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Docker and Kubernetes for Java Developers

You're reading from   Docker and Kubernetes for Java Developers Scale, deploy, and monitor multi-container applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786468390
Length 318 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Jaroslaw Krochmalski Jaroslaw Krochmalski
Author Profile Icon Jaroslaw Krochmalski
Jaroslaw Krochmalski
Jarosław Krochmalski Jarosław Krochmalski
Author Profile Icon Jarosław Krochmalski
Jarosław Krochmalski
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Docker 2. Networking and Persistent Storage FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Microservices 4. Creating Java Microservices 5. Creating Images with Java Applications 6. Running Containers with Java Applications 7. Introduction to Kubernetes 8. Using Kubernetes with Java 9. Working with the Kubernetes API 10. Deploying Java on Kubernetes in the Cloud 11. More Resources

Dockerfile

As you will remember from Chapter 1, Introduction to Docker, the Dockerfile is kind of a recipe to build an image. It's a plain text file containing instructions which are executed by Docker in the order they are placed. Each Dockerfile has a base image that the Docker engine will use to build upon. A resulting image will be a specific state of a file system: a read-only, frozen immutable snapshot of a live container, composed of layers representing changes in the filesystem at various points in time.

The image creation flow in Docker is pretty straightforward and consists basically of two steps:

  1. First, you prepare a text file named Dockerfile, which contains a series of instructions on how to build the image. The set of instructions you can use in the Dockerfile is not very broad, but sufficient to fully instruct Docker how to create an image.
  2. Next, you execute...
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