Files
docker-docs/content/guides/rust/_index.md
David Karlsson 56e58ae5bf site: rework guides filters and tags taxonomy
- Rework the filtering system for guides to drop the use of the
  "products", "subjects", and "levels" taxonomies in favor of "tags" and
  "languages"
- This change means that the existing taxonomy functionality integrates
  better with the guides filtering, and there are fewer parameters to
  keep in mind when adding metadata to a guide
  - Only two taxonomies instead of three
  - Only one of those taxonomies are guides-specific (languages)
  - The other taxonomy (tags) works for all content
- Updates how tags and tag pages are rendered in general

Signed-off-by: David Karlsson <35727626+dvdksn@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-28 16:10:20 +01:00

1.1 KiB

title, linkTitle, description, keywords, summary, toc_min, toc_max, aliases, languages, params
title linkTitle description keywords summary toc_min toc_max aliases languages params
Rust language-specific guide Rust Containerize Rust apps using Docker Docker, getting started, Rust, language This guide covers how to containerize Rust applications using Docker. 1 2
/language/rust/
/guides/language/rust/
rust
time
20 minutes

The Rust language-specific guide teaches you how to create a containerized Rust application using Docker. In this guide, you'll learn how to:

  • Containerize a Rust application
  • Build an image and run the newly built image as a container
  • Set up volumes and networking
  • Orchestrate containers using Compose
  • Use containers for development
  • Configure a CI/CD pipeline for your application using GitHub Actions
  • Deploy your containerized Rust application locally to Kubernetes to test and debug your deployment

After completing the Rust modules, you should be able to containerize your own Rust application based on the examples and instructions provided in this guide.

Start with building your first Rust image.