Merge pull request #24955 from sfsmithcha/add_how_services_work

add how services work to how swarm mode works guide
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Sebastiaan van Stijn 2016-07-27 10:59:08 +02:00 committed by GitHub
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10 changed files with 106 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -86,8 +86,7 @@ take a manager node offline for maintenance. See [node promote](../../reference/
You can also demote a manager node to a worker node. See You can also demote a manager node to a worker node. See
[node demote](../../reference/commandline/node_demote.md). [node demote](../../reference/commandline/node_demote.md).
<!-- TODO For when How services work guide is ready
## What's Next ## What's Next
* Read about how swarm mode [services](services.md) work. * Read about how swarm mode [services](services.md) work.
-->

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<!--[metadata]>
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aliases = [
"/engine/swarm/how-swarm-mode-works/"
]
title = "How services work"
description = "How swarm mode services work"
keywords = ["docker, container, cluster, swarm mode, node"]
advisory = "rc"
[menu.main]
identifier="how-services-work"
parent="how-swarm-works"
weight="4"
+++
<![end-metadata]-->
# How services work
To deploy an application image when Docker Engine is in swarm mode, you create a
service. Frequently a service will be the image for a microservice within the
context of some larger application. Examples of services might include an HTTP
server, a database, or any other type of executable program that you wish to run
in a distributed environment.
When you create a service, you specify which container image to use and which
commands to execute inside running containers. You also define options for the
service including:
* the port where the swarm will make the service available outside the swarm
* an overlay network for the service to connect to other services in the swarm
* CPU and memory limits and reservations
* a rolling update policy
* the number of replicas of the image to run in the swarm
## Services, tasks, and containers
When you deploy the service to the swarm, the swarm manager accepts your service
definition as the desired state for the service. Then it schedules the service
on nodes in the swarm as one or more replica tasks. The tasks run independently
of each other on nodes in the swarm.
For example, imagine you want to load balance between three instances of an HTTP
listener. The diagram below shows an HTTP listener service with three replicas.
Each of the three instances of the listener is a task in the swarm.
![services diagram](../images/services-diagram.png)
A container is an isolated process. In the swarm mode model, each task invokes
exactly one container. A task is analogous to a “slot” where the scheduler
places a container. Once the container is live, the scheduler recognizes that
the task is in a running state. If the container fails health checks or
terminates, the task terminates.
## Tasks and scheduling
A task is the atomic unit of scheduling within a swarm. When you declare a
desired service state by creating or updating a service, the orchestrator
realizes the desired state by scheduling tasks. For instance, the you define a
service that instructs the orchestrator to keep three instances of a HTTP
listener running at all times. The orchestrator responds by creating three
tasks. Each task is a slot that the scheduler fills by spawning a container. The
container is the instantiation of the task. If a HTTP listener task subsequently
fails its health check or crashes, the orchestrator creates a new replica task
that spawns a new container.
A task is a one-directional mechanism. It progresses monotonically through a
series of states: assigned, prepared, running, etc. If the task fails the
scheduler removes the task and its container and then creates a new task to
replace it according to the desired state specified by the service.
The underlying logic of Docker swarm mode is a general purpose scheduler and
orchestrator. The service and task abstractions themselves are unaware of the
containers they implement. Hypothetically, you could implement other types of
tasks such as virtual machine tasks or non-containerized process tasks. The
scheduler and orchestrator are agnostic about they type of task. However, the
current version of Docker only supports container tasks.
The diagram below shows how swarm mode accepts service create requests and
schedules tasks to worker nodes.
![services flow](../images/service-lifecycle.png)
## Replicated and global services
There are two types of service deployments, replicated and global.
For a replicated service, you specify the number of identical tasks you want to
run. For example, you decide to deploy an HTTP service with three replicas, each
serving the same content.
A global service is a service that runs one task on every node. There is no
pre-specified number of tasks. Each time you add a node to the swarm, the
orchestrator creates a task and the scheduler assigns the task to the new node.
Good candidates for global services are monitoring agents, an anti-virus
scanners or other types of containers that you want to run on every node in the
swarm.
The diagram below shows a three-service replica in yellow and a global service
in gray.
![global vs replicated services](../images/replicated-vs-global.png)

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