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Docker Orchestration

You're reading from   Docker Orchestration A concise, fast-paced guide to orchestrating and deploying scalable services with Docker

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787122123
Length 284 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Randall Smith Randall Smith
Author Profile Icon Randall Smith
Randall Smith
Gianluca Arbezzano Gianluca Arbezzano
Author Profile Icon Gianluca Arbezzano
Gianluca Arbezzano
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Docker Orchestration FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Multi-Container Applications with Docker Compose 3. Cluster Building Blocks – Registry, Overlay Networks, and Shared Storage 4. Orchestration with Docker Swarm 5. Deploying and Managing Services with Kubernetes 6. Working with Mesosphere 7. Using Simpler Orchestration Tools – Fleet and Cattle 8. Monitoring Your Cluster 9. Using Continuous Integration to Build, Test, and Deploy Containers 10. Why Stop at Containers? Automating Your Infrastructure

Configuring Docker hosts

In many ways, Docker abstracts the server away from the application. It no longer matters which Linux distribution a server is running. A Docker application can be based on any distribution available. Multiple applications can run on the same server and use different base images. Despite that, without the server, nothing runs.

In Chapter 9 , Using Continuous Integration to Build, Test, and Deploy Containers, we discussed the importance of having a consistent build process for Docker images because doing so provides consistency and reliability. The same is true for the servers those applications run on. If the servers are not consistent, it could cause problems for the containers running on them. This section will discuss different ways of ensuring that the server images are consistent.

Using configuration management

Configuration management has been around on servers in many forms for decades. Sometimes it was as simple as mounting /usr from a remote server or using...

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