PostgreSQL with Docker: Difference between revisions

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Subsequent startups will not require specification of -e POSTGRES_USER and -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD, as long as we use the same local directory Postgres initialized its state on.
Subsequent startups will not require specification of -e POSTGRES_USER and -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD, as long as we use the same local directory Postgres initialized its state on.
=Exposing Ports on the Local Host=


=Running a Transient Instance=
=Running a Transient Instance=

Revision as of 17:44, 18 October 2018

Internal

Overview

In its simplest form:

docker run postgres

command starts a transient Posgres container instance that does not expose any port on the local host, it is initialized on the fly to allow access to any user and uses an anonymous local volume that will not be reattached to during the next run. To get a usable Postgres instance we can shut down and restart and that regains access to stored data between restarts, we should use create a dedicated named volume or a bind mount, initialize the database with a username and a password during the first initialization run and map ports to the local host.

Dedicated Storage

We prefer using a bind mount as it gives easy access to the stored state, in case we need to troubleshoot. A named volume can be also used.

docker run ...  --mount type=bind,source=/Users/ovidiu/runtime/docker-volumes/postgres,target=/var/lib/postgresql/data --name postgres ... postgres

Authenticated Access

When the container is run the first time, it goes through an initialization sequence, and if no specific authentication configuration is provided in form of environment variables, it will configure itself to allow unauthenticated access. To prevent that from happening, start the container for the first time as shown:

docker run --mount type=bind,source=/Users/ovidiu/runtime/docker-volumes/postgres,target=/var/lib/postgresql/data -e POSTGRES_USER=admin -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=<some-password> --name postgres  postgres

This will initialized the database to allow access as admin/<some-password>.

Subsequent startups will not require specification of -e POSTGRES_USER and -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD, as long as we use the same local directory Postgres initialized its state on.

Exposing Ports on the Local Host

Running a Transient Instance

Postgres binds by default on port 5432 and this is the port published by the following command:

docker run -p 5432:5432/tcp  postgres

The command will implicitly create a local anonymous volume that will linger around after the container stops. The data on the anonymous local volume can be accessed by starting the stopped container. Test

You can attach to the container with:

docker exec -it <container-id> bash