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The Software Developer's Guide to Linux

You're reading from   The Software Developer's Guide to Linux A practical, no-nonsense guide to using the Linux command line and utilities as a software developer

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804616925
Length 300 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Christian Sturm Christian Sturm
Author Profile Icon Christian Sturm
Christian Sturm
David Cohen David Cohen
Author Profile Icon David Cohen
David Cohen
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. How the Command Line Works 2. Working with Processes FREE CHAPTER 3. Service Management with systemd 4. Using Shell History 5. Introducing Files 6. Editing Files on the Command Line 7. Users and Groups 8. Ownership and Permissions 9. Managing Installed Software 10. Configuring Software 11. Pipes and Redirection 12. Automating Tasks with Shell Scripts 13. Secure Remote Access with SSH 14. Version Control with Git 15. Containerizing Applications with Docker 16. Monitoring Application Logs 17. Load Balancing and HTTP 18. Other Books You May Enjoy
19. Index

Containerizing Applications with Docker

Over the last decade, Docker containerization has become a kind of default packaging format for web applications and modern microservices. In a container, your program sits in a very lightweight, isolated shell of Linux filesystem, process, user, and network abstractions, safely separate from the host environment. Container images also happen to be incredibly portable – they’re easy to shuffle around from a developer’s laptop to a testing or staging environment to a production server. This solves many of the problems that have plagued software and infrastructure over the last several decades.

In some sense, containers are quite similar to the Linux packages you’ve learned how to install from repositories. A container image is, roughly, a compressed archive (such as, a .tar.gz file) of your application, along with all the configuration files and dependencies the application needs. That little package – an...

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