Book Image

Administering Windows Server Hybrid Core Infrastructure AZ-800 Exam Guide

By : Steve Miles
Book Image

Administering Windows Server Hybrid Core Infrastructure AZ-800 Exam Guide

By: Steve Miles

Overview of this book

Written by an Azure MVP and Microsoft Certified Trainer with 20 years of experience in data center infrastructure, this AZ-800 study guide is an essential preparation tool for administrators who want to take the exam and acquire key skills that will help them thrive in their careers. This book will guide you through all the ways Windows Server can be used to manage hybrid solutions on-premises and in the cloud, starting with deploying and managing Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) in on-premises and cloud environments. You’ll then dive into managing virtual machines and containers and progress to implementing and managing an on-premises and hybrid networking infrastructure. The later parts of the book focus on managing storage and file services, concluding with a detailed overview of all the knowledge needed to pass the AZ-800 exam with practical examples throughout the chapters. In the final chapter, you’ll be able to test your understanding of the topics covered with the help of practice exams to make sure that you’re completely prepared for the contents and structure of the exam. By the end of the book, you’ll have gained the knowledge, both practical and conceptual, that's required to administer Windows Server hybrid core infrastructure confidently.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1: Hybrid Identity
6
Part 2: Hybrid Networking
9
Part 3: Hybrid Storage
12
Part 4: Hybrid Compute
18
Part 5: Exam Prep
19
Chapter 14: Exam Preparation Practice Tests

Managing Windows Server container images

A Windows container is created, run, and managed through Docker. Docker Engine provides tools that help automate the creation process. The Docker components that enable this are as follows:

  • The Docker text file, Dockerfile: This file includes instructions for creating a container image. This includes identifying the base image that will be used and the commands that will be run when creating the image and identifying when new instances of the image are deployed.
  • The Docker command, docker build: This command calls the Dockerfile, which then triggers the image creation process.

In addition to automation, Docker commands can be run manually. The following are some common commands for reference:

  • docker images: This command lists installed images on the container host
  • docker run: This command creates a container using a container image
  • docker commit: This command commits the changes that have been made to a container...