No mention of licensing. I have a fear regarding what that will look like...
Docker's app containers are coming to Windows Server, says Microsoft
Microsoft has announced new container support in the next version of Windows Server, along with an open source implementation of the Docker Engine. Docker is a way of packaging applications into an isolated and standardised bundle, enabling multiple “Dockerized” apps to run on a single server. Standardisation means that app …
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Wednesday 15th October 2014 18:45 GMT thames
I imagine it will be some sort of tiered per app image license, all carefully calculated out to ensure that customers can't save money by switching from traditional VMs to containers. Since traditional VMs and containers are not 100% comparable, this will no doubt lead to massively complex and ever changing license terms.
Going from the Azure announcement, it also looks like you can't use standard Docker app images on Windows, but rather ones specially built and designed for MS Windows (it is a different OS after all). Since the appeal of Docker (as opposed to vanilla Linux containers) is the availability of standard app images, Microsoft will have their work cut out getting third party developers to build up the app image library for them. It will be like the phone app situation they have with regards to the Windows Phone app store versus the market leaders Android and Apple.
Your best bet for running Docker on Windows is likely going to be running Linux in a VM on Windows and then running the standard Linux version of Docker on top of that. And perhaps then wondering just what it is you need Windows for.
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Friday 17th October 2014 10:39 GMT Down not across
>And in few years it might get to where Solaris has been for years
You mean a hobby?
"only for the purpose of developing, testing, prototyping and demonstrating your applications, and not for any other purpose."
That's a pretty cheap shot using T&C from a free download for development purposes.
There are some people on this forum who seem to take to Solaris bashing whenever an opportunity arises. Fine, everyone is entitled to their opinion.
There is a lot of Solaris in use in corporate world. It is very solid and reliable environment.
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Wednesday 15th October 2014 18:54 GMT Anonymous Coward
"Virtual machines (VMs) have a similar advantage, but are more heavyweight since each VM runs an entire operating system, whereas a Dockerized app is smaller and faster to start."
Is that true? A Solaris zone consumes no space bar the changes from its clone, eg. VirtualBox inside a zone (with configured 5 VMs) takes up 9MB. Starting and logging in takes less than 1 second.
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Wednesday 15th October 2014 19:26 GMT thames
Docker is a container management system, so it's using the underlying OS container system. On Linux, I believe that Docker originally used LXC containers, although now they're accessing the container features (cgroups, etc.) directly through their own libraries.
Docker have also defined an app packaging format to make using "cloudy" type container stuff easier. They're intended to let you "plug" server apps together without a lot of configuration.
Containers have been available on Linux for years now, although they weren't all that well known outside of people doing cloudy stuff or some types of web hosting. There are plenty of people who use Linux containers without using Docker. Google was one of the companies that did a lot of work on the underlying container system because they wanted it for their own systems.
Solaris Zones are also containers. If there were a Solaris version of Docker, it would use Zones. In other words, Docker sits as a layer on top of the containers themselves. All Docker is doing is making using containers easier.
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Thursday 23rd October 2014 10:51 GMT MadMike
@thames
-Linux LXC is a copy of Solaris Zones, just as
-BTRFS is a copy of Solaris ZFS
-systemtap is a copy of Solaris DTrace
-systemd is a copy of Solaris SMF
-Open vSwitch is a copy of Solaris Crossbow
-etc etc
I would be very surprised if you can point any Linux tech that is NOT a copy from Unix. The whole concept Linux is a copy of Unix. Everything Linux does, is copying from Unix. Itself is a copy.
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Wednesday 15th October 2014 19:07 GMT Erik4872
Interesting
One of the toughest things to do to get a Windows application stack working is to work out and deploy all the prerequisites. I think that as long as an organization can keep its developers under control the idea of containerized applications is a good one.
Unfortunately, my job is in systems integration, so I get to see exactly what happens when developers aren't controlled, when salespeople sell things that don't exist, etc. DevOps is a good model when your Devs also have some Ops skills. When they don't, it's a mess. In my experience, developers have very little insight about how the infrastructure works once they get their application to "run". Admittedly, we're in an era of infinitely elastic cloud computing (ha ha...) so who cares if the devs build something that requires 6 cores of CPU running flat out for minutes at a time?
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Wednesday 15th October 2014 19:23 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Interesting
I think that's just the way Windows developers are in general. I know, I've been one, and worked with many, for a decade or more. More often than not, their mentality (assuming they know what they're doing) is the computer's sole purpose for being created is to run their software.
I think that stems from DOS, where in most cases that held true.
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Wednesday 15th October 2014 19:30 GMT Anonymous Coward
Currently MS dev shops typically leverage MSDN subscriptions in the development space which allows each developer to stand up as many dev/test VMs as required to get the work done as long as everyone touching those VMs has their own MSDN subscription. Because of this I would not expect any licensing changes to cover containers to impact dev shops.
These dev/test windows VMs are a pain to manage for a large dev shop.
The use of Vagrant and its HyperV client goes some way to easing the pain of managing those images, but native Windows containers could make things faster and easier in some situations.
We do use Docker in some of our Linux dev projects and that works well - it would be nice to be able to work in a similar way for our Windows dev.
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Wednesday 15th October 2014 23:02 GMT ok i'll sign up
Just like Parallels Virtuozzo?
That required licenses for each containerised application, can't see why this would be different.
Main limit on Parallels was that if you wanted to install some software in a container that required Kernel or zone 0 access then it simply wouldn't work, everything was required to be in user space, for example you never used to be able to install Citrix in a container (haven't tried XA7 with VDA).
We had to leave that because of too many cases where some software wouldn't work because of some driver or other and they had to control which Windows Updates you could deploy.
MS running this I think is a great step forwards since at least Windows Updates will be designed to cater for this situation, though at this stage I don't think it supports any real server operations beyond simple .net / web. IMO should have just bought Parallels and made it more compliant.
Guess Solaris zones is similar but things are designed to be run in user space anyway