290
votes

My docker compose file has three containers, web, nginx, and postgres. Postgres looks like this:

postgres:
  container_name: postgres
  restart: always
  image: postgres:latest
  volumes:
    - ./database:/var/lib/postgresql
  ports:
    - 5432:5432

My goal is to mount a volume which corresponds to a local folder called ./database inside the postgres container as /var/lib/postgres. When I start these containers and insert data into postgres, I verify that /var/lib/postgres/data/base/ is full of the data I'm adding (in the postgres container), but in my local system, ./database only gets a data folder in it, i.e. ./database/data is created, but it's empty. Why?

Notes:

UPDATE 1

Per Nick's suggestion, I did a docker inspect and found:

    "Mounts": [
        {
            "Source": "/Users/alex/Documents/MyApp/database",
            "Destination": "/var/lib/postgresql",
            "Mode": "rw",
            "RW": true,
            "Propagation": "rprivate"
        },
        {
            "Name": "e5bf22471215db058127109053e72e0a423d97b05a2afb4824b411322efd2c35",
            "Source": "/var/lib/docker/volumes/e5bf22471215db058127109053e72e0a423d97b05a2afb4824b411322efd2c35/_data",
            "Destination": "/var/lib/postgresql/data",
            "Driver": "local",
            "Mode": "",
            "RW": true,
            "Propagation": ""
        }
    ],

Which makes it seem like the data is being stolen by another volume I didn't code myself. Not sure why that is. Is the postgres image creating that volume for me? If so, is there some way to use that volume instead of the volume I'm mounting when I restart? Otherwise, is there a good way of disabling that other volume and using my own, ./database?

UPDATE 2

I found the solution, thanks to Nick! (and another friend) Answer below.

4
do you already run the initdb command line to initialize your database cluster?Sebastian Webber
Are you sure your data subdirectory is really empty? It might have special access permissions.Yaroslav Stavnichiy
Thanks for getting back to me so fast! I'm using a flask app, so I from app import db and db.create_all() from a docker run after starting the containers. I don't initdb directly from the command line.Alex Lenail
@YaroslavStavnichiy I don't know how else to check that than sudo su - and look in ./database/data. There's nothing in there as far as I can tell.Alex Lenail
Someone might find this useful: sample compose file persisting postgres, elastic search and media data, stackoverflow.com/a/56475980/5180118ArdentLearner

4 Answers

346
votes

Strangely enough, the solution ended up being to change

volumes:
  - ./postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql

to

volumes:
  - ./postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
138
votes

You can create a common volume for all Postgres data

 docker volume create pgdata

or you can set it to the compose file

   version: "3"
   services:
     db:
       image: postgres
       environment:
         - POSTGRES_USER=postgres
         - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=postgress
         - POSTGRES_DB=postgres
       ports:
         - "5433:5432"
       volumes:
         - pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
       networks:
         - suruse
   volumes: 
     pgdata:

It will create volume name pgdata and mount this volume to container's path.

You can inspect this volume

docker volume inspect pgdata

// output will be
[
    {
        "Driver": "local",
        "Labels": {},
        "Mountpoint": "/var/lib/docker/volumes/pgdata/_data",
        "Name": "pgdata",
        "Options": {},
        "Scope": "local"
    }
]
14
votes

I would avoid using a relative path. Remember that docker is a daemon/client relationship.

When you are executing the compose, it's essentially just breaking down into various docker client commands, which are then passed to the daemon. That ./database is then relative to the daemon, not the client.

Now, the docker dev team has some back and forth on this issue, but the bottom line is it can have some unexpected results.

In short, don't use a relative path, use an absolute path.

2
votes

I think you just need to create your volume outside docker first with a docker create -v /location --name and then reuse it.

And by the time I used to use docker a lot, it wasn't possible to use a static docker volume with dockerfile definition so my suggestion is to try the command line (eventually with a script ) .