Book Image

Learning Windows Server Containers

Book Image

Learning Windows Server Containers

Overview of this book

Windows Server Containers are independent, isolated, manageable and portable application environments which are light weight and shippable. Decomposing your application into smaller manageable components or MicroServices helps in building scalable and distributed application environments. Windows Server Containers have a significant impact on application developers, development operations (DevOps) and infrastructure management teams. Applications can be built, shipped and deployed in a fast-paced manner on an easily manageable and updatable environment. Learning Windows Server Containers teaches you to build simple to advanced production grade container based application using Asp.Net Core, Visual Studio, Azure, Docker and PowerShell technologies. The book teaches you to build and deploy simple web applications as Windows and Hyper-V containers on Windows 10 and Windows Server 2016 on Azure. You will learn to build on top of Windows Container Base OS Images, integrate with existing images from Docker Hub, create custom images and publish to Hub. You will also learn to work with storage containers built using Volumes and SQL Server as container, create and configure custom networks, integrate with Redis Cache containers, configure continuous integration and deployment pipelines using VSTS and Git Repository. Further you can also learn to manage resources for a container, setting up monitoring and diagnostics, deploy composite container environments using Docker Compose on Windows and manage container clusters using Docker Swarm. The last chapter of the book focuses on building applications using Microsoft’s new and thinnest server platform – Nano Servers.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Integrating Redis containers with Music Store


We started off with Music Store as a monolithic application and our goal was to break it down into multiple sub-systems which can be independently deployed as quickly as possible. Each of those sub-systems should be configurable for operations teams increasing the agility of the service. In the previous chapter, we added database storage features to Music Store. The database containers are provisioned on separate host which eases off maintenance activities and helps in adding additional resources like CPU power and storage on demand. Applications which depend hugely on data perform frequent data transactions, each of the transactions adds to cost and latency. Performance of an application can be improved by placing the frequently used data close to the application use distributed cache stores. In this section, will use Redis Cache containers to store frequently used data. Music Store is built using C# and ASP.NET Core and entity framework as...