Mohamed El Eraky
Posted on July 3, 2023
Inception
Hello everyone, This article is part of The Swarm series, The knowledge in this series is built in sequence, Check-out The Swarm series section above.
At the last article we covered How to Deploy a highly available Container, And deployed a simple Nignx web-app using DockerCLI and Play-with-docker lab.
Overview
In This article We will complete The Swarm tutorials, Will Deploy a Stack consists of Nginx and MySql containers, Also will explain the values behind the usage of stack for deployment, in this lab will use Play-with-docker lab, Docker Stack commands, and compose YAML file.
What is Stack
Docker Stack command is used for Managing Swarm stacks, The Stack use to run multi-container Docker applications. With Stack you use a YAML file to define your Containers configurations, Then you use a single command to start and run The Stack from this YAML file.
It's the same concept As the Docker-compose command with normal docker mode, However we're using Docker Stack command with Swarm mode.
The value behind the Stack:
Defining all stack containers and configuration at one YAML file -Docker-compose file- The value of using docker stack and compose is the same value of using blueprints. Blueprints -which is YAML file in our case- is very useful for history. Instead of Saving you commands of the running containers and it's configurations at some files out-there, You use all of stack containers and configuration at one file and simply publish it with one single command.
And when you want to update your stack configuration, instead of save the updated commands at The File and the hassle of remembering which one to use in future, Simply you update the Same YAML file and run with The stack command. So you have one single file consist of the updated configurations.
Example Docker Stack YAML file
Let's start out by creating our stack YAML file:
- Start by Build the past Swarm environment Here with out deploy any applications.
- On the manager node, Create a file called
docker-stack.yaml
by the command below:
vim docker-stack.yaml
- Past the below content in the YAML file.
version: '3'
services: # services list
nginx: # service name
image: nginx:latest # specify an image with it's tag
ports: # defining ports
- "8080:80"
volumes: # mount volume disk | mount nginx.conf stored on local device to nginx container
- ./nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
# establish connection to mysql container by mention the defined variables at mysql environment below
environment:
MYSQL_HOST: mysql
MYSQL_PORT: 3306
MYSQL_DATABASE: myapp
MYSQL_USER: root
MYSQL_PASSWORD: password
# The build of this container in depends on mysql
depends_on:
- mysql
mysql:
image: mysql:latest
volumes:
- ./data:/var/lib/mysql
# Define mysql variables
environment:
MYSQL_DATABASE: myapp
MYSQL_USER: root
MYSQL_PASSWORD: password
MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: password
- Now you're ready to deploy your stack
Stack deploy
- Run the following command to run
myapp
stack:
docker stack deploy -c docker-stack.yaml myapp
- The result for this command will create a network for the stack, the nginx service and the mysql service.
- list docker stack by the following:
docker stack ls
- list Container Services by the following:
# stack services
docker stack services myapp
# all swarm services
docker service ls
- Get more info with
docker stack ps myapp
Stack Delete
Now let's delete our environment with single & simple command:
- delete by the following:
docker stack rm myapp
At the end Note that the deployment went through Error, And the container cannot start; And Will discover how to troubleshoot in the next article....
That's it, Very straightforward, very fast๐.
Hope this article inspired you and will appreciate your feedback. Thank you.
References
Posted on July 3, 2023
Join Our Newsletter. No Spam, Only the good stuff.
Sign up to receive the latest update from our blog.
Related
November 25, 2024