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  • Book Overview & Buying Docker on Windows
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Docker on Windows

Docker on Windows

By : Elton Stoneman
4.4 (14)
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Docker on Windows

Docker on Windows

4.4 (14)
By: Elton Stoneman

Overview of this book

Docker is a platform for running server applications in lightweight units called containers. You can run Docker on Windows Server 2016 and Windows 10, and run your existing apps in containers to get significant improvements in efficiency, security, and portability. This book teaches you all you need to know about Docker on Windows, from 101 to deploying highly-available workloads in production. This book takes you on a Docker journey, starting with the key concepts and simple examples of how to run .NET Framework and .NET Core apps in Windows Docker containers. Then it moves on to more complex examples—using Docker to modernize the architecture and development of traditional ASP.NET and SQL Server apps. The examples show you how to break up monoliths into distributed apps and deploy them to a clustered environment in the cloud, using the exact same artifacts you use to run them locally. To help you move confidently to production, it then explains Docker security, and the management and support options. The book finishes with guidance on getting started with Docker in your own projects, together with some real-world case studies for Docker implementations, from small-scale on-premises apps to very large-scale apps running on Azure.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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Securing the software supply chain with DTR


DTR is the second part of Docker's extended EE offering (I covered Universal Control Plane (UCP) in Chapter 8, Administering and Monitoring Dockerized Solutions). DTR is a private Docker registry, which adds an important piece to the overall security story of the Docker platform: a secure software supply chain.

You can digitally sign Docker images with DTR, and DTR lets you configure who can push and pull images, securely storing all the digital signatures users have applied to an image. It also works in conjunction with UCP to enforce content trust. With Docker Content Trust, you can set up your cluster so it will only run containers from images that have been signed by specific users or teams.

This is a powerful feature that meets the audit requirements for a lot of regulated industries. There may be requirements for a company to prove that the software running in production is actually built from the code in the repository. This is very difficult...

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