
- Deploying Stateful Workloads via Portworx
- Running Apache Spark on Nomad
- Integrating Vault with Nomad for Secrets Management
- Securing Nomad with TLS
- Continuous Deployment with Nomad and Terraform
- Auto-bootstrapping a Nomad Cluster
Documentation is available on the Nomad website here.
Resources
- Website
- Mailing List
- Gitter
- Webinars
- Community Calls
Who Uses Nomad
- CircleCI
- Citadel
- Deluxe Entertainment
- Jet.com (Walmart)
- PagerDuty
- Pandora
- SAP Ariba
- SeatGeek
- Spaceflight Industries
- SpotInst
- Target
- Trivago
- Roblox
- Oscar Health
- eBay
- Joyent
- Dutch National Police
- N26
- Elsevier
- Graymeta
- NIH NCBI
- Q2Ebanking
- imgix
- Region Syddanmark
...and more!
Contributing to Nomad
If you wish to contribute to Nomad, you will need Go installed on your machine (version 1.14.1+ is required, and gcc-go is not supported).
See the contributing directory for more developer documentation.
Developing with Vagrant There is an included Vagrantfile that can help bootstrap the process. The created virtual machine is based off of Ubuntu 16, and installs several of the base libraries that can be used by Nomad.
To use this virtual machine, checkout Nomad and run vagrant up from the root
of the repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad.git
$ cd nomad
$ vagrant up
The virtual machine will launch, and a provisioning script will install the needed dependencies.
Developing locally
For local dev first make sure Go is properly installed, including setting up a
GOPATH. After setting up Go, clone this
repository into $GOPATH/src/github.com/hashicorp/nomad. Then you can
download the required build tools such as vet, cover, godep etc by bootstrapping
your environment.
$ make bootstrap
...
Nomad creates many file handles for communicating with tasks, log handlers, etc.
In some development environments, particularly macOS, the default number of file
descriptors is too small to run Nomad's test suite. You should set
ulimit -n 1024 or higher in your shell. This setting is scoped to your current
shell and doesn't affect other running shells or future shells.
Afterwards type make test. This will run the tests. If this exits with exit status 0,
then everything is working!
$ make test
...
To compile a development version of Nomad, run make dev. This will put the
Nomad binary in the bin and $GOPATH/bin folders:
$ make dev
Optionally run Consul to enable service discovery and health checks:
$ sudo consul agent -dev
And finally start the nomad agent:
$ sudo bin/nomad agent -dev
If the Nomad UI is desired in the development version, run make dev-ui. This will build the UI from source and compile it into the dev binary.
$ make dev-ui
...
$ bin/nomad
...
To compile protobuf files, installing protoc is required: See
https://github.com/google/protobuf for more information.
Note: Building the Nomad UI from source requires Node, Yarn, and Ember CLI. These tools are already in the Vagrant VM. Read the UI README for more info.
To cross-compile Nomad, run make prerelease and make release.
This will generate all the static assets, compile Nomad for multiple
platforms and place the resulting binaries into the ./pkg directory:
$ make prerelease
$ make release
...
$ ls ./pkg
...