Book Image

Learn Docker - Fundamentals of Docker 18.x

By : Dr. Gabriel N. Schenker
Book Image

Learn Docker - Fundamentals of Docker 18.x

By: Dr. Gabriel N. Schenker

Overview of this book

Docker containers have revolutionized the software supply chain in small and big enterprises. Never before has a new technology so rapidly penetrated the top 500 enterprises worldwide. Companies that embrace containers and containerize their traditional mission-critical applications have reported savings of at least 50% in total maintenance cost and a reduction of 90% (or more) of the time required to deploy new versions of those applications. Furthermore they are benefitting from increased security just by using containers as opposed to running applications outside containers. This book starts from scratch, introducing you to Docker fundamentals and setting up an environment to work with it. Then we delve into concepts such as Docker containers, Docker images, Docker Compose, and so on. We will also cover the concepts of deployment, orchestration, networking, and security. Furthermore, we explain Docker functionalities on public clouds such as AWS. By the end of this book, you will have hands-on experience working with Docker containers and orchestrators such as SwarmKit and Kubernetes.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

The tasks of an orchestrator


So, what are the tasks that we expect an orchestrator worth its money to execute for us? Let's look at them in detail. The following list shows the most important tasks that, at the time of writing, enterprise users typically expect from their orchestrator.

Reconciling the desired state

When using an orchestrator, one tells it in a declarative way how one wants it to run a given application or application service. We learned what declarative versus imperative means in Chapter 8, Docker Compose. Part of this declarative way of describing the application service we want to run is elements such as which container image to use, how many instances to run of this service, which ports to open, and more. This declaration of the properties of our application service is what we call the desired state.

So,  when we now tell the orchestrator the first time to create such a new application service based on the declaration, then the orchestrator makes sure to schedule as many...