Estimated reading time: 6 minutesYou are viewing docs for legacy standalone Swarm. These topics describe standalone Docker Swarm. If you use Docker 1.12 or higher, Swarm mode is integrated with Docker Engine. Most users should use integrated Swarm mode — a good place to start is Getting started with swarm mode and Swarm mode CLI commands. Standalone Docker Swarm is not integrated into the Docker Engine API and CLI commands.
Docker Swarm comes with multiple discovery backends. You use a hosted discovery service with Docker Swarm. The service maintains a list of IPs in your cluster. This page describes the different types of hosted discovery available to you. These are:
The recommended way to do node discovery in Swarm is Docker’s libkv project. The libkv project is an abstraction layer over existing distributed key/value stores. As of this writing, the project supports:
For details about libkv and a detailed technical overview of the supported backends, refer to the libkv project.
On each node, start the Swarm agent.
The node IP address doesn’t have to be public as long as the Swarm manager can access it. In a large cluster, the nodes joining swarm may trigger request spikes to discovery. For example, a large number of nodes are added by a script, or recovered from a network partition. This may result in discovery failure. You can use --delay
option to specify a delay limit. Swarm join will add a random delay less than this limit to reduce pressure to discovery.
Etcd:
swarm join --advertise=<node_ip:2375> etcd://<etcd_addr1>,<etcd_addr2>/<optional path prefix>
Consul:
swarm join --advertise=<node_ip:2375> consul://<consul_addr>/<optional path prefix>
ZooKeeper:
swarm join --advertise=<node_ip:2375> zk://<zookeeper_addr1>,<zookeeper_addr2>/<optional path prefix>
Start the Swarm manager on any machine or your laptop.
Etcd:
swarm manage -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> etcd://<etcd_addr1>,<etcd_addr2>/<optional path prefix>
Consul:
swarm manage -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> consul://<consul_addr>/<optional path prefix>
ZooKeeper:
swarm manage -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> zk://<zookeeper_addr1>,<zookeeper_addr2>/<optional path prefix>
Use the regular Docker commands.
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> info
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> run ...
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> ps
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> logs ...
...
Try listing the nodes in your cluster.
Etcd:
swarm list etcd://<etcd_addr1>,<etcd_addr2>/<optional path prefix>
<node_ip:2375>
Consul:
swarm list consul://<consul_addr>/<optional path prefix>
<node_ip:2375>
ZooKeeper:
swarm list zk://<zookeeper_addr1>,<zookeeper_addr2>/<optional path prefix>
<node_ip:2375>
You can securely talk to the distributed k/v store using TLS. To connect
securely to the store, you must generate the certificates for a node when you
join
it to the swarm. You can only use with Consul and Etcd. The following example illustrates this with Consul:
swarm join \
--advertise=<node_ip:2375> \
--discovery-opt kv.cacertfile=/path/to/mycacert.pem \
--discovery-opt kv.certfile=/path/to/mycert.pem \
--discovery-opt kv.keyfile=/path/to/mykey.pem \
consul://<consul_addr>/<optional path prefix>
This works the same way for the Swarm manage
and list
commands.
Note*: This discovery method is incompatible with replicating Swarm managers. If you require replication, you should use a hosted discovery key store.
You can use a static file or list of nodes for your discovery backend. The file must be stored on a host that is accessible from the Swarm manager. You can also pass a node list as an option when you start Swarm.
Both the static file and the nodes
option support an IP address ranges. To specify a range supply a pattern, for example, 10.0.0.[10:200]
refers to nodes starting from 10.0.0.10
to 10.0.0.200
. For example for the file
discovery method.
$ echo "10.0.0.[11:100]:2375" >> /tmp/my_cluster
$ echo "10.0.1.[15:20]:2375" >> /tmp/my_cluster
$ echo "192.168.1.2:[2:20]375" >> /tmp/my_cluster
Or with node discovery:
swarm manage -H <swarm_ip:swarm_port> "nodes://10.0.0.[10:200]:2375,10.0.1.[2:250]:2375"
Edit the file and add line for each of your nodes.
echo <node_ip1:2375> >> /opt/my_cluster
echo <node_ip2:2375> >> /opt/my_cluster
echo <node_ip3:2375> >> /opt/my_cluster
This example creates a file named /tmp/my_cluster
. You can use any name you like.
Start the Swarm manager on any machine.
swarm manage -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> file:///tmp/my_cluster
Use the regular Docker commands.
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> info
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> run ...
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> ps
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> logs ...
...
List the nodes in your cluster.
$ swarm list file:///tmp/my_cluster
<node_ip1:2375>
<node_ip2:2375>
<node_ip3:2375>
Start the manager on any machine or your laptop.
swarm manage -H <swarm_ip:swarm_port> nodes://<node_ip1:2375>,<node_ip2:2375>
or
swarm manage -H <swarm_ip:swarm_port> <node_ip1:2375>,<node_ip2:2375>
Use the regular Docker commands.
docker -H <swarm_ip:swarm_port> info
docker -H <swarm_ip:swarm_port> run ...
docker -H <swarm_ip:swarm_port> ps
docker -H <swarm_ip:swarm_port> logs ...
List the nodes in your cluster.
$ swarm list file:///tmp/my_cluster
<node_ip1:2375>
<node_ip2:2375>
<node_ip3:2375>
Warning: The Docker Hub Hosted Discovery Service is not recommended for production use. It’s intended to be used for testing/development. See the discovery backends for production use.
This example uses the hosted discovery service on Docker Hub. Using Docker Hub’s hosted discovery service requires that each node in the swarm is connected to the public internet. To create your cluster:
Create a cluster.
$ swarm create
6856663cdefdec325839a4b7e1de38e8 # <- this is your unique <cluster_id>
Create each node and join them to the cluster.
On each of your nodes, start the swarm agent. The node IP address doesn’t have to be public (eg. 192.168.0.X) but the Swarm manager must be able to access it.
$ swarm join --advertise=<node_ip:2375> token://<cluster_id>
Start the Swarm manager.
This can be on any machine or even your laptop.
$ swarm manage -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> token://<cluster_id>
Use regular Docker commands to interact with your cluster.
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> info
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> run ...
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> ps
docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip:swarm_port> logs ...
...
List the nodes in your cluster.
swarm list token://<cluster_id>
<node_ip:2375>
You can contribute a new discovery backend to Swarm. For information on how to do this, see github.com/docker/docker/pkg/discovery.