Book Image

The Linux DevOps Handbook

By : Damian Wojsław, Grzegorz Adamowicz
3.5 (2)
Book Image

The Linux DevOps Handbook

3.5 (2)
By: Damian Wojsław, Grzegorz Adamowicz

Overview of this book

The Linux DevOps Handbook is a comprehensive resource that caters to both novice and experienced professionals, ensuring a strong foundation in Linux. This book will help you understand how Linux serves as a cornerstone of DevOps, offering the flexibility, stability, and scalability essential for modern software development and operations. You’ll begin by covering Linux distributions, intermediate Linux concepts, and shell scripting to get to grips with automating tasks and streamlining workflows. You’ll then progress to mastering essential day-to-day tools for DevOps tasks. As you learn networking in Linux, you’ll be equipped with connection establishment and troubleshooting skills. You’ll also learn how to use Git for collaboration and efficient code management. The book guides you through Docker concepts for optimizing your DevOps workflows and moves on to advanced DevOps practices, such as monitoring, tracing, and distributed logging. You’ll work with Terraform and GitHub to implement continuous integration (CI)/continuous deployment (CD) pipelines and employ Atlantis for automated software delivery. Additionally, you’ll identify common DevOps pitfalls and strategies to avoid them. By the end of this book, you’ll have built a solid foundation in Linux fundamentals, practical tools, and advanced practices, all contributing to your enhanced Linux skills and successful DevOps implementation.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: Linux Basics
6
Part 2: Your Day-to-Day DevOps Tools
12
Part 3: DevOps Cloud Toolkit

Docker advanced use cases

While using Docker and its CLI, there are a lot of things we will need to take care of in terms of the life cycle of the container, build process, volumes, and networking. Some of those things you can automate by using other tools, but it’s still useful to know what’s going on underneath.

Running public images

A lot of public images you can find on Docker Hub (https://hub.docker.com) have initialization scripts available that take configuration from environment variables or the mounted files to a predefined directory.

The most commonly used image that uses both techniques is images with databases. Let’s look for an official Docker PostgreSQL image. You can find the one we’ll be using here: https://hub.docker.com/_/postgres.

To run the official PostgreSQL Docker image, you can use the following command:

admin@myhome:~$ docker run --name some-postgres -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword -d postgres

In this command...