Book Image

Docker on Windows - Second Edition

By : Elton Stoneman
Book Image

Docker on Windows - Second Edition

By: Elton Stoneman

Overview of this book

Docker on Windows, Second Edition teaches you all you need to know about Docker on Windows, from the 101 to running highly-available workloads in production. You’ll be guided through a Docker journey, starting with the key concepts and simple examples of .NET Framework and .NET Core apps in Docker containers on Windows. Then you’ll learn how to use Docker to modernize the architecture and development of traditional ASP.NET and SQL Server apps. The examples show you how to break up legacy monolithic applications into distributed apps and deploy them to a clustered environment in the cloud, using the exact same artifacts you use to run them locally. You’ll see how to build a CI/CD pipeline which uses Docker to compile, package, test and deploy your applications. To help you move confidently to production, you’ll learn about Docker security, and the management and support options. The book finishes with guidance on getting started with Docker in your own projects. You’ll walk through some real-world case studies for Docker implementations, from small-scale on-premises apps to very large-scale apps running on Azure.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Understanding Docker and Windows Containers
6
Section 2: Designing and Building Containerized Solutions
10
Section 3: Preparing for Docker in Production
14
Section 4: Getting Started on Your Container Journey

Managing application configuration in Docker Swarm

I spent some time in Chapter 5, Adopting Container-First Solution Design building a flexible configuration system into my Docker images for the NerdDinner stack. The core principle of that was to bundle the default configuration for development into each image, but allow settings to be overridden when you run a container. That means we'll use the same Docker image in every environment, just swapping out the configuration settings to change behavior.

That works for a single Docker Engine where I can use environment variables to override individual settings and volume mounts to replace whole configuration files. You can do much more with configuration in Docker Swarm—using Docker config objects and Docker secrets to store data in the swarm that can be delivered to containers. This is a much neater way of dealing with...