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Docker on Windows

You're reading from   Docker on Windows From 101 to production with Docker on Windows

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785281655
Length 358 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Elton Stoneman Elton Stoneman
Author Profile Icon Elton Stoneman
Elton Stoneman
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Docker on Windows 2. Packaging and Running Applications as Docker Containers FREE CHAPTER 3. Developing Dockerized .NET and .NET Core Applications 4. Pushing and Pulling Images from Docker Registries 5. Adopting Container-First Solution Design 6. Organizing Distributed Solutions with Docker Compose 7. Orchestrating Distributed Solutions with Docker Swarm 8. Administering and Monitoring Dockerized Solutions 9. Understanding the Security Risks and Benefits of Docker 10. Powering a Continuous Deployment Pipeline with Docker 11. Debugging and Instrumenting Application Containers 12. Containerize What You Know - Guidance for Implementing Docker

Defining applications with Docker Compose

The Docker Compose file format is very simple. YAML is a human-readable superset of JSON, and the Compose file specification uses descriptive attribute names. In the Compose file, you define the services, networks, and volumes that make up your application. Networks and volumes are the same concepts that you use with the Docker engine. Services are an abstraction over containers.

A container is a single instance of a component, but a service can be multiple instances of the same component running in different containers. You could have three containers in the service used for your web application and two containers in the service you use for a message handler:

A service is like a template to run a container from an image, with a known configuration. Using services, you can scale up components of the application—running multiple...

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