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Docker for Developers

You're reading from   Docker for Developers Develop and run your application with Docker containers using DevOps tools for continuous delivery

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789536058
Length 468 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Richard Bullington-McGuire Richard Bullington-McGuire
Author Profile Icon Richard Bullington-McGuire
Richard Bullington-McGuire
Michael Schwartz Michael Schwartz
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Michael Schwartz
Andrew K. Dennis Andrew K. Dennis
Author Profile Icon Andrew K. Dennis
Andrew K. Dennis
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: An Introduction to Docker – Containers and Local Development
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Docker FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Using VirtualBox and Docker Containers for Development 4. Chapter 3: Sharing Containers Using Docker Hub 5. Chapter 4: Composing Systems Using Containers 6. Section 2: Running Docker in Production
7. Chapter 5: Alternatives for Deploying and Running Containers in Production 8. Chapter 6: Deploying Applications with Docker Compose 9. Chapter 7: Continuous Deployment with Jenkins 10. Chapter 8: Deploying Docker Apps to Kubernetes 11. Chapter 9: Cloud-Native Continuous Deployment Using Spinnaker 12. Chapter 10: Monitoring Docker Using Prometheus, Grafana, and Jaeger 13. Chapter 11: Scaling and Load Testing Docker Applications 14. Section 3: Docker Security – Securing Your Containers
15. Chapter 12: Introduction to Container Security 16. Chapter 13: Docker Security Fundamentals and Best Practices 17. Chapter 14: Advanced Docker Security – Secrets, Secret Commands, Tagging, and Labels 18. Chapter 15: Scanning, Monitoring, and Using Third-Party Tools 19. Chapter 16: Conclusion – End of the Road, but not the Journey 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Docker logging and container runtime logging

When you are trying to troubleshoot problems with your application, it helps to have detailed logs for both the application itself and from whatever system it runs. Every Docker container, whether it is run locally or with a cloud container runtime manager such as Kubernetes, produces its own logs that you can query.

In previous chapters, we've used both the docker logs command and the kubectl logs command in order to examine logs for the demo application when run both on a local workstation and in the cloud with Kubernetes. These commands can yield insight into events that are critical to your system, including both application logging messages and error and exception logs. They are still the bedrock tools you will reach for; but particularly when we need to scale out our application with Kubernetes, we will need a more sophisticated approach.

Understanding Kubernetes container logging

Every Docker container running in every...

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