Book Image

Learning CoreOS

By : Kingston Smiler. S, Shantanu Agrawal
Book Image

Learning CoreOS

By: Kingston Smiler. S, Shantanu Agrawal

Overview of this book

CoreOS is an open source operating system developed upon the Linux kernel. The rise of CoreOS is directly related to the rise of Docker (a Linux container management system). It is a minimal operating system layer and takes a different approach to automating the deployment of containers. The major difference between CoreOS and other Linux distributions is that CoreOS was designed to deploy hundreds of servers. CoreOS immensely helps the users to create systems, which are easy to scale and manage, making life easier for all, be it developer, QA, or deployer. This book is all about setting up, deploying, and using CoreOS to manage clusters and clouds. It will help you understand what CoreOS is and its benefits as a cloud orchestration platform. First, we’ll show you how to set up a simple CoreOS instance with single node in the cluster and how to run a Docker container inside the CoreOS instance. Next, you’ll be introduced to Fleet and systemd, and will deploy and distribute Docker services across different nodes in cluster using Fleet. Later, you’ll be briefed about running services in a cluster with constraints, publishing the services already running on the cluster to new services, and making your services interact with each other. We conclude by teaching you about advanced container networking. By the end of the book, you will know the salient features of CoreOS and will be able to deploy, administrate, and secure a CoreOS environment.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Learning CoreOS
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Introduction to network virtualization


Network virtualization is one of the most widely discussed topics in the recent past in the networking industry. To understand network virtualization better, think of server virtualization wherein the physical infrastructures are logically segregated into multiple virtual devices, each assigning to different containers for performing its workload. Similar to server virtualization, there is a requirement to virtualize the networking layer that provides connectivity for different virtual machines/containers.

As in server virtualization, wherein the customer will have full access to the virtualized server infrastructure, customers may also want to virtualize the networking infrastructure to secure data traffic between their VMs or containers. They don't want others to expose the data exchange that is happening between their applications to other customers' VMs or containers.

Network virtualization as a concept is not new to the networking world. Network...