docs/cluster/mesos
Isabel Jimenez a99ceeb9c1 Adding suicide logic for tasks so as to prevent false timeout for tasks having a long image pull
Signed-off-by: Isabel Jimenez <contact@isabeljimenez.com>
2016-01-14 13:37:23 -05:00
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task Adding suicide logic for tasks so as to prevent false timeout for tasks having a long image pull 2016-01-14 13:37:23 -05:00
README.md Typo 2015-12-14 09:55:10 +08:00
agent.go Removing Queue package and regrouping task logic 2016-01-14 03:52:11 -05:00
agent_test.go Adding suicide logic for tasks so as to prevent false timeout for tasks having a long image pull 2016-01-14 13:37:23 -05:00
cluster.go Adding suicide logic for tasks so as to prevent false timeout for tasks having a long image pull 2016-01-14 13:37:23 -05:00
cluster_test.go Reorganize engine failure detection procedure. Change engine option 'RefreshRetry' to 'FailureRetry'. 2015-12-15 19:13:03 -08:00
offer_sorter.go Adding integration tests, decline offers after 'SWARM_MESOS_OFFER_TIMEOUT', Tracking tasks and managing offers, refactoring list of slaves, queue create requests before processing them 2015-05-26 16:21:54 -04:00
offer_sorter_test.go Adding integration tests, decline offers after 'SWARM_MESOS_OFFER_TIMEOUT', Tracking tasks and managing offers, refactoring list of slaves, queue create requests before processing them 2015-05-26 16:21:54 -04:00
scheduler.go Removing Queue package and regrouping task logic 2016-01-14 03:52:11 -05:00
utils.go Removing Queue package and regrouping task logic 2016-01-14 03:52:11 -05:00

README.md

Using Docker Swarm and Mesos

Swarm comes with a built-in scheduler that works with the swarm manager to schedule container resources. You can completely replace the built-in scheduler with a 3rd party scheduler. For example, you can replace it with the Mesos scheduler as described here.

When using Docker Swarm and Mesos, you use the Docker client to ask the swarm manager to schedule containers. The swarm manager then schedules those containers on a Mesos cluster.

Prerequisites

Each node in your swarm must run a Mesos slave. The slave must be capable of starting tasks in a Docker Container using the --containerizers=docker option.

You need to configure two TCP ports on the slave. One port to listen for the swarm manager, for example 2375. And a second TCP port to listen for the Mesos master, for example 3375.

Start the Docker Swarm manager

If you use a single Mesos master:

$ docker run -d -p <swarm_port>:2375 -p 3375:3375 \
    swarm manage \
        -c mesos-experimental \
        --cluster-opt mesos.address=<public_machine_ip> \
        --cluster-opt mesos.port=3375 \
        <mesos_master_ip>:<mesos_master_port>

The command above creates a swarm manager listening at <swarm_port>. The <mesos_master_ip> value points to where Mesos master lives in the cluster. Typically, this is localhost, a hostname, or an IP address. The <public_machine_ip> value is the IP address for Mesos master to talk to swarm manager. If mesos master and swarm manager are co-located on the same machine, you can use the 0.0.0.0 or localhost value.

If you use multiple Mesos masters:

$ docker run -d -p <swarm_port>:2375 -p 3375:3375 \
    swarm manage \
        -c mesos-experimental \
        --cluster-opt mesos.address=<public_machine_ip> \
        --cluster-opt mesos.port=3375 \
        zk://<mesos_masters_url>

Once the manager is running, check your configuration by running docker info as follows:

$ docker -H tcp://<swarm_ip>:<swarm_port> info
Containers: 0
Offers: 2
  Offer: 20150609-222929-1327399946-5050-14390-O6286
     └ cpus: 2
     └ mem: 1006 MiB
     └ disk: 34.37 GiB
     └ ports: 31000-32000
  Offer: 20150609-222929-1327399946-5050-14390-O6287
     └ cpus: 2
     └ mem: 1006 MiB
     └ disk: 34.37 GiB
     └ ports: 31000-32000

If you run into Abnormal executor termination error, you might want to run the swarm container with an additional environment variable: SWARM_MESOS_USER=root.