Book Image

Extending Docker

By : Russ McKendrick
Book Image

Extending Docker

By: Russ McKendrick

Overview of this book

With Docker, it is possible to get a lot of apps running on the same old servers, making it very easy to package and ship programs. The ability to extend Docker using plugins and load third-party plugins is incredible, and organizations can massively benefit from it. In this book, you will read about what first and third party tools are available to extend the functionality of your existing Docker installation and how to approach your next Docker infrastructure deployment. We will show you how to work with Docker plugins, install it, and cover its lifecycle. We also cover network and volume plugins, and you will find out how to build your own plugin. You’ll discover how to integrate it with Puppet, Ansible, Jenkins, Flocker, Rancher, Packer, and more with third-party plugins. Then, you’ll see how to use Schedulers such as Kubernetes and Amazon ECS. Finally, we’ll delve into security, troubleshooting, and best practices when extending Docker. By the end of this book, you will learn how to extend Docker and customize it based on your business requirements with the help of various tools and plugins.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Packaging images


So far, we have been quite happily downloading prebuilt images from the Docker Hub to test with. Next up, we are going to be looking at creating our own images. Before we dive into creating images using third-party tools, we should have a quick look at how to go about building them in Docker.

An application

Before we start building our own images, we should really have an application to "bake" into it. I suspect you are probably getting bored of doing the same WordPress installation over and over again. We are going to be looking at something completely different.

So, we are going to build an image that has Moby Counter installed. Moby counter is an application written by Kai Davenport, who describes it as follows:

"A small app to demonstrate keeping state inside a docker-compose application."

The application runs in a browser and will add a Docker logo to the page wherever you click, the idea being that it uses a Redis or Postgres backend to store the number of Docker logos...