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You're reading from  The DevOps 2.1 Toolkit: Docker Swarm

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Published inMay 2017
Publisher
ISBN-139781787289703
Edition1st Edition
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Viktor Farcic
Viktor Farcic
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Viktor Farcic

Viktor Farcic is a senior consultant at CloudBees, a member of the Docker Captains group, and an author. He codes using a plethora of languages starting with Pascal (yes, he is old), Basic (before it got the Visual prefix), ASP (before it got the .NET suffix), C, C++, Perl, Python, ASP.NET, Visual Basic, C#, JavaScript, Java, Scala, and so on. He never worked with Fortran. His current favorite is Go. Viktor's big passions are Microservices, Continuous Deployment, and Test-Driven Development (TDD). He often speaks at community gatherings and conferences. Viktor wrote Test-Driven Java Development by Packt Publishing, and The DevOps 2.0 Toolkit. His random thoughts and tutorials can be found in his blog—Technology Conversations
Read more about Viktor Farcic

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Using service registry to store the state


Now that we have Consul instances set up let us explore how to exploit them to our own benefit. We'll study the design of the Docker Flow Proxy as a way to demonstrate some of the challenges and solutions you might want to apply to your own services.

Let us create the proxy network and the service:

eval $(docker-machine env swarm-1)

docker network create --driver overlay proxy

docker service create --name proxy \
    -p 80:80 \
    -p 443:443 \
    -p 8080:8080 \
    --network proxy \
    -e MODE=swarm \
    --replicas 3 \
    -e CONSUL_ADDRESS="$(docker-machine ip swarm-1):8500 \
,$(docker-machine ip \
swarm-2):8500,$(docker-machine ip swarm-3):8500" \
    vfarcic/docker-flow-proxy

The command we used to create the proxy service is slightly different than before. Namely, now we have the CONSUL_ADDRESS variable with the comma separated addresses of all three Consul instances. The proxy is made in a way that it will try the first address. If it does...

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The DevOps 2.1 Toolkit: Docker Swarm
Published in: May 2017Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781787289703

Author (1)

author image
Viktor Farcic

Viktor Farcic is a senior consultant at CloudBees, a member of the Docker Captains group, and an author. He codes using a plethora of languages starting with Pascal (yes, he is old), Basic (before it got the Visual prefix), ASP (before it got the .NET suffix), C, C++, Perl, Python, ASP.NET, Visual Basic, C#, JavaScript, Java, Scala, and so on. He never worked with Fortran. His current favorite is Go. Viktor's big passions are Microservices, Continuous Deployment, and Test-Driven Development (TDD). He often speaks at community gatherings and conferences. Viktor wrote Test-Driven Java Development by Packt Publishing, and The DevOps 2.0 Toolkit. His random thoughts and tutorials can be found in his blog—Technology Conversations
Read more about Viktor Farcic