Merge pull request #26114 from londoncalling/fix-linespacing-swarmtut
fixed line spacing in Swarm tutorial bullets
(cherry picked from commit 6221592087
)
Signed-off-by: Charles Smith <charles.smith@docker.com>
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1 changed files with 20 additions and 12 deletions
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@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ This tutorial uses Docker Engine CLI commands entered on the command line of a
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terminal window. You should be able to install Docker on networked machines and
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be comfortable running commands in the shell of your choice.
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If you’re brand new to Docker, see [About Docker Engine](../../index.md).
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If you are brand new to Docker, see [About Docker Engine](../../index.md).
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## Set up
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@ -48,15 +48,16 @@ provider. This tutorial uses the following machine names:
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* worker1
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* worker2
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### Docker Engine 1.12 or later
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>**Note:** You can follow many of the tutorial steps to test single-node swarm
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as well, in which case you need only one host. Multi-node commands will not
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work, but you can initialize a swarm, create services, and scale them.
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To use swarm mode, you must [install Docker Engine](../../installation/index.md)
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on each one of the host machines. Alternatively, install the latest Docker for
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Mac or Docker for Windows.
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### Docker Engine 1.12 or newer
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>**Note**: Docker for Mac and Docker for Windows let you use single-node
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features of swarm mode, like creating a swarm and creating a service. Multi-node
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features like joining additional nodes and scaling a service are not available.
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This tutorial requires Docker Engine 1.12 or newer on each of the host machines.
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Install Docker Engine and verify that the Docker Engine daemon is running on
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each of the machines. You can get the latest version of Docker Engine as
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follows:
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* [install Docker Engine on Linux machines](#install-docker-engine-on-linux-machines)
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@ -96,23 +97,30 @@ Docker for Mac or Docker for Windows running.
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### The IP address of the manager machine
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The IP address must be assigned to an a network interface available to the host
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operating system. All nodes in the swarm must be able to access the manager at the IP address.
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The IP address must be assigned to a network interface available to the host
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operating system. All nodes in the swarm must be able to access the manager at
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the IP address.
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Because other nodes contact the manager node on its IP address, you should use a
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fixed IP address.
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>**Tip**: You can run `ifconfig` on Linux or Mac OS X to see a list of the
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You can run `ifconfig` on Linux or Mac OS X to see a list of the
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available network interfaces.
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If you are using Docker Machine, you can get the manager IP with either
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`docker-machine ls` or `docker-machine ip <MACHINE-NAME>` — for example,
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`docker-machine ip manager1`.
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The tutorial uses `manager1` : `192.168.99.100`.
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### Open ports between the hosts
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The following ports must be available. On some systems, these ports are open by default.
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* **TCP port 2377** for cluster management communications
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* **TCP** and **UDP port 7946** for communication among nodes
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* **TCP** and **UDP port 4789** for overlay network traffic
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## What's next?
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After you have set up your environment, you're ready to [create a swarm](create-swarm.md).
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After you have set up your environment, you are ready to [create a swarm](create-swarm.md).
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