DockerCLI/docs/reference/commandline/swarm_init.md

9.5 KiB

swarm init

Initialize a swarm

Options

Name Type Default Description
--advertise-addr string Advertised address (format: <ip|interface>[:port])
--autolock Enable manager autolocking (requiring an unlock key to start a stopped manager)
--availability string active Availability of the node (active, pause, drain)
--cert-expiry duration 2160h0m0s Validity period for node certificates (ns|us|ms|s|m|h)
--data-path-addr string Address or interface to use for data path traffic (format: <ip|interface>)
--data-path-port uint32 0 Port number to use for data path traffic (1024 - 49151). If no value is set or is set to 0, the default port (4789) is used.
--default-addr-pool ipNetSlice default address pool in CIDR format
--default-addr-pool-mask-length uint32 24 default address pool subnet mask length
--dispatcher-heartbeat duration 5s Dispatcher heartbeat period (ns|us|ms|s|m|h)
--external-ca external-ca Specifications of one or more certificate signing endpoints
--force-new-cluster Force create a new cluster from current state
--listen-addr node-addr 0.0.0.0:2377 Listen address (format: <ip|interface>[:port])
--max-snapshots uint64 0 Number of additional Raft snapshots to retain
--snapshot-interval uint64 10000 Number of log entries between Raft snapshots
--task-history-limit int64 5 Task history retention limit

Description

Initialize a swarm. The docker engine targeted by this command becomes a manager in the newly created single-node swarm.

Examples

$ docker swarm init --advertise-addr 192.168.99.121

Swarm initialized: current node (bvz81updecsj6wjz393c09vti) is now a manager.

To add a worker to this swarm, run the following command:

    docker swarm join \
    --token SWMTKN-1-3pu6hszjas19xyp7ghgosyx9k8atbfcr8p2is99znpy26u2lkl-1awxwuwd3z9j1z3puu7rcgdbx \
    172.17.0.2:2377

To add a manager to this swarm, run 'docker swarm join-token manager' and follow the instructions.

docker swarm init generates two random tokens, a worker token and a manager token. When you join a new node to the swarm, the node joins as a worker or manager node based upon the token you pass to swarm join.

After you create the swarm, you can display or rotate the token using swarm join-token.

--autolock

This flag enables automatic locking of managers with an encryption key. The private keys and data stored by all managers will be protected by the encryption key printed in the output, and will not be accessible without it. Thus, it is very important to store this key in order to activate a manager after it restarts. The key can be passed to docker swarm unlock to reactivate the manager. Autolock can be disabled by running docker swarm update --autolock=false. After disabling it, the encryption key is no longer required to start the manager, and it will start up on its own without user intervention.

--cert-expiry

This flag sets the validity period for node certificates.

--dispatcher-heartbeat

This flag sets the frequency with which nodes are told to use as a period to report their health.

--external-ca

This flag sets up the swarm to use an external CA to issue node certificates. The value takes the form protocol=X,url=Y. The value for protocol specifies what protocol should be used to send signing requests to the external CA. Currently, the only supported value is cfssl. The URL specifies the endpoint where signing requests should be submitted.

--force-new-cluster

This flag forces an existing node that was part of a quorum that was lost to restart as a single node Manager without losing its data.

--listen-addr

The node listens for inbound swarm manager traffic on this address. The default is to listen on 0.0.0.0:2377. It is also possible to specify a network interface to listen on that interface's address; for example --listen-addr eth0:2377.

Specifying a port is optional. If the value is a bare IP address or interface name, the default port 2377 will be used.

--advertise-addr

This flag specifies the address that will be advertised to other members of the swarm for API access and overlay networking. If unspecified, Docker will check if the system has a single IP address, and use that IP address with the listening port (see --listen-addr). If the system has multiple IP addresses, --advertise-addr must be specified so that the correct address is chosen for inter-manager communication and overlay networking.

It is also possible to specify a network interface to advertise that interface's address; for example --advertise-addr eth0:2377.

Specifying a port is optional. If the value is a bare IP address or interface name, the default port 2377 will be used.

--data-path-addr

This flag specifies the address that global scope network drivers will publish towards other nodes in order to reach the containers running on this node. Using this parameter it is then possible to separate the container's data traffic from the management traffic of the cluster. If unspecified, Docker will use the same IP address or interface that is used for the advertise address.

--data-path-port

This flag allows you to configure the UDP port number to use for data path traffic. The provided port number must be within the 1024 - 49151 range. If this flag is not set or is set to 0, the default port number 4789 is used. The data path port can only be configured when initializing the swarm, and applies to all nodes that join the swarm. The following example initializes a new Swarm, and configures the data path port to UDP port 7777;

$ docker swarm init --data-path-port=7777

After the swarm is initialized, use the docker info command to verify that the port is configured:

$ docker info
<...>
ClusterID: 9vs5ygs0gguyyec4iqf2314c0
Managers: 1
Nodes: 1
Data Path Port: 7777
<...>

--default-addr-pool

This flag specifies default subnet pools for global scope networks. Format example is --default-addr-pool 30.30.0.0/16 --default-addr-pool 40.40.0.0/16

--default-addr-pool-mask-length

This flag specifies default subnet pools mask length for default-addr-pool. Format example is --default-addr-pool-mask-length 24

--task-history-limit

This flag sets up task history retention limit.

--max-snapshots

This flag sets the number of old Raft snapshots to retain in addition to the current Raft snapshots. By default, no old snapshots are retained. This option may be used for debugging, or to store old snapshots of the swarm state for disaster recovery purposes.

--snapshot-interval

This flag specifies how many log entries to allow in between Raft snapshots. Setting this to a higher number will trigger snapshots less frequently. Snapshots compact the Raft log and allow for more efficient transfer of the state to new managers. However, there is a performance cost to taking snapshots frequently.

--availability

This flag specifies the availability of the node at the time the node joins a master. Possible availability values are active, pause, or drain.

This flag is useful in certain situations. For example, a cluster may want to have dedicated manager nodes that are not served as worker nodes. This could be achieved by passing --availability=drain to docker swarm init.