##NOTE This lab is for participants of the Docker Universal Control Plane beta program. It will not work unless you have access to the UCP binaries.
##Introduction This lab will guide you through 5 tasks with Docker Universal Control Plane:
-
Task 1: Install Docker Universal Control Plane on ducp-0
-
Task 2: Add ducp-1 as a second managed node
-
Task 3: Create an Nginx container
-
Task 4: Download the Client bundle to ducp-2
-
Task 5: Use Docker Compose from ducp-2 to stand up an app
It should take 25-35 minutes to finish.
##What is Docker Universal Control Plane Docker Universal Control Plane is a an on-premise solution to help you manage your Docker-based applications.
-
This lab assumes you've created 3 Docker hosts running Docker Engine 1.9. These hosts should be named ducp-0, ducp-1, and ducp-2.
-
You will need fully qualified domain name (FQDN) and IP address for each host.
-
You will need a Docker hub account that has been given permission to access the Docker Universal Control Plane beta.
-
The following ports need to be accessible on all of you hosts for UCP to function:
- 443: UCP controller
- 2376: Swarm manager
- 12376: Engine proxy
- 12379, 12380: Key Value store
- 12381: Swarm CA service
- 12382: UCD CA service
-
The following ports are used as part of this lab:
- 8005: Nginx container created in Task 3
- 5000, 5001: Voting containers deployed in Task 5
##Task 1: Installing Docker Universal Control Plane In this task we're going to install the Docker Universal Control Plane (UCP) server onto ducp-0. This is done by running a bootstrap container, and providing a few pieces of information.
Note*: Some dialogs / logs may say "Orca" this is the internal code name for UCP*
-
ssh into ducp-0
$ ssh -i <indentity file> ubuntu@<ducp-0 public ip>
Note*: You may be prompted to accept the RSA key. If so, enter*
yes
-
Run the UCP installer
docker run --rm -it -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock --name ucp dockerorca/ucp install -i
-
Provide the following inputs:
-
Password:
<password of your choosing>
-
Additional Aliases:
<ducp-0 FQDN>
<ducp-0 IP>
-
Your Docker hub credentials
Note*: Do not use the private IP. Use the one labled "IP"*
The UCP installer should finish something similar to:
INFO[0160] Installing UCP with host address 172.31.42.38 INFO[0002] Generating Swarm Root CA INFO[0013] Generating UCP Root CA INFO[0022] Deploying UCP Containers INFO[0027] UCP instance ID: JJOB:SQP3:PERQ:UPP3:54UP:K7B6:ZWL6:GLES:CN7M:5KLO INFO[0027] UCP Server SSL: SHA1 Fingerprint=48:22:4F:6B:36:6D: INFO[0027] Login as "admin"/(your admin password) to UCP at https://<ducp-0 IP>:443
-
Note*: If you are deploying to an EC2 istance, the installer may indicate the server is reachable on the private IP
, but instead use your web browser navigate to the UCP server via ducp-0's public IP
*
Note*: You may be warned that your connection is not private. That is because we are not using publicly signed certificates for the SSL connnection to the website.*
To bypass this in Chrome click advanced
and then proceed to . . . .
link. Safari may net let you past this warning
- Login into the UCP server with the username
admin
(case sensitive) and the password you chose.
You'll be logged into the UCP dashboard. Notice you have several containers and images, as well as 1 node, and 0 applications running. These images and containers are what power the UCP server.
##Task 2: Deploy a Second Docker Host In this step we'll add a 2nd node (ducp-1) to our cluster.
-
In a new terminal session ssh into ducp-1
$ ssh -i <identity file> ubuntu@<ducp-1 public ip>
Note*: You may be prompted to accept the RSA key. If so, enter*
yes
-
Run the UCP bootstrap with the join option
docker run --rm -it -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock --name ucp dockerorca/ucp join -i
-
Provide the following inputs:
- URL to the Orca server:
https://<ducp-0 IP>
- Proceed with the join:
y
- Admin username:
admin
- Admin password:
<password>
- Docker Hub credentials
- Additional Aliases:
<ducp-1 FQDN>
<ducp-1 IP>
The Installer should finish with something similar to:
INFO[0000] This engine will join UCP and advertise itself with host address 10.0.11.13 INFO[0000] Verifying your system is compatible with UCP INFO[0012] Starting local swarm containers
- URL to the Orca server:
-
Go back to your web browser, and refresh the dashboard. You should now see you have 2 nodes running.
-
Click
Nodes
Here you can see details on both of your running nodes
##Task 3: Create a Container In this section we'll deploy an Nginx container using UCP
-
In the UCP UI click the menu button in the upper left corner
-
From the drop down select
Containers
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On the Control Plane / Containers page, click
+ Deploy Container
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Provide the following inputs:
- Image Name:
nginx:latest
- Container Name:
mynginx
- Under Network set port 80 to redirect to 8005 and click the
+
button
Feel free to examine the other settings, but leave them at their defaults
- Image Name:
-
Click
Run Container
-
Click the magnifying glass next to your container,
Scroll down to the node section of the page to find out which node your webserver is running on (
ducp-0
orducp-1
)In your web browser navigate to the IP address (and port 8005) of the node (
ducp-0
orducp-1
) where Nginx is running.For example:
http://52.23.41.23:8005
You should see the Nginx welcome screen.
One of the great things about UCP is that it doesn't preclude you from using the Docker command line tools you're used to. In this task we're going to install the UCP client bundle onto your local machine
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Navigate to your UCP server in your web browser
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In the upper right corner click
admin
and chooseProfile
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Click
Create a Client Bundle
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Navigate to where the bundle was downloaded, and unzip the client bundle
$ unzip bundle.zip Archive: bundle.zip extracting: ca.pem extracting: cert.pem extracting: key.pem extracting: cert.pub extracting: env.sh
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Change into the directory that was created when the bundle was unzipped
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Execute the
env.sh
script to set the appropriate environment variables for your UCP deployment$ source env.sh
-
Run
docker info
to examine the configuration of your Docker Swarm. Your output should show that you are managing the swarm vs. a single node.$ docker info Containers: 10 Images: 15 Role: primary Strategy: spread Filters: health, port, dependency, affinity, constraint Nodes: 2 orca-ducp-0: 10.0.10.47:12376 └ Containers: 7 └ Reserved CPUs: 0 / 1 └ Reserved Memory: 0 B / 3.859 GiB └ Labels: executiondriver=native-0.2, kernelversion=3.19.0-26-generic, operatingsystem=Ubuntu 14.04.3 LTS, storagedriver=aufs orca-ducp-1: 10.0.11.13:12376 └ Containers: 3 └ Reserved CPUs: 0 / 1 └ Reserved Memory: 0 B / 3.859 GiB └ Labels: executiondriver=native-0.2, kernelversion=3.19.0-26-generic, operatingsystem=Ubuntu 14.04.3 LTS, storagedriver=aufs CPUs: 2 Total Memory: 7.718 GiB Name: orca-ducp-0 ID: F4Q3:NJRJ:GZ3M:6TKK:KUEE:TRUO:AEFG:ET7U:RAP4:3RHW:HYOH:I2TK Labels: swarm_master=tcp://10.0.10.47:2376
##Task 5: Use Docker Compose In this task we'll use Docker Compose to stand up a multi-tier voting application.
-
Use the editor of your choice to createa a file named
docker-compose.yml
, and copy the following commands into your new file.voting-app: image: dockercond2/dockercon-voting-app links: - redis:voteapps_redis_1 ports: - "5000:80" redis: image: redis ports: ["6379"] worker: image: dockercond2/dockercon-worker links: - redis:voteapps_redis_1 - db:voteapps_db_1 db: image: postgres:9.4 result-app: image: dockercond2/dockercon-result-app links: - db:voteapps_db_1 ports: - "5001:80"
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Deploy the application. The compose file will start several different containers that comprise a voting app
$ docker-compose up -d
It will take several minutes for the compose to complete, and several lines of text will scroll by. It should finish similar to this
Creating ubuntu_voting-app_1 Pulling result-app (dockercond2/dockercon-result-app:latest)... orca-ducp-1: Pulling dockercond2/dockercon-result-app:latest... : downloaded orca-ducp-0: Pulling dockercond2/dockercon-result-app:latest... : downloaded Creating ubuntu_result-app_1
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In your web browser navigate back to the UCP server dashboard (
https://<ducp-0 public IP>
)Notice the dashboard now shows 1 application running.
-
Click on the menu icon and select
applications
from the drop down. -
List out all the running containers by clicking
Show
on the line listing the Ubuntu application -
Click show to the on the Ubuntu application to find out which nodes your voting app and results are running (
ducp-0
orducp-1
)In your web browser navigate to the IP address (and port 5000) of the node (
ducp-0
orducp-1
) where the voting app is running.For example:
http://52.23.41.23:5000
Then navigate to the IP address (and port 5001) of the node (
ducp-0
orducp-1
) where the results app is running.For example:
http://52.23.41.23:5001
-
Navigate back to the applcation view in UPC, and click
inspect
next to any of the containersThis shows us the details of the running container. We can control container state here. Aditionally we can scale out a given container.
Finally, the menu bar allows you to see performance stats, logs, and even open a console window into the container.
Feel free to explore these options.