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Docker Certified Associate (DCA): Exam Guide

You're reading from   Docker Certified Associate (DCA): Exam Guide Enhance and validate your Docker skills by gaining Docker certification

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839211898
Length 612 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Francisco Javier Ramírez Urea Francisco Javier Ramírez Urea
Author Profile Icon Francisco Javier Ramírez Urea
Francisco Javier Ramírez Urea
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1 - Key Container Concepts
2. Modern Infrastructures and Applications with Docker FREE CHAPTER 3. Building Docker Images 4. Running Docker Containers 5. Container Persistency and Networking 6. Deploying Multi-Container Applications 7. Introduction to Docker Content Trust 8. Section 2 - Container Orchestration
9. Introduction to Orchestration 10. Orchestration Using Docker Swarm 11. Orchestration Using Kubernetes 12. Section 3 - Docker Enterprise
13. Introduction to the Docker Enterprise Platform 14. Universal Control Plane 15. Publishing Applications in Docker Enterprise 16. Implementing an Enterprise-Grade Registry with DTR 17. Section 4 - Preparing for the Docker Certified Associate Exam
18. Summarizing Important Concepts 19. Mock Exam Questions and Final Notes 20. Assessments 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Learning about Docker objects

Let's define the different categories of objects that are available for a standalone Docker daemon:

  • Images: These are the basis for creating containers. In Chapter 2, Building Docker Images, we learned the concept of multi-layered templates for providing a root filesystem for the container's main process and all the meta-information required to execute it.
  • Containers: As we learned in Chapter 1, Modern Infrastructures and Applications with Docker, a container is a compound of isolated namespaces, resources, and files for a process (or multiple processes). This process will run inside a wrapped environment as if it was alone in its own system, sharing the host kernel and its resources.
  • Volumes: Volumes are used to bypass copy-on-write containers' filesystems. As a result, we will be able to store data out of containers, avoiding their life cycle. We will learn more about volumes in Chapter 4, Container Persistency and Networking.
  • Networks:...
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