Book Image

Native Docker Clustering with Swarm

By : Fabrizio Soppelsa, Chanwit Kaewkasi
Book Image

Native Docker Clustering with Swarm

By: Fabrizio Soppelsa, Chanwit Kaewkasi

Overview of this book

Docker Swarm serves as one of the crucial components of the Docker ecosystem and offers a native solution for you to orchestrate containers. It’s turning out to be one of the preferred choices for Docker clustering thanks to its recent improvements. This book covers Swarm, Swarm Mode, and SwarmKit. It gives you a guided tour on how Swarm works and how to work with Swarm. It describes how to set up local test installations and then moves to huge distributed infrastructures. You will be shown how Swarm works internally, what’s new in Swarmkit, how to automate big Swarm deployments, and how to configure and operate a Swarm cluster on the public and private cloud. This book will teach you how to meet the challenge of deploying massive production-ready applications and a huge number of containers on Swarm. You'll also cover advanced topics that include volumes, scheduling, a Libnetwork deep dive, security, and platform scalability.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Native Docker Clustering with Swarm
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Dedication
Preface

Docker Swarm Mode


In this section, we will continue exploring Swarm Mode commands for managing a cluster.

Manually adding nodes

You can choose to create new Swarm nodes, so Docker hosts, either way you prefer.

If Docker Machine is used, it will reach its limit very soon. You will have to be very patient while listing machines and wait for several seconds for Machine to get and print the information as a whole.

A method to add nodes manually is to use Machine with the generic driver; so, delegate host provisioning (Operating System installation, network and security groups configurations, and so on) to something else (such as Ansible), and later exploit Machine to install Docker in a proper manner. This is how it can be done:

  1. Manually configure the cloud environment (security groups, networks, and so on.)

  2. Provision Ubuntu hosts with a third party tool.

  3. Run Machine with the generic driver on these hosts with the only goal to properly install Docker.

  4. Manage hosts with the tool at part 2, or even others...