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Learning CoreOS

You're reading from   Learning CoreOS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785888304
Length 190 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Shantanu Agrawal Shantanu Agrawal
Author Profile Icon Shantanu Agrawal
Shantanu Agrawal
Kingston Smiler. S Kingston Smiler. S
Author Profile Icon Kingston Smiler. S
Kingston Smiler. S
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. CoreOS, Yet Another Linux Distro? FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting Up Your CoreOS Environment 3. Creating Your CoreOS Cluster and Managing the Cluster 4. Managing Services with User-Defined Constraints 5. Discovering Services Running in a Cluster 6. Service Chaining and Networking Across Services 7. Creating a Virtual Tenant Network and Service Chaining Using OVS 8. What Next? Index

Introduction to Flannel/Rudder


Similar to Weave, Flannel also assigns an IP address to a container that can be used for container to container communication by creating an overlay mesh network. Flannel internally uses etcd to store the mapping between the assigned container IP address and host IP address. It doesn't have elaborate features like Weave and can be used if other feature sets provided by Weave are not required. For example, Flannel doesn't provide automatic service discovery through DNS and still requires application coding or instrumentation to discover service endpoints.

By default, each container is assigned an IP address in the /24 subnet. Subnet size can be configured. Flannel uses UDP to encapsulate traffic to transmit to a destination.

In later sections, we will learn about using Flannel. Flannel was previously referred to as Rudder.

Integrating Weave with CoreOSWeave is rather simple to install. The standalone installation is as simple as pulling the Weave script from the...

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