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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

CoreOS versus other Linux distributions

Even though CoreOS is yet another Linux distribution like Fedora/Centos, the key difference between CoreOS and other standard Linux distributions are as follows:

  • CoreOS is not designed to run any applications or services directly. Any application to be run inside CoreOS should be deployed as a container (which can either be Docker/Rocket). So it is not possible to install any software packages in CoreOS and hence CoreOS doesn't have any installation software packages like yum, apt, and so on. In short, CoreOS is a stripped-down version of a Linux distribution that doesn't have any inbuilt user applications or library installed.
  • Most of the Linux distributions are meant to run as a host operating system either in a data center server or in a typical desktop PC. They are not developed to manage a cluster of nodes/the cloud; rather, they will be part of the cloud that is being managed by other cloud orchestration platforms. However, CoreOS is a Linux distribution that is builtout for the management of a massive server infrastructure with clustering. The CoreOS cluster is a group of physical or virtual machines that runs CoreOS with the same cluster ID. The services running in the cluster nodes are managed by fleet, which is the CoreOS orchestration tool. Software updates in a traditional Linux distribution are done by updating the packages one by one. However, CoreOS supports a scheme called fast patch, wherein the entire CoreOS OS is updated once. The CoreUpdate program is used for updating CoreOS in a server, cluster, or complete data center.
  • CoreOS is extremely lightweight when compared to traditional Linux distributions.
You have been reading a chapter from
Learning CoreOS
Published in: Mar 2016
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781785888304
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