Book Image

DevOps with Windows Server 2016

Book Image

DevOps with Windows Server 2016

Overview of this book

Delivering applications swiftly is one of the major challenges faced in fast-paced business environments. Windows Server 2016 DevOps is the solution to these challenges as it helps organizations to respond faster in order to handle the competitive pressures by replacing error-prone manual tasks using automation. This book is a practical description and implementation of DevOps principles and practices using the features provided by Windows Server 2016 and VSTS vNext. It jumps straight into explaining the relevant tools and technologies needed to implement DevOps principles and practices. It implements all major DevOps practices and principles and takes readers through it from envisioning a project up to operations and further. It uses the latest and upcoming concepts and technologies from Microsoft and open source such as Docker, Windows Container, Nano Server, DSC, Pester, and VSTS vNext. By the end of this book, you will be well aware of the DevOps principles and practices and will have implemented all these principles practically for a sample application using the latest technologies on the Microsoft platform. You will be ready to start implementing DevOps within your project/engagement.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
DevOps with Windows Server 2016
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
Acknowledgments
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Understanding Dockerfile


Dockerfile is the primary building block for creating Windows Container images. It is a simple text-based, human-readable file without any extension and is named Dockerfile. Although there is the mechanism to name it differently, generally it is named Dockerfile. We have already seen that every Container image is based on a base image; Dockerfile contains instructions to create a custom Container image from a base image. These instructions are executed sequentially from top to bottom by Docker daemon, the engine behind all activities related to Windows Containers. The instructions refer to the command and their parameters understood by Docker daemon. Dockerfile enables Infrastructure as Code practices by converting the application deployment and configuration into instructions that can be versioned and stored in a source code repository.

When building an image from Dockerfile, the file is sent to Docker daemon. For each instruction within Dockerfile, Docker daemon...