Book Image

Implementing Modern DevOps

By : Danny Varghese, David Gonzalez
Book Image

Implementing Modern DevOps

By: Danny Varghese, David Gonzalez

Overview of this book

This book follows a unique approach to modern DevOps using cutting-edge tools and technologies such as Ansible, Kubernetes, and Google Cloud Platform. This book starts by explaining the organizational alignment that has to happen in every company that wants to implement DevOps in order to be effective, and the use of cloud datacenters in combination with the most advanced DevOps tools to get the best out of a small team of skilled engineers. It also delves into how to use Kubernetes to run your applications in Google Cloud Platform, minimizing the friction and hassle of maintaining a cluster but ensuring its high availability. By the end of this book, you will be able to realign teams in your company and create a Continuous Delivery pipeline with Kubernetes and Docker. With strong monitoring in place, you will also be able to react to adverse events in your system, minimizing downtime and improving the overall up-time and stability of your system.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface

Docker Swarm


As we have seen in previous chapters, Docker is a fantastic tool that follows the most modern architectural principles used for running applications packed as containers. In this case, Docker Swarm runs only Docker containers, ignoring other technologies that, at the moment, are not suitable for production, such as Rkt. Even Docker is quite new to the scene up to a point that some companies hesitate in deploying it in their production systems, as there is not so much expertise in the market as well as many doubts about security or how Docker works in general.

Docker Swarm is the clustered version of Docker, and it solves the problem described in the previous section in a very simple manner: pretty much all the docker commands that you learned in the Docker chapter works in Docker Swarm so that we can federate our hardware without actually taking care of the hardware itself. Just add nodes to the pool of resources and Swarm will take care of them, leveraging the way we build our...