562ec005a6
- Use the ones provided by docker/go-connections, they are a drop in replacement. - Remove pkg/sockets from docker. - Keep pkg/tlsconfig because libnetwork still needs it and there is a circular dependency issue. Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
file | ||
kv | ||
nodes | ||
backends.go | ||
discovery.go | ||
discovery_test.go | ||
entry.go | ||
generator.go | ||
generator_test.go | ||
README.md |
page_title | page_description | page_keywords |
---|---|---|
Docker discovery | discovery | docker, clustering, discovery |
Discovery
Docker comes with multiple Discovery backends.
Backends
Using etcd
Point your Docker Engine instances to a common etcd instance. You can specify
the address Docker uses to advertise the node using the --cluster-advertise
flag.
$ docker daemon -H=<node_ip:2376> --cluster-advertise=<node_ip:2376> --cluster-store etcd://<etcd_ip1>,<etcd_ip2>/<path>
Using consul
Point your Docker Engine instances to a common Consul instance. You can specify
the address Docker uses to advertise the node using the --cluster-advertise
flag.
$ docker daemon -H=<node_ip:2376> --cluster-advertise=<node_ip:2376> --cluster-store consul://<consul_ip>/<path>
Using zookeeper
Point your Docker Engine instances to a common Zookeeper instance. You can specify
the address Docker uses to advertise the node using the --cluster-advertise
flag.
$ docker daemon -H=<node_ip:2376> --cluster-advertise=<node_ip:2376> --cluster-store zk://<zk_addr1>,<zk_addr2>/<path>