In a previous step of the tutorial, you scaled the number of instances of a service. In this part of the tutorial, you deploy a service based on the Redis 3.0.6 container tag. Then you upgrade the service to use the Redis 3.0.7 container image using rolling updates.
If you haven’t already, open a terminal and ssh into the machine where you run your manager node. For example, the tutorial uses a machine named manager1.
Deploy your Redis tag to the swarm and configure the swarm with a 10 second update delay. Note that the following example shows an older Redis tag:
$ docker service create \
  --replicas 3 \
  --name redis \
  --update-delay 10s \
  redis:3.0.6
0u6a4s31ybk7yw2wyvtikmu50
You configure the rolling update policy at service deployment time.
The --update-delay flag configures the time delay between updates to a service task or sets of tasks. You can describe the time T as a combination of the number of seconds Ts, minutes Tm, or hours Th. So 10m30s indicates a 10 minute 30 second delay.
By default the scheduler updates 1 task at a time. You can pass the --update-parallelism flag to configure the maximum number of service tasks that the scheduler updates simultaneously.
By default, when an update to an individual task returns a state of RUNNING, the scheduler schedules another task to update until all tasks are updated. If, at any time during an update a task returns FAILED, the scheduler pauses the update. You can control the behavior using the --update-failure-action flag for docker service create or docker service update.
Inspect the redis service:
$ docker service inspect --pretty redis
ID:             0u6a4s31ybk7yw2wyvtikmu50
Name:           redis
Service Mode:   Replicated
 Replicas:      3
Placement:
 Strategy:	    Spread
UpdateConfig:
 Parallelism:   1
 Delay:         10s
ContainerSpec:
 Image:         redis:3.0.6
Resources:
Endpoint Mode:  vip
Now you can update the container image for redis. The swarm manager applies the update to nodes according to the UpdateConfig policy:
$ docker service update --image redis:3.0.7 redis
redis
The scheduler applies rolling updates as follows by default:
RUNNING, wait for the specified delay period then start the next task.FAILED, pause the update.Run docker service inspect --pretty redis to see the new image in the desired state:
$ docker service inspect --pretty redis
ID:             0u6a4s31ybk7yw2wyvtikmu50
Name:           redis
Service Mode:   Replicated
 Replicas:      3
Placement:
 Strategy:	    Spread
UpdateConfig:
 Parallelism:   1
 Delay:         10s
ContainerSpec:
 Image:         redis:3.0.7
Resources:
Endpoint Mode:  vip
The output of service inspect shows if your update paused due to failure:
$ docker service inspect --pretty redis
ID:             0u6a4s31ybk7yw2wyvtikmu50
Name:           redis
...snip...
Update status:
 State:      paused
 Started:    11 seconds ago
 Message:    update paused due to failure or early termination of task 9p7ith557h8ndf0ui9s0q951b
...snip...
To restart a paused update run docker service update <SERVICE-ID>. For example:
$ docker service update redis
To avoid repeating certain update failures, you may need to reconfigure the service by passing flags to docker service update.
Run docker service ps <SERVICE-ID> to watch the rolling update:
$ docker service ps redis
NAME                                   IMAGE        NODE       DESIRED STATE  CURRENT STATE            ERROR
redis.1.dos1zffgeofhagnve8w864fco      redis:3.0.7  worker1    Running        Running 37 seconds
 \_ redis.1.88rdo6pa52ki8oqx6dogf04fh  redis:3.0.6  worker2    Shutdown       Shutdown 56 seconds ago
redis.2.9l3i4j85517skba5o7tn5m8g0      redis:3.0.7  worker2    Running        Running About a minute
 \_ redis.2.66k185wilg8ele7ntu8f6nj6i  redis:3.0.6  worker1    Shutdown       Shutdown 2 minutes ago
redis.3.egiuiqpzrdbxks3wxgn8qib1g      redis:3.0.7  worker1    Running        Running 48 seconds
 \_ redis.3.ctzktfddb2tepkr45qcmqln04  redis:3.0.6  mmanager1  Shutdown       Shutdown 2 minutes ago
Before Swarm updates all of the tasks, you can see that some are running redis:3.0.6 while others are running redis:3.0.7. The output above shows the state once the rolling updates are done.
Next, learn about how to drain a node in the swarm.
tutorial, cluster management, swarm, service, rolling-update
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    https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/swarm-tutorial/rolling-update/