Book Image

DevOps Automation Cookbook

By : Michael Duffy
Book Image

DevOps Automation Cookbook

By: Michael Duffy

Overview of this book

<p>There has been a recent explosion in tools that allow you to redefine the delivery of infrastructure and applications, using a combination of automation and testing to deliver continuous deployment. DevOps has garnered interest from every quarter, and is rapidly being recognized as a radical shift, as large as the Agile movement for the delivery of software.</p> <p>This book takes a collection of some of the coolest software available today and shows you how to use it to create impressive changes to the way you deliver applications and software. It tackles the plethora of tools that are now available to enable organizations to take advantage of the automation, monitoring, and configuration management techniques that define a DevOps-driven infrastructure.</p> <p>Starting off with the fundamental command-line tools that every DevOps enthusiast must know, this book will guide you through the implementation of the Ansible tool to help you facilitate automation and perform diverse tasks. You will explore how to build hosts automatically with the creation of Apt mirrors and interactive pre-seeds, which are of the utmost importance for Ubuntu automation. You will also delve into the concept of virtualization and creating and manipulating guests with ESXi. Following this, you will venture into the application of Docker; learn how to install, run, network, and restore Docker containers; and also learn how to build containers in Jenkins and deploy apps using a combination of Ansible, Docker, and Jenkins. You will also discover how to filter data with Grafana and the usage of InfluxDB along with unconventional log management. Finally, you will get acquainted with cloud infrastructure, employing the Heroku and Amazon AWS platforms.</p> <p>By tackling real-world issues, this book will guide you through a huge variety of tools, giving new users the ability to get up and running and offering advanced users some interesting recipes that may help with existing issues.</p>
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
DevOps Automation Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Performing basic Docker operations


Now that we have the ability to create Docker containers, let's have a look at how to control them. Docker has a comprehensive set of tools that allows you to start, stop, and delete containers.

Getting ready

For this recipe, you will need an Ubuntu 14.04 server with Docker installed.

How to do it…

This recipe demonstrates the basic commands used to manage Docker containers. By using these commands, you can manage the full lifecycle of the container:

  1. Use the following command to list the running containers on your system:

    $ sudo docker ps
    

    Tip

    This only shows the running containers. To see the containers that have been stopped, use the following command:

    $ sudo docker ps -a
    
  2. To stop a running container, use the following command:

    $ docker stop <dockerID>
    

    Here the ID is derived from running docker ps and selecting the ID of the image you wish to stop.

  3. To remove a docker container, use the following command:

    $ sudo docker rm <CONTAINER ID>
    

    Tip

    Remember...