The complete guide to running Java in Docker and Kubernetes

Running JVMs in containers, the hard bits explained! Everything you need to know to run containers in production

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Description

If you need to learn how to run, tune, and maintain JVM applications that run in Docker and/or Kubernetes then this is the course for you.

This course is very different from other Java/Docker/Kubernetes courses. It focuses on all the skills that you need to succeed in production.

All of the examples are in Java but the content is applicable for any JVM language including Scala, Groovy, and Kotlin.

We'll start with introductions for Docker and Kubernetes then we'll get into the fun stuff. We'll learn:

  • What a container is under the covers

  • Linux cgroups

  • Linux namespaces

Then we will go into how the JVM and your Java application behave differently in Kubernetes when running inside cgroups and namespaces. We'll cover:

  • JVM ergonomics

  • How CPU Shares and Quota work

  • How Kubernetes manages CPU and Memory

Then we will teach you all the techniques needed to build production-ready images:

  • Selecting a base image

  • JDK vs JRE based images

  • Multi-stage Docker builds

  • GraalVM

  • Class data sharing

  • Ahead of time compilation

We will experiment with different JVM versions and settings.

By the end of this course you'll know how to:

  • Build a production-ready image

  • Select between using CPU limits, quotas, or both in Kubernetes

  • Select memory limits and tune the JVM for running in Kubernetes

  • Understand CPU usage in Kubernetes and know why it is different to VMs and physical machines.



What You Will Learn!

  • In depth knowledge of how Java works in a Container
  • Kubernetes & Docker
  • Containers in depth: Linux cgroups & namespaces
  • How to build a production-quality Docker image for JVM applications

Who Should Attend!

  • JVM developers interested in understanding how the JVM behaves in a container
  • Java developers using Docker
  • Java developers using Kubernetes
  • JVM developers using containers