Book Image

The DevOps 2.1 Toolkit: Docker Swarm

By : Viktor Farcic
Book Image

The DevOps 2.1 Toolkit: Docker Swarm

By: Viktor Farcic

Overview of this book

Viktor Farcic's latest book, The DevOps 2.1 Toolkit: Docker Swarm, takes you deeper into one of the major subjects of his international best seller, The DevOps 2.0 Toolkit, and shows you how to successfully integrate Docker Swarm into your DevOps toolset. Viktor shares with you his expert knowledge in all aspects of building, testing, deploying, and monitoring services inside Docker Swarm clusters. You'll go through all the tools required for running a cluster. You'll travel through the whole process with clusters running locally on a laptop. Once you're confident with that outcome, Viktor shows you how to translate your experience to different hosting providers like AWS, Azure, and DigitalOcean. Viktor has updated his DevOps 2.0 framework in this book to use the latest and greatest features and techniques introduced in Docker. We'll go through many practices and even more tools. While there will be a lot of theory, this is a hands-on book. You won't be able to complete it by reading it on the metro on your way to work. You'll have to read this book while in front of the computer and get your hands dirty.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
11
Embracing Destruction: Pets versus Cattle

Scaling services


We should always run at least two instances of any given service. That way they can share the load and, if one of them fails, there will be no downtime. We'll explore Swarm's failover capability soon and leave load balancing for the next chapter.

We can, for example, tell Swarm that we want to run five replicas of then go-demo service:

docker service scale go-demo=5

With the service scale command, we scheduled five replicas. Swarm will make sure that five instances of go-demo are running somewhere inside the cluster.

We can confirm that, indeed, five replicas are running through the, already familiar, service ls command:

docker service ls

The output is as follows (IDs are removed for brevity):

NAME       MODE       REPLICAS IMAGE
go-demo    replicated 5/5      vfarcic/go-demo:1.0
go-demo-db replicated 1/1      mongo:3.2.10

As we can see, five out of five REPLICAS of the go-demo service are running.

The service ps command provides more detailed information about a single service:

docker...