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The DevOps 2.2 Toolkit

You're reading from   The DevOps 2.2 Toolkit Self-Sufficient Docker Clusters

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788991278
Length 360 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Viktor Farcic Viktor Farcic
Author Profile Icon Viktor Farcic
Viktor Farcic
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Self-Adapting and Self-Healing Systems FREE CHAPTER 2. Choosing a Solution for Metrics Storage and Query 3. Deploying and Configuring Prometheus 4. Scraping Metrics 5. Defining Cluster-Wide Alerts 6. Alerting Humans 7. Alerting the System 8. Self-Healing Applied to Services 9. Self-Adaptation Applied to Services 10. Painting the Big Picture – The Self-Sufficient System Thus Far 11. Instrumenting Services 12. Self-Adaptation Applied to Instrumented Services 13. Setting Up a Production Cluster 14. Self-Healing Applied to Infrastructure 15. Self-Adaptation Applied to Infrastructure 16. Blueprint of a Self-Sufficient System 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Persisting state

What shall we do with the stateful services inside our cluster? If any of them fails and Swarm reschedules it, the state will be lost. Even if impossible happens and none of the replicas of the service ever fail, sooner or later we'll have to upgrade the cluster. That means that existing nodes will be replaced with new images and Swarm will have to reschedule your services to the new nodes. In other words, services will fail or be rescheduled, and we might need to persist state when they are stateful.

Let us go through each of the stateful services we're currently running inside our cluster.

The obvious case of stateful services is databases. We are running MongoDB. Should we persist its state? Many would answer positively to that question. I'll argue against persisting data on disk. Instead, we should create a replica set with at least three MongoDBs...

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