Signed-off-by: Charles Smith <charles.smith@docker.com>
2.2 KiB
Add nodes to the swarm
Once you've created a swarm with a manager node, you're ready to add worker nodes.
-
Open a terminal and ssh into the machine where you want to run a worker node. This tutorial uses the name
worker1
. -
Run the following command to create a worker node joined to the existing swarm:
docker swarm join <MANAGER-IP>:<PORT>
Replace
<MANAGER-IP>
with the address of the manager node and<PORT>
with the port where the manager listens.In the tutorial, the following command joins
worker1
to the swarm onmanager1
:$ docker swarm join 192.168.99.100:2377 This node joined a Swarm as a worker.
-
Open a terminal and ssh into the machine where you want to run a second worker node. This tutorial uses the name
worker2
. -
Run
docker swarm join <MANAGER-IP>:<PORT>
to create a worker node joined to the existing Swarm.Replace
<MANAGER-IP>
with the address of the manager node and<PORT>
with the port where the manager listens. -
Open a terminal and ssh into the machine where the manager node runs and run the
docker node ls
command to see the worker nodes:ID NAME MEMBERSHIP STATUS AVAILABILITY MANAGER STATUS LEADER 03g1y59jwfg7cf99w4lt0f662 worker2 Accepted Ready Active 9j68exjopxe7wfl6yuxml7a7j worker1 Accepted Ready Active dxn1zf6l61qsb1josjja83ngz * manager1 Accepted Ready Active Reachable Yes
The
MANAGER
column identifies the manager nodes in the swarm. The empty status in this column forworker1
andworker2
identifies them as worker nodes.Swarm management commands like
docker node ls
only work on manager nodes.
What's next?
Now your swarm consists of a manager and two worker nodes. In the next step of the tutorial, you deploy a service to the swarm.