Several articles have been extremely helpful in understanding Docker's volume and data management. These two in particular are excellent:
However, I am not sure if what I am looking for is discussed. Here is my understanding:
docker run -v /host/something:/container/something
the host files will overlay (but not overwrite) the container files at the specified location. The container will no longer have access to the location's previous files, but instead only have access to the host files at that location.docker inspect
. (usually somewhere like /var/lib/docker/vfs/dir/cde167197ccc3e138a14f1a4f7c....
). However, this is hairy when Docker has to run inside a Virtualbox VM.How can I reverse the overlay so that when mounting a volume, the container files take precedence over my host files?
I want to specify a mountpoint where I can easily access the container filesystem. I understand I can use a data container for this, or I can use docker inspect
to find the mountpoint, but neither solution is a good solution in this case.
The docker 1.10+ way of sharing files would be through a volume, as in docker volume create
.
That means, you don't need a container dedicated to a data volume, you can use a data volume directly.
That way, you can share and mount that volume in a container which will then keep its content in said volume.
That is more in line with how a container is working: isolating memory, cpu and filesystem from the host: that is why you cannot "mount a volume and have the container's files take precedence over the host file": that would break that container isolation and expose to the host its content.
Begin your container's script with copying files from a read-only mount bind reflecting the host files to a work location in the container. End the script with copying necessary results from the container's work location back to the host using either the same or different mount point.
Alternatively to the end-of-the script command, run the container without automatically removing it at the end, then run docker cp CONTAINER_NAME:CONTAINER_DIR HOST_DIR
, then docker rm CONTAINER_NAME
.
Alternatively to copying results back to the host, keep them in a separate "named" volume, provided that the container had it mounted ( type=volume,src=datavol,dst=CONTAINER_DIR/work
). Use the named volume with other docker run
commands to retrieve or use the results.
The input files may be modified in the host during development between the repeated runs of the container. Avoid shadowing them with the frozen files in the named volume. Beginning the container script with copying the input files from the host may help.
Using a named volume helps running the container read-only. (One may still need --tmpfs /tmp
for temporary files or --tmpfs /tmp:exec
if some container commands create and run executable code in the temporary location).
The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.