Book Image

Docker Quick Start Guide

By : Earl Waud
Book Image

Docker Quick Start Guide

By: Earl Waud

Overview of this book

Docker is an open source software platform that helps you with creating, deploying, and running your applications using containers. This book is your ideal introduction to Docker and containerization. You will learn how to set up a Docker development environment on a Linux, Mac, or Windows workstation, and learn your way around all the commands to run and manage your Docker images and containers. You will explore the Dockerfile and learn how to build your own enterprise-grade Docker images. Then you will learn about Docker networks, Docker swarm, and Docker volumes, and how to use these features with Docker stacks in order to define, deploy, and maintain highly-scalable, fault-tolerant multi-container applications. Finally, you will learn how to leverage Docker with Jenkins to automate the building of Docker images and the deployment of Docker containers. By the end of this book, you will be well prepared when it comes to using Docker for your next project.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Accessing container applications in a swarm

So, now you have a swarm running with an odd number of manager nodes, and a number of worker nodes. You have deployed some swarm services to run your favorite containerized applications. What's next? Well, you just might want to access one or more of the applications running in your swarm. Perhaps you have deployed a web server application. It would be nice to be able to visit the web pages shared by that web server, right? Let's take a quick look and see how easy it is to do so.

One of the features that the swarm managers handle for us is to direct traffic to our services. In an earlier example, we set up a web service that was running three replicas in the swarm. The swarm I am currently using happens to have three manager nodes and three worker nodes. All six nodes are eligible to run workloads so when the service is started...