container-manager
container-manager is a daemon that watches your containers. It reads container definitions from a config file and creates/removes containers, similar to docker swarm deploy
command but does not require Docker daemon to be in swarm mode.
Installing
Install latest released binary from releases page or install development version with:
go get github.com/cenkalti/container-manager
If you're using Arch, you can install container-manager-bin
package from AUR.
Usage
- Put your container definitions in a config file.
- Run
contianer-manager -config <path>
with systemd, supervisor or etc.
- Update configuration when you are about to deploy/update containers. (Do not forget to change the
version
field.)
- Reload configuration with
SIGHUP
. container-manager will update running containers.
Example config
checkinterval: 60s
listenaddr: 0.0.0.0:26662
containers:
nginx:
version: 1
image: nginx
portbindings:
"80/tcp":
- hostip: "0.0.0.0"
hostport: 8080
sleep:
version: 1
count: 4
stoptimeout: 5
image: ubuntu:16.04
cmd:
- bash
- "-c"
- sleep 999999999
Notes
Private repositories
If you are using a private Docker repository, you will need credentials to pull new images.
container-manager uses the same config file (~/.docker/config
) as the docker CLI tool.
Container logs
Because running containers are removed and new containers are created when they get redeployed,
log messages will also be deleted if you use json-file
log driver (default).
It is recommended to use another log-driver to keep your log messages after containers are deleted.
Example:
containers:
ticker:
image: ubuntu:16.04
cmd:
- bash
- "-c"
- while true; do date; sleep 1; done
logconfig:
type: journald
If you use journald
log driver, you can access logs with following command:
journalctl CONTAINER_NAME=ticker