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Docker on Amazon Web Services

You're reading from   Docker on Amazon Web Services Build, deploy, and manage your container applications at scale

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788626507
Length 822 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Justin Menga Justin Menga
Author Profile Icon Justin Menga
Justin Menga
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Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
1. Container and Docker Fundamentals FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Applications Using Docker 3. Getting Started with AWS 4. Introduction to ECS 5. Publishing Docker Images Using ECR 6. Building Custom ECS Container Instances 7. Creating ECS Clusters 8. Deploying Applications Using ECS 9. Managing Secrets 10. Isolating Network Access 11. Managing ECS Infrastructure Life Cycle 12. ECS Auto Scaling 13. Continuously Delivering ECS Applications 14. Fargate and ECS Service Discovery 15. Elastic Beanstalk 16. Docker Swarm in AWS 17. Elastic Kubernetes Service 1. Assessments 2. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Running ECS tasks


We've seen how we can deploy long-running applications as ECS services, but how do we run ad-hoc tasks or short-lived containers using ECS? The answer of course is to create an ECS task, which typically are used to run ad-hoc tasks, such as running a deployment script, performing database migrations, or perhaps performing scheduled batch processing.

Although ECS services are essentially long-running ECS tasks, ECS does treat ECS tasks that you create yourself quite differently from ECS services, as described in the following table:

Scenario/feature

ECS service behavior

ECS task behavior

Container is stopped or fails

ECS will always attempt to maintain the desired count of a given ECS service, and will attempt to restart a container if the active count falls below the desired count due to a container being stopped or failing.

ECS tasks are one-shot executions that are either success or fail. ECS will never attempt to re-run a failed ECS task.

Task definition configuration

You cannot...

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