Book Image

Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins

By : Rafał Leszko
Book Image

Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins

By: Rafał Leszko

Overview of this book

The combination of Docker and Jenkins improves your Continuous Delivery pipeline using fewer resources. It also helps you scale up your builds, automate tasks and speed up Jenkins performance with the benefits of Docker containerization. This book will explain the advantages of combining Jenkins and Docker to improve the continuous integration and delivery process of app development. It will start with setting up a Docker server and configuring Jenkins on it. It will then provide steps to build applications on Docker files and integrate them with Jenkins using continuous delivery processes such as continuous integration, automated acceptance testing, and configuration management. Moving on you will learn how to ensure quick application deployment with Docker containers along with scaling Jenkins using Docker Swarm. Next, you will get to know how to deploy applications using Docker images and testing them with Jenkins. By the end of the book, you will be enhancing the DevOps workflow by integrating the functionalities of Docker and Jenkins.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Exercises

In this chapter, we have covered the fundamentals of Ansible and the way to use it together with Docker. As an exercise, we propose the following tasks:

  1. Create the server infrastructure and use Ansible to manage it.
    • Connect a physical machine or run a VirtualBox machine to emulate the remote server
    • Configure SSH access to the remote machine (SSH keys)
    • Install Python on the remote machine
    • Create an Ansible inventory with the remote machine
    • Run the Ansible ad hoc command (with the ping module) to check that the infrastructure is configured correctly
  2. Create a Python-based "hello world" web service and deploy it in a remote machine using Ansible playbook.
    • The service can look exactly the same as described in the exercises for the chapter
    • Create a playbook, which deploys the service into the remote machine
    • Run the ansible-playbook command and check whether...