Book Image

Mastering Docker Enterprise

By : Mark Panthofer
Book Image

Mastering Docker Enterprise

By: Mark Panthofer

Overview of this book

While known mostly as the open source engine behind tens of millions of server nodes, Docker also offers commercially supported enterprise tooling known as the Docker Enterprise. This platform leverages the deep roots from Docker Engine - Community (formerly Docker CE) and Kubernetes, but adds support and tooling to efficiently operate a secure container platform at scale. With hundreds of enterprises on board, best practices and adoption patterns are emerging rapidly. These learning points can be used to inform adopters and help manage the enterprise transformation associated with enterprise container adoption. This book starts by explaining the case for Docker Enterprise, as well as its structure and reference architecture. From there, we progress through the PoC,pilot and production stages as a working model for adoption, evolving the platform’s design and configuration for each stage and using detailed application examples along the way to clarify and demonstrate important concepts.The book concludes with Docker’s impact on other emerging software technologies, such as Blockchain and Serverless computing. By the end of this book, you’ll have a better understanding of what it takes to get your enterprise up and running with Docker Enterprise and beyond.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Docker Enterprise
5
Section 2: Piloting Docker Enterprise
10
Section 3: In Production with Docker Enterprise

Moving from science projects to production platforms

In the early days, and for containers up until about the middle of 2017, Docker-based applications look more like science projects than well engineered production platforms. It seems as though no amount of technical debt was too high as long as your application was running, stable, and cool. Additionally, the hand-rolled tooling it took to support early Docker/Kubernetes applications was fully understood by only one or two members of an enterprise team, and they were usually more aligned with the developers and less aligned with the operations team, creating a huge gap in the enterprise skill set required to support containers in production. As the technical debt grew and the skill set gap widened, a large market opportunity emerged.

With Docker's explosive growth since 2013, a significant market opportunity emerged to...