After you complete the tutorial setup steps, you're ready to create a swarm. Make sure the Docker Engine daemon is started on the host machines.
Open a terminal and ssh into the machine where you want to run your manager
node. For example, the tutorial uses a machine named manager1
.
Run the following command to create a new swarm:
docker swarm init --listen-addr <MANAGER-IP>:<PORT>
In the tutorial, the following command creates a swarm on the manager1
machine:
$ docker swarm init --listen-addr 192.168.99.100:2377
No --secret provided. Generated random secret:
4ao565v9jsuogtq5t8s379ulb
Swarm initialized: current node (dxn1zf6l61qsb1josjja83ngz) is now a manager.
To add a worker to this swarm, run the following command:
docker swarm join --secret 4ao565v9jsuogtq5t8s379ulb \
--ca-hash sha256:07ce22bd1a7619f2adc0d63bd110479a170e7c4e69df05b67a1aa2705c88ef09 \
192.168.99.100:2377
The --listen-addr
flag configures the manager node to listen on port
2377
. The other nodes in the swarm must be able to access the manager at
the IP address.
Run docker info
to view the current state of the swarm:
$ docker info
Containers: 2
Running: 0
Paused: 0
Stopped: 2
...snip...
Swarm: active
NodeID: dxn1zf6l61qsb1josjja83ngz
IsManager: Yes
Managers: 1
Nodes: 1
CACertHash: sha256:b7986d3baeff2f5664dfe350eec32e2383539ec1a802ba541c4eb829056b5f61
...snip...
Run the docker node ls
command to view information about nodes:
$ docker node ls
ID NAME MEMBERSHIP STATUS AVAILABILITY MANAGER STATUS LEADER
dxn1zf6l61qsb1josjja83ngz * manager1 Accepted Ready Active Reachable Yes
The *
next to the node id, indicates that you're currently connected on
this node.
Docker Engine swarm mode automatically names the node for the machine host name. The tutorial covers other columns in later steps.
In the next section of the tutorial, we'll add two more nodes to the cluster.