This volume plugin adds the ability to manage Linode Block Storage as Docker Volumes from within a Linode. Good use cases for volumes include off-node storage to avoid size constraints or moving a container and the related volume between nodes in a Swarm.
- Linux (tested on Fedora 34, should work with other versions and distributions)
- Docker (tested on version 20, should work with other versions)
docker plugin install --alias linode --grant-all-permissions \
linode/docker-volume-linode \
linode-token=<linode token>
Option Name | Description |
---|---|
linode-token | Required The Linode APIv4 Personal Access Token to use. (requires linodes:read_write volumes:read_write events:read_only ) |
linode-label | The label of the current Linode. This is only necessary if your Linode does not have a resolvable Link Local IPv6 Address. |
force-attach | If true, volumes will be forcibly attached to the current Linode if already attached to another Linode. (defaults to false) WARNING: Forcibly reattaching volumes can result in data loss if a volume is not properly unmounted. |
mount-root | Sets the root directory for volume mounts (defaults to /mnt) |
log-level | Sets log level to debug,info,warn,error (defaults to info) |
socket-user | Sets the user to create the docker socket with (defaults to root) |
Options can be set once for all future uses with docker plugin set
.
The plugin can also be configured (or reconfigured) in multiple steps.
docker plugin install --alias linode linode/docker-volume-linode
docker plugin disable linode
docker plugin set linode linode-token=<linode token>
docker plugin enable linode
- For all options see Driver Options section
Volumes can be mounted to one container at the time because Linux Block Storage volumes can only be attached to one Linode at the time.
All examples assume the driver has been aliased to linode
.
Linode Block Storage volumes can be created and managed using the docker volume create command.
$ docker volume create -d linode my-test-volume
my-test-volume
If a named volume already exists on the Linode account and it is in the same region of the Linode, it will be reattached if possible. A Linode Volume can be attached to a single Linode at a time.
The driver offers driver specific volume create options:
Option | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
size |
int | 10 |
the size (in GB) of the volume to be created. Volumes must be at least 10GB in size, so the default is 10GB. |
filesystem |
string | ext4 |
the filesystem argument for mkfs when formating the new (raw) volume (xfs, btrfs, ext4) |
delete-on-remove |
bool | false |
if the Linode volume should be deleted when removed |
$ docker volume create -o size=50 -d linode my-test-volume-50
my-test-volume-50
Volumes can also be created and attached from docker run
:
docker run -it --rm --mount volume-driver=linode,source=test-vol,destination=/test,volume-opt=size=25 alpine
Multiple create options can be supplied:
docker run -it --rm --mount volume-driver=linode,source=test-vol,destination=/test,volume-opt=size=25,volume-opt=filesystem=btrfs,volume-opt=delete-on-remove=true alpine
$ docker volume ls
DRIVER VOLUME NAME
linode:latest my-test-volume
linode:latest my-test-volume-50
$ docker run --rm -it -v my-test-volume:/usr/local/apache2/htdocs/ httpd
...
$ docker volume rm my-test-volume
my-test-volume
$ docker volume rm my-test-volume-50
my-test-volume-50
- Install Golang: https://golang.org/
- Get code and Compile:
go get -u github.com/linode/docker-volume-linode
docker-volume-linode --linode-token=<token from linode console>
The driver name when running manually is the same name as the socket file.
docker plugin set docker-volume-linode log-level=debug
docker-volume-linode --linode-token=<...> --log-level=debug
A great place to get started is the Docker Engine managed plugin system documentation.
The integration tests for this project can be easily run using the make int-test
target.
This target provisions and connects to a Linode instance, uploads the plugin, builds it, enables it,
and runs the integration test suite. Subsequent runs of this target will re-use the existing Linode instance.
In order to run this target, Ansible and the Linode Ansible Collection must be installed on the local machine:
pip install ansible
ansible-galaxy collection install linode.cloud
pip install -r https://raw.githubusercontent.com/linode/ansible_linode/main/requirements.txt
The integration test suite also requires that a full-access Linode Personal Access Token
be exported as the LINODE_TOKEN
environment variable.
export LINODE_TOKEN=EXAMPLETOKEN
The integration test suite can now be run:
make int-test
NOTE: This target requires an existing SSH key be created. If an SSH key exists at a path other than
~/.ssh/id_rsa
, the QUICKTEST_SSH_PUBKEY
argument can be specified:
make QUICKTEST_SSH_PUBKEY="~/.ssh/mykey.pub" int-test
If you would like to create a test environment for docker-volume-linode without running the integration test suite,
the QUICKTEST_SKIP_TESTS
argument can be specified:
make QUICKTEST_SKIP_TESTS=1 int-test
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