Mount NFS v3/4, AWS EFS or CIFS inside your docker containers. This is a docker plugin which enables these volume types to be directly mounted within a container.
NFS needs to be installed on Linux systems in order to properly mount NFS mounts.
sudo apt-get install -y nfs-common
sudo yum install -y nfs-utils
It is recommend to try mounting an NFS volume to eliminate any configuration issues prior to running the plugin:
sudo mount -t nfs4 1.1.1.1:/mountpoint /target/mount
$ go get github.com/ContainX/docker-volume-netshare
$ go build
Binaries are available through GitHub releases. You can download the appropriate binary, package and version from the Releases page
The method below will install the sysvinit and /etc/default options that can be overwritten during service start.
$ wget https://github.com/ContainX/docker-volume-netshare/releases/download/v0.36/docker-volume-netshare_0.36_amd64.deb
$ sudo dpkg -i docker-volume-netshare_0.36_amd64.deb
/etc/default/docker-volume-netshare
service docker-volume-netshare start
1. Run the plugin - can be added to systemd or run in the background
$ sudo docker-volume-netshare nfs
2. Run the plugin - adding the correct DOCKER_API_VERSION If you are not using the latest stable version of docker engine please specify the version with flag. For example: To check docker API version:
docker version
Client:
Version: 17.12.0-ce
API version: 1.35
Go version: go1.9.2
Git commit: c97c6d6
Built: Wed Dec 27 20:11:19 2017
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Server:
Engine:
Version: 17.12.0-ce
API version: 1.35 (minimum version 1.12)
Go version: go1.9.2
Git commit: c97c6d6
Built: Wed Dec 27 20:09:53 2017
OS/Arch: linux/amd64
Experimental: false
Here the Docker API Version is 1.35. So you should start the plugin with the right version of Docker API.
Minimum supported version for the plugin is 1.12.
$ sudo docker-volume-netshare nfs -a 1.35
2. Launch a container
$ docker run -i -t --volume-driver=nfs -v nfshost/path:/mount ubuntu /bin/bash
1. Run the plugin - can be added to systemd or run in the background
// With File System ID resolution to AZ / Region URI
$ sudo docker-volume-netshare efs
// For VPCs without AWS DNS - using IP for Mount
$ sudo docker-volume-netshare efs --noresolve
2. Launch a container
// Launching a container using the EFS File System ID
$ docker run -i -t --volume-driver=efs -v fs-2324532:/mount ubuntu /bin/bash
// Launching a container using the IP Address of the EFS mount point (--noresolve flag in plugin)
$ docker run -i -t --volume-driver=efs -v 10.2.3.1:/mount ubuntu /bin/bash
1. Run the plugin - can be added to systemd or run in the background
$ sudo docker-volume-netshare cifs --username user --password pass --domain domain --security security -a docker_api_version
2. Launch a container
// In CIFS the "//" is omitted and handled by netshare
$ docker run -it --volume-driver=cifs -v cifshost/share:/mount ubuntu /bin/bash
.NetRC is fully support eliminating users and passwords to be specified in step 1. To use .netrc do the following steps:
1. Create a /root/.netrc file (since netshare needs to be run as a root user). Add the host and credential mappings.
See example:
//.netrc
machine some_hostname
username jeremy
password somepass
domain optional
security optional
fileMode optional
dirMode optional
2. Run the plugin
$ sudo docker-volume-netshare cifs -a docker_api_version
3. Launch a container
// In CIFS the "//" is omitted and handled by netshare
$ docker run -it --volume-driver=cifs -v cifshost/share:/mount ubuntu /bin/bash
Docker 1.9.0 now has support for volume management. This allows you to user docker volume create
to define a volume by name so
options and other info can be eliminated when running a container.
1. Run the plugin - can be added to systemd or run in the background
$ sudo docker-volume-netshare cifs -a docker_api_version
2. Create a Volume
This will create a new volume via the Docker daemon which will call Create
in netshare passing in the corresponding user, pass and domain info.
$ docker volume create -d cifs --name cifshost/share --opt username=user --opt password=pass --opt domain=domain --opt security=security --opt fileMode=0777 --opt dirMode=0777
3. Launch a container
// cifs/share matches the volume as defined in Step #2 using docker volume create
$ docker run -it -v cifshost/share:/mount ubuntu /bin/bash
Some CIFS servers may require a specific security mode to connect. The security
option defines the sec
option that is passed to mount.cifs
. More information about available sec
options.
e.g.: Apple Time Capsule's require the security mode ntlm
.
This software is licensed under the Apache 2 license, quoted below.
Copyright 2019 ContainX / Jeremy Unruh
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.