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The Docker Workshop

You're reading from   The Docker Workshop Learn how to use Docker containers effectively to speed up the development process

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838983444
Length 792 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (5):
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Engy Fouda Engy Fouda
Author Profile Icon Engy Fouda
Engy Fouda
Onur Yılmaz Onur Yılmaz
Author Profile Icon Onur Yılmaz
Onur Yılmaz
Sathsara Sarathchandra Sathsara Sarathchandra
Author Profile Icon Sathsara Sarathchandra
Sathsara Sarathchandra
Aric Renzo Aric Renzo
Author Profile Icon Aric Renzo
Aric Renzo
Vincent Sesto Vincent Sesto
Author Profile Icon Vincent Sesto
Vincent Sesto
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Running My First Docker Container 2. Getting Started with Dockerfiles FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing Your Docker Images 4. Multi-Stage Dockerfiles 5. Composing Environments with Docker Compose 6. Introduction to Docker Networking 7. Docker Storage 8. CI/CD Pipeline 9. Docker Swarm 10. Kubernetes 11. Docker Security 12. Best Practices 13. Monitoring Docker Metrics 14. Collecting Container Logs 15. Extending Docker with Plugins Appendix

Native Docker DNS

One of the biggest benefits of running a containerized infrastructure is the ability to quickly and effortlessly scale your workloads horizontally. Having more than one machine in a cluster with a shared overlay network between them means that you can have many containers running across fleets of servers.

As we saw in the previous exercise, Docker gives us the power to allow containers to directly talk to other containers in a cluster through the various network drivers that Docker provides, such as bridge, macvlan, and overlay drivers. In the previous example, we leveraged Docker bridge networking to allow containers to talk to each other by their respective IP addresses. However, when your containers are deployed on real servers, you can't normally rely on containers having consistent IP addresses that they can use to talk to each other. Every time a new container instance terminates or respawns, Docker will give that container a new IP address.

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