this post was submitted on 15 Oct 2023
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Hei there. I've read that it's best practice to use docker volumes to store persistent container data (such as config, files) instead of using bindmount. So far, I've only used the latter and would like to change this.

From what I've read, all volumes are stored in var/lib/docker/volumes. I also understood, that a volume is basically a subdirectory in that path.

I'd like to keep things organized and would like the volumes of my containers to be stored in subdirectories for each stack in docker compose, e.g.

volumes/arr/qbit /arr/gluetun /nextcloud/nextcloud /nextcloud/database

Is this possible using compose?

Another noob question: is there any disadvantage to using the default network docker creates for each stack/container?

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[–] itmike@fikaverse.club 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@Pete90 There is plugins you can use to tell docker where your volumes are. Something like this works for local directories:

Docker will create a _data directory as usual.

volumes:
web_data:
db_data:
driver: local # Define the driver and options under the volume name
driver_opts:
type: none
device: /data/myservice/db_data
o: bind

[–] ErwinLottemann@feddit.de 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

this is a bind mount, defining them like this in a compose file is for when multiple containers share volumes, you just need to write the name of the volume instead of the path, but...

 - database:/var/lib/mysql

is not that much less than

 - ./database:/var/lib/mysql

🤷

[–] itmike@fikaverse.club 1 points 1 year ago

@ErwinLottemann I like named volumes in my compose files better thou, keep them organised under the volume section and manageable with docker-cli if needed.

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