Book Image

The Docker Workshop

By : Vincent Sesto, Onur Yılmaz, Sathsara Sarathchandra, Aric Renzo, Engy Fouda
5 (1)
Book Image

The Docker Workshop

5 (1)
By: Vincent Sesto, Onur Yılmaz, Sathsara Sarathchandra, Aric Renzo, Engy Fouda

Overview of this book

No doubt Docker Containers are the future of highly-scalable software systems and have cost and runtime efficient supporting infrastructure. But learning it might look complex as it comes with many technicalities. This is where The Docker Workshop will help you. Through this workshop, you’ll quickly learn how to work with containers and Docker with the help of practical activities.? The workshop starts with Docker containers, enabling you to understand how it works. You’ll run third party Docker images and also create your own images using Dockerfiles and multi-stage Dockerfiles. Next, you’ll create environments for Docker images, and expedite your deployment and testing process with Continuous Integration. Moving ahead, you’ll tap into interesting topics and learn how to implement production-ready environments using Docker Swarm. You’ll also apply best practices to secure Docker images and to ensure that production environments are running at maximum capacity. Towards the end, you’ll gather skills to successfully move Docker from development to testing, and then into production. While doing so, you’ll learn how to troubleshoot issues, clear up resource bottlenecks and optimize the performance of services. By the end of this workshop, you’ll be able to utilize Docker containers in real-world use cases.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Preface

Monitoring Environment Metrics with Prometheus

Prometheus was originally created and developed by SoundCloud as they needed a way to monitor their highly dynamic container environments and were not satisfied with the current tooling at the time because they felt it didn't fit their needs. Prometheus was developed as a way for SoundCloud to monitor not only their containers but also the underlying hosting hardware and orchestration running their services.

Its initial creation was back in 2012, and since then, the project has been free and open source and part of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation. It has also been widely adopted by companies across the globe needing to gain more insight into how their cloud environments are performing.

Prometheus works by gathering metrics of interest from our system and stores these in its local on-disk, time-series database. It does this by scraping an HTTP endpoint provided by the service or application you are collecting data from...