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Learning DevOps

You're reading from   Learning DevOps The complete guide to accelerate collaboration with Jenkins, Kubernetes, Terraform and Azure DevOps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838642730
Length 504 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Mikael Krief Mikael Krief
Author Profile Icon Mikael Krief
Mikael Krief
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: DevOps and Infrastructure as Code FREE CHAPTER
2. DevOps Culture and Practices 3. Provisioning Cloud Infrastructure with Terraform 4. Using Ansible for Configuring IaaS Infrastructure 5. Optimizing Infrastructure Deployment with Packer 6. Section 2: DevOps CI/CD Pipeline
7. Managing Your Source Code with Git 8. Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery 9. Section 3: Containerized Applications with Docker and Kubernetes
10. Containerizing Your Application with Docker 11. Managing Containers Effectively with Kubernetes 12. Section 4: Testing Your Application
13. Testing APIs with Postman 14. Static Code Analysis with SonarQube 15. Security and Performance Tests 16. Section 5: Taking DevOps Further
17. Security in the DevOps Process with DevSecOps 18. Reducing Deployment Downtime 19. DevOps for Open Source Projects 20. DevOps Best Practices 21. Assessments 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Containerizing Your Application with Docker

In the last few years, one technology in particular has been making headlines on the net, on social networks, and at events—Docker.

Docker is a containerization tool, which became open source in 2013. It allows you to isolate an application from its host system so that the application becomes portable and code tested on a developer's workstation can be deployed to production with fewer concerns about execution runtime dependencies. We'll talk a little about application containerization.

A container is a system that embeds an application and its dependencies. Unlike a VM, a container contains only a light operating system with only the elements required for the OS, such as system libraries, binaries, and code dependencies.

To learn more about the differences between VMs and containers, and why containers will replace...

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