Docker run --rm -it --name web001 volume:latest powershell At the same time, docker will create a folder with the Container’s name Inside the Volume folder. Below, you can see the volume I created In the DockerFile (Called data) and I’ll go ahead and create a file Inside it. Dec 1, 2018 - When using Docker Toolbox for Windows, mounting volumes requires additional setup steps.
Updated on December 25th, 2018 in Setting Up Docker for Windows and WSL to Work Flawlessly With a couple of tweaks the WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux, also known as Bash for Windows) can be used with Docker for Windows. Quick Jump: This article expects you to have WSL set up already. If you don’t, I have another article that goes over how to set up an. You can even run graphical apps and it doesn’t require a VM.
Onwards we go While the cannot run directly on WSL, you can use the to connect to a remote Docker daemon running through or any other VM you create (this article covers both methods). If you’re wondering “why not just run docker.exe and docker-compose.exe from Docker for Windows directly in WSL?”, that’s due to a bug with running Docker or Docker Compose interactively in that environment. The TL;DR is you can’t run anything in the foreground with interactive mode, which makes it unusable for real web development. But with the Docker CLI configured to the remote Docker for Windows host it’s really awesome! Using this method, very large Rails applications respond in 100ms (or 5s when having to compile 10,000+ lines of Javascript and SCSS). That’s with mounted volumes too! I use this set up pretty much every day for Rails, Flask, Phoenix, Node and Webpack driven apps.
It’s very solid in terms of performance and reliability. Configure Docker for Windows In the general settings, you’ll want to expose the daemon without TLS. It mentions “use with caution” because any time you make a network connection that’s not encrypted, it’s worth talking about but in this case it’s completely safe because we’re never connecting to it over a public network. This is going to allow your local WSL instance to connect locally to the Docker daemon running within Docker for Windows.
The traffic isn’t even leaving your dev box since the daemon is only bound to localhost, so not even other machines on your local network will be able to connect. In other words, it’s very safe for this data to be transmit over plain text. You may also want to share any drives you plan on having your source code reside on. This step isn’t necessary but I keep my code on an internal secondary HD, so I shared my “E” drive too.
If you do that, goto the “Shared Drives” setting and enable it. Can’t use Docker for Windows? This is only necessary if you are NOT running Docker for Windows!
You’ll want to set up your own VM to run Docker. Goes into detail on how to do this, and it even includes links to videos on how to configure the VM. Install Docker and Docker Compose within WSL Everyone can follow along at this point! We still need to install Docker and Docker Compose inside of WSL because it’ll give us access to both CLI apps. We just won’t bother starting the Docker daemon. The following instructions are for Ubuntu 18.04, but if you happen to use a different WSL distribution, you can follow Docker’s installation guide for your distro from.
Install Docker You can copy / paste all of the commands below into your WSL terminal. Here’s the Ubuntu 18.04 installation notes taken from Docker’s documentation. # Update the apt package list. Sudo apt-get update -y # Install Docker's package dependencies. Sudo apt-get install -y apt-transport-https ca-certificates curl software-properties-common # Download and add Docker's official public PGP key. Curl -fsSL sudo apt-key add - # Verify the fingerprint. Sudo apt-key fingerprint 0EBFCD88 # Add the `stable` channel's Docker upstream repository.
# # If you want to live on the edge, you can change 'stable' below to 'test' or # 'nightly'. I highly recommend sticking with stable! Sudo add-apt-repository 'deb arch=amd64 $(lsbrelease -cs ) stable' # Update the apt package list (for the new apt repo). Sudo apt-get update -y # Install the latest version of Docker CE. Sudo apt-get install -y docker-ce # Allow your user to access the Docker CLI without needing root access. Sudo usermod -aG docker $USER At this point you must close your terminal and open a new one so that you can run Docker without sudo.
You might as well do it now! Install Docker Compose We’re going to install Docker Compose using PIP instead of the pre-compiled binary on GitHub because it runs a little bit faster (both are still Python apps). # Install Python and PIP. Sudo apt-get install -y python python-pip # Install Docker Compose into your user's home directory. Pip install -user docker-compose Configure WSL to Connect to Docker for Windows The next step is to configure WSL so that it knows how to connect to the remote Docker daemon running in Docker for Windows (remember, it’s listening on port 2375). If you’re not using Docker for Windows and followed to create your own VM then you probably did this already which means you can skip the command below. Connect to a remote Docker daemon with this 1 liner: echo 'export DOCKERHOST=tcp://localhost:2375' /.bashrc && source /.bashrc That just adds the export line to your.bashrc file so it’s available every time you open your terminal.
The source commands reloads your bash configuration so you don’t have to open a new terminal right now for it to take effect. Verify Everything Works. # You should get a bunch of output about your Docker daemon. # If you get a permission denied error, close + open your terminal and try again.
Docker info # You should get back your Docker Compose version. Docker-compose -version Ensure Volume Mounts Work The last thing we need to do is set things up so that volume mounts work. This tripped me up for a while because check this out When using WSL, Docker for Windows expects you to supply your volume paths in a format that matches this: /c/Users/nick/dev/myapp. But, WSL doesn’t work like that.
Instead, it uses the /mnt/c/Users/nick/dev/myapp format. Honestly I think Docker should change their path to use /mnt/c because it’s more clear on what’s going on, but that’s a discussion for another time. To get things to work for now, you have 2 options. If you’re running Windows 18.03 (Spring 2018) or newer you can configure WSL to mount at / instead of /mnt and you’re all done. If you’re running 17.09 (Fall 2017) you’ll need to do something else.
Here’s step by step instructions for both versions of Windows: Running Windows 10 18.03+ or Newer? First up, open a WSL terminal because we need to run a few commands. Create and modify the new WSL configuration file. Sudo nano /etc/wsl.conf # Now make it look like this and save the file when you're done: automount root = / options = 'metadata' We need to set root = / because this will make your drives mounted at /c or /e instead of /mnt/c or /mnt/e.
The options = 'metadata' line is not necessary but it will fix folder and file permissions on WSL mounts so everything isn’t 777 all the time within the WSL mounts. I highly recommend you do this! Once you make those changes, sign out and sign back in to Windows to ensure the changes take effect. Win + L isn’t enough. You’ll need to do a full blown sign out / sign in. If you get an error the next time you start your WSL terminal don’t freak out. It’s a bug with 18.03 and you can easily fix it.
Hit CTRL + Shift + ECS to open the task manager, goto the “Services” tab, find the “LxssManager” service and restart it. This seems to only happen if you sign out of Windows instead of doing a full reboot and will likely be fixed in a future 18.03+ patch. Once that’s done, you’re all set. You’ll be able to access your mounts and they will work perfectly with Docker and Docker Compose without any additional adjustments. For example you’ll be able to use.:/myapp in a docker-compose.yml file, etc.
What terminal emulator are you using?, then you’ll want to make sure to upgrade to the latest alpha release (at least 18.05.06+ which you can see in the title bar of the settings). It contains a patched wslbridge.exe file to support a custom WSL root mount point. The supports this by default, so you’re all good.
I don’t know if other terminals support this yet. Let me know in the comments. Sudo mkdir /c sudo mount -bind /mnt/c /c You’ll want to repeat those commands for any drives that you shared, such as d or e, etc. Verify that it works by running: ls -la /c. You should see the same exact output as running ls -la /mnt/c because /mnt/c is mounted to /c. At this point you’re golden.
You can use volume mount paths like.:/myapp in your Docker Compose files and everything will work like normal. That’s awesome because that format is what native Linux and MacOS users also use. It’s worth noting that whenever you run a docker-compose up, you’ll want to make sure you navigate to the /c/Users/nick/dev/myapp location first, otherwise your volume won’t work. In other words, never access /mnt/c directly.
Technically you could use a symlink instead of a bind mount, but I’ve been burned in the past when it came to using symlinks and having certain tools not work because they failed to follow them correctly. Better safe than sorry here. However, feel free to use symlinks inside WSL to access your bind mount. For example my Dev folder lives all the way in /e/Backup/VMs/workstation/home/nick/Dev and there’s no way in heck I’m going to always type that when I want to access my development files. So inside WSL I created a symlink with ln -s /e/Backup/VMs/workstation/home/nick/Dev /Dev and now I can just type cd /Dev to access my files and everything works.
Automatically set up the bind mount: Unfortunately you will have to run that sudo mount command every time you open a new terminal because WSL doesn’t support mounting through /etc/fstab yet (edit: it does in 18.09+, but if you’re using 18.09+ you should follow the 18.03+ steps). But we can work around that limitation by just mounting it in your /.bashrc file.
This is a little dirty but as far as I know, I think this is the only way to do it, so if you know of a better way, please let me know. You can do that with this 1 liner: echo 'sudo mount -bind /mnt/c /c' /.bashrc && source /.bashrc and make sure to repeat the command for any additional drives you shared with Docker for Windows.
By the way, you don’t need to mkdir because we already did it. Yes I know, that means you will be prompt for your root password every time you open a terminal, but we can get around that too because Linux is cool like that. Allow your user to bind a mount without a root password: To do that, run the sudo visudo command. That should open up nano (a text editor).
Goto the bottom of the file and add this line: nick ALL=(root) NOPASSWD: /bin/mount, but replace “nick” with your username. That just allows your user to execute the sudo mount command without having to supply a password. You can save the file with CTRL + O, confirm and exit with CTRL + X. Mission complete.
You’re all set to win at life by using Docker for Windows and WSL. Let me know how it goes in the comments!
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 dir c: docker Directory: C: docker Mode LastWriteTime Length Name - - - - -a- 7/30/2016 9:47 PM 8 test.txt docker run -it -v c:/docker:/host ubuntu bash root@333a10babe3a:/# ls /host root@333a10babe3a:/# Hmm As you can see, the c: docker folder has a test file, but it doesn’t show up in the Docker container. After some head scratching, I figured out the missing piece: Out of the box, Docker isn’t configured with permissions to share your drives with your containers. Giving Docker Access To give Docker access to your computer’s drives, right click on the Docker icon in your taskbar, then click “Settings” Under the “Shared Drives” section, check the drives you’d like to share, then click “Apply” Docker will ask you for credentials, which it uses to access the drives. (Note that if you log into your computer with a Windows Live account, your username should be something like “MicrosoftAccount [email protected]”) Once you save your credentials, you should be able to share volumes from your host computer to your containers.
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