Book Image

Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins, 3rd Edition - Third Edition

By : Rafał Leszko
Book Image

Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins, 3rd Edition - Third Edition

By: Rafał Leszko

Overview of this book

This updated third edition of Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins will explain the advantages of combining Jenkins and Docker to improve the continuous integration and delivery process of app development. You’ll start by setting up a Docker server and configuring Jenkins on it. Next, you’ll discover steps for building applications and microservices on Dockerfiles and integrating them with Jenkins using continuous delivery processes such as continuous integration, automated acceptance testing, configuration management, and Infrastructure as Code. Moving ahead, you'll learn how to ensure quick application deployment with Docker containers, along with scaling Jenkins using Kubernetes. Later, you’ll explore how to deploy applications using Docker images and test them with Jenkins. Toward the concluding chapters, the book will focus on missing parts of the CD pipeline, such as the environments and infrastructure, application versioning, and non-functional testing. By the end of this continuous integration and continuous delivery book, you’ll have gained the skills you need to enhance the DevOps workflow by integrating the functionalities of Docker and Jenkins.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1 – Setting Up the Environment
5
Section 2 – Architecting and Testing an Application
9
Section 3 – Deploying an Application

Introducing Kubernetes

Kubernetes is an open source cluster management system that was originally designed by Google. Looking at the popularity charts, it is a clear winner among other competitors, such as Docker Swarm and Apache Mesos. Its popularity has grown so fast that most cloud platforms provide Kubernetes out of the box. It's not Docker-native, but there are a lot of additional tools and integrations to make it work smoothly with the whole Docker ecosystem; for example, kompose can translate Docker Compose files into Kubernetes configurations.

Information

In the first edition of this book, I recommended Docker Compose and Docker Swarm for application dependency resolution and server clustering. While they're both good tools, Kubernetes' popularity has grown so high recently that I decided to use Kubernetes as the recommended approach and keep Docker-native tooling as an alternative.

Let's take a look at the simplified architecture of Kubernetes...