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153 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
153 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
# Overlay Driver
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### Design
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TODO
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### Multi-Host Overlay Driver Quick Start
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This example is to provision two Docker Hosts with the **experimental** Libnetwork overlay network driver.
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### Pre-Requisites
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- Kernel >= 3.16
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- Experimental Docker client
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### Install Docker Experimental
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Follow Docker experimental installation instructions at: [https://github.com/docker/docker/tree/master/experimental](https://github.com/docker/docker/tree/master/experimental)
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To ensure you are running the experimental Docker branch, check the version and look for the experimental tag:
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```
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$ docker -v
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Docker version 1.8.0-dev, build f39b9a0, experimental
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```
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### Install and Bootstrap K/V Store
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Multi-host networking uses a pluggable Key-Value store backend to distribute states using `libkv`.
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`libkv` supports multiple pluggable backends such as `consul`, `etcd` & `zookeeper` (more to come).
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In this example we will use `consul`
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Install:
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```
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$ curl -OL https://dl.bintray.com/mitchellh/consul/0.5.2_linux_amd64.zip
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$ unzip 0.5.2_linux_amd64.zip
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$ mv consul /usr/local/bin/
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```
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**host-1** Start Consul as a server in bootstrap mode:
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```
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$ consul agent -server -bootstrap -data-dir /tmp/consul -bind=<host-1-ip-address>
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```
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**host-2** Start the Consul agent:
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```
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$ consul agent -data-dir /tmp/consul -bind <host-2-ip-address>
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$ consul join <host-1-ip-address>
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```
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### Start the Docker Daemon with the Network Driver Daemon Flags
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**host-1** Docker daemon:
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```
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$ docker -d --kv-store=consul:localhost:8500 --label=com.docker.network.driver.overlay.bind_interface=eth0
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```
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**host-2** Start the Docker Daemon with the neighbor ID configuration:
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```
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$ docker -d --kv-store=consul:localhost:8500 --label=com.docker.network.driver.overlay.bind_interface=eth0 --label=com.docker.network.driver.overlay.neighbor_ip=<host-1-ip-address>
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```
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### QuickStart Containers Attached to a Network
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**host-1** Start a container that publishes a service svc1 in the network dev that is managed by overlay driver.
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```
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$ docker run -i -t --publish-service=svc1.dev.overlay debian
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root@21578ff721a9:/# ip add show eth0
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34: eth0: <BROADCAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc noqueue state UP group default
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link/ether 02:42:ec:41:35:bf brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
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inet 172.21.0.16/16 scope global eth0
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valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
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inet6 fe80::42:ecff:fe41:35bf/64 scope link
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valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
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```
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**host-2** Start a container that publishes a service svc2 in the network dev that is managed by overlay driver.
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```
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$ docker run -i -t --publish-service=svc2.dev.overlay debian
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root@d217828eb876:/# ping svc1
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PING svc1 (172.21.0.16): 56 data bytes
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64 bytes from 172.21.0.16: icmp_seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.706 ms
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64 bytes from 172.21.0.16: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.687 ms
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64 bytes from 172.21.0.16: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.841 ms
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```
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### Detailed Setup
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You can also setup networks and services and then attach a running container to them.
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**host-1**:
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```
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docker network create -d overlay prod
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docker network ls
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docker network info prod
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docker service publish db1.prod
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cid=$(docker run -itd -p 8000:8000 ubuntu)
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docker service attach $cid db1.prod
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```
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**host-2**:
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```
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docker network ls
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docker network info prod
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docker service publish db2.prod
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cid=$(docker run -itd -p 8000:8000 ubuntu)
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docker service attach $cid db2.prod
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```
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Once a container is started, a container on `host-1` and `host-2` both containers should be able to ping one another via IP, service name, \<service name>.\<network name>
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View information about the networks and services using `ls` and `info` subcommands like so:
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```
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$ docker service ls
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SERVICE ID NAME NETWORK CONTAINER
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0771deb5f84b db2 prod 0e54a527f22c
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aea23b224acf db1 prod 4b0a309ca311
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$ docker network info prod
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Network Id: 5ac68be2518959b48ad102e9ec3d8f42fb2ec72056aa9592eb5abd0252203012
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Name: prod
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Type: overlay
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$ docker service info db1.prod
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Service Id: aea23b224acfd2da9b893870e0d632499188a1a4b3881515ba042928a9d3f465
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Name: db1
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Network: prod
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```
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To detach and unpublish a service:
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```
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$ docker service detach $cid <service>.<network>
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$ docker service unpublish <service>.<network>
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# Example:
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$ docker service detach $cid db2.prod
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$ docker service unpublish db2.prod
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```
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To reiterate, this is experimental, and will be under active development.
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