Book Image

Docker Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Ken Cochrane, Jeeva S. Chelladhurai, Neependra K Khare
2 (1)
Book Image

Docker Cookbook - Second Edition

2 (1)
By: Ken Cochrane, Jeeva S. Chelladhurai, Neependra K Khare

Overview of this book

Docker is an open source tool used for creating, deploying, and running applications using containers. With more than 100 self-contained tutorials, this book examines common pain points and best practices for developers building distributed applications with Docker. Each recipe in this book addresses a specific problem and offers a proven, best practice solution with insights into how it works, so that you can modify the code and configuration files to suit your needs. The Docker Cookbook begins by guiding you in setting up Docker in different environments and explains how to work with its containers and images. You’ll understand Docker orchestration, networking, security, and hosting platforms for effective collaboration and efficient deployment. The book also covers tips and tricks and new Docker features that support a range of other cloud offerings. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to package and deploy end-to-end distributed applications with Docker and be well-versed with best practice solutions for common development problems.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Selecting the logging driver for containers

Docker allows you to select the logging driver while starting the Docker daemon. With the release of Docker 18.03, eleven types of logging drivers are supported:

Driver Description
None No logs are available for the container and docker container logs does not return any output.
json-file (default) The logs are formatted as JSON.
syslog Writes log messages to the syslog daemon on the host machine.
journald Writes log messages to the journald daemon on the host machine.
gelf Writes log messages to a Graylog Extended Log Format (GELF) endpoint such as Graylog or Logstash.
fluentd Writes log messages to the fluentd daemon on the host machine.
awslogs Writes log messages to Amazon CloudWatch Logs.
splunk Writes log messages to splunk using the HTTP Event Collector.
etwlogs Writes log messages as Event Tracing for Windows...