5.4 KiB
description | keywords | title |
---|---|---|
Engine | Engine, CE, EE, node, activation, enterprise | CE-EE Node Activate |
The Docker Engine 18.09
release introduces a new feature called CE-EE Node Activate, which allows a user to perform an in-place seamless activation of the Enterprise engine feature set on an existing Community Edition (CE) node through the Docker command line.
CE-EE Node Activate will apply a license, and switch the Docker engine to the Enterprise engine binary.
Requirements:
- The Docker Community Edition (CE) version must be 18.09 or higher.
- All of the Docker packages must be installed: docker-cli, docker-server, and containerd.
Limitations
- This feature is only supported on x86 Linux nodes.
- Windows nodes are not currently supported.
- Node-level Engine activation between CE and EE is only supported in the same version of Docker Enterprise Engine for Docker.
- Prior versions of Docker CE do not support this feature.
Docker Engine 18.09 CE to EE Node Activation Process
The activation can be performed either online with connection to Docker Hub, or offline.
- Check the current Docker version. Both the Docker client and server (
containerd
) need to be installed. Your output may vary slightly from what is displayed on this page.
$ docker version
Client:
Version: 18.09.0-ce
API version: 1.39
Go version: go1.10.3
Git commit: ca36ebe
Built: Thu Aug 23 18:21:56 2018
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: false
Server:
Engine:
Version: 18.09.0-ce
API version: 1.39 (minimum version 1.12)
Go version: go1.10.3
Git commit: ca36ebe
Built:
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: false
- Log into the Docker engine from the command line.
NOTE: When running the command docker login
, the shell stores the credentials in the current user's home
directory. RHEL and Ubuntu-based Linux distributions have different behavior for sudo. RHEL sets $HOME to point
to /root
while Ubuntu leaves $HOME
pointing to the user's home directory who ran sudo
and this can cause
permission and access problems when switching between sudo
and non-sudo'd commands.
For Ubuntu or Debian:
$ docker login
Login with your Docker ID to push and pull images from Docker Hub. If you don't have a Docker ID, head over to https://hub.docker.com to create one.
Username: beluga
Password:
WARNING! Your password will be stored unencrypted in /home/docker/.docker/config.json.
Configure a credential helper to remove this warning. See
https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/login/#credentials-store
Login Succeeded
For CentOS, use sudo
:
$ sudo docker login
Login with your Docker ID to push and pull images from Docker Hub. If you don't have a Docker ID, head over to https://hub.docker.com to create one.
Username: beluga
Password:
WARNING! Your password will be stored unencrypted in /home/docker/.docker/config.json.
Configure a credential helper to remove this warning. See
https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/login/#credentials-store
Login Succeeded
-
Download your Docker Enterprise license and distribute it to your Docker engines.
-
Activate the EE license. You must use
sudo
even if your user is part of the docker group.
$ sudo docker engine activate --license ee-engine-license-1000-nodes.lic
License: Quantity: 400 Nodes Expiration date: 2019-05-12 License is currently active
18.09.0: resolved
e3cba72cdf2e: done [==================================================>] 434B/434B
3642e2b52398: done [==================================================>] 1.161kB/1.161kB
eb6fe2abc4ad: done [==================================================>] 4.544MB/4.544MB
f2f08b0292f2: done [==================================================>] 25.65MB/25.65MB
a539281ee17b: done [==================================================>] 1.122MB/1.122MB
515c4dc2b0fe: done [==================================================>] 333.9kB/333.9kB
2cf04a6ee63e: done [==================================================>] 4.84kB/4.84kB
Successfully activated engine.
Restart docker with 'systemctl restart docker' to complete the activation.
- Check the Docker Engine version. The engine server will become EE, and the engine client will stay CE.
$ docker version
Client:
Version: 18.09.0-ce
API version: 1.39
Go version: go1.10.3
Git commit: ca36ebe
Built: Thu Aug 23 18:21:56 2018
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: false
Server:
Engine:
Version: 18.09.0-ee-1
API version: 1.39 (minimum version 1.12)
Go version: go1.10.3
Git commit: b9e7996
Built:
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: false
NOTE: Your output may vary slightly from what is displayed on this page.
- If you are running a Swarm cluster with CE, please repeat these steps on each node.
Offline CE-EE node activation
For offline CE-EE node activation, you'll need to get the Docker Enterprise Engine onto the system. The recommended model is to download the EE .deb
or .rpm
packages manually and copy them to the target systems. Afterward, download the license manually, and copy that license to the target systems. Use the --license <path/to/license.file>
command line option to the activate command.