Docker Storage Operations: Difference between revisions

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The volume is mounted in /var/lib/docker/volumes/''volume-name''/_data.
The volume is mounted in /var/lib/docker/volumes/''volume-name''/_data.
==Verifying Whether a Volume Exists==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
if docker volume inspect <volume-name> /dev/null 2>&1; then
  echo "volume exists";
else
  echo "volume does not exist";
fi
</syntaxhighlight>


==Getting Information on a Volume==
==Getting Information on a Volume==

Revision as of 04:09, 10 May 2018

External

Internal

Overview

Container-Generated Data Storage Operations

Mounting a Volume

If the container has volume mount points specified with VOLUME in its original Dockerfile, those mount points must be bound to paths on the native host when the container is created. This is done with --v|--volume or --mount (recommended) command line options, as follows. Note that the mount succeeds even if no VOLUME is declared in Dockerfile.

--mount

The --mount flag allows mounting data volumes, host directories and tmpfs mounts in a container. --mount supports most of the options supported by -v|--volume, with some exceptions:

  • --mount allows specifying a volume driver and volume driver options per volume, without creating the volume in advance. In contrast, docker run --volume allows specifying a single volume driver, which is shared by all volumes, using the --volume-driver flag.
  • --mount allows specifying custom metadata ("labels") for a volume, before the volume is created.
  • --mount does not allow relabeling a volume with Z or z flags, which are used for selinux labeling.
docker run --mount type=volume,source=<native-host-path>,destination=<container-mount-point>,volume-label="<some-label>" ...
docker run ... --mount type=volume,source=/data-volumes/postgresql,destination=var/lib/pgsql/data,volume-label="postgres" ...

Also, a named volume can be used:

docker run --mount type=volume,source=<volume-name>,destination=<container-mount-point>,volume-label="<some-label>" ...
docker run ... --mount type=volume,source=external-storage,destination=var/lib/pgsql/data,volume-label="postgres" ...

Anonymous volumes can be created, and mounted with (note there is no "source"):

docker run --mount type=volume,destination=<container-mount-point> ...

Bind mounts are created with:

docker run ... --mount type=bind,src=<native-host-path>,dst=<container-mount-point> ...
docker run ... --mount type=bind,src=/data-volumes/postgresql,dst=/var/lib/pgsql/data ...

When --mount with type=bind is used, the native-host-path must refer to an existing path on the host. The path will not be created if it does not exist, and the command will fail:

docker run --rm -it --mount type=bind,src=/some/path/that/does/not/exist,dst=/blah test-image
docker: Error response from daemon: invalid mount config for type "bind": bind source path does not exist.

Also, the mount point must have sufficient permissions. For more details on native host path permissions, see Native Host Path Permissions.

-v|--volume

docker run ... -v <native-host-path>:<container-mount-point> ...

Creating a Volume

https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/volume_create/

The command creates a new volume that containers can consume and store data in. If a name is not specified, Docker generates a random name. Volumes thus created survive a Docker server reboot, meaning they will be re-mounted on reboot.

docker volume create [volume-name]

Creating a NFS Volume

docker volume create \
  --driver local \
  --opt type=nfs \
  --opt o=addr=192.168.1.1,rw \
  --opt device=:<path-on-the-remote-nfs-server> \
  <volume-name>
docker volume create \
   --driver local \
   --opt type=nfs \
   --opt o=addr=192.168.1.40,rw \
   --opt device=:/volume1/dovecot \
 rackstation-dovecot

The volume is mounted in /var/lib/docker/volumes/volume-name/_data.

Verifying Whether a Volume Exists

if docker volume inspect <volume-name> /dev/null 2>&1; then 
  echo "volume exists"; 
else 
  echo "volume does not exist"; 
fi

Getting Information on a Volume

docker volume ls [volume-name]
docker volume inspect <volume-name>

Remove a Volume

docker volume rm