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How do I mount a host directory as a volume in docker compose

I have a development environment I'm dockerizing and I would like the ability to livereload my changes without having to rebuild docker images. I'm using docker compose because redis is one of my app's dependencies and I like being able to link a redis container

I have two containers defined in my docker-compose.yml:

node:
  build: ./node
  links:
    - redis
  ports:
    - "8080"
  env_file:
    - node-app.env

redis:
  image: redis
  ports:
    - "6379"

I've gotten to the point in my node app's dockerfile where I add a volume, but how do I mount the the host's directory in the volume so that all my live edits to the code are reflected in the container?

Here's my current Dockerfile:

# Set the base image to Ubuntu
FROM    node:boron

# File Author / Maintainer
MAINTAINER Amin Shah Gilani <amin@gilani.me>

# Install nodemon
RUN npm install -g nodemon

# Add a /app volume
VOLUME ["/app"]

# TODO: link the current . to /app

# Define working directory
WORKDIR /app

# Run npm install
RUN npm install

# Expose port
EXPOSE  8080

# Run app using nodemon
CMD ["nodemon", "/app/app.js"]

My project looks like this:

/
- docker-compose.yml
- node-app.env
- node/
  - app.js
  - Dockerfile.js

j
jkris

Checkout their documentation

From the looks of it you could do the following on your docker-compose.yml

volumes:
    - ./:/app

Where ./ is the host directory, and /app is the target directory for the containers.

For the lazy – v3 / v2 / v1

Side note: Syntax remains the same for all versions as of this edit


Tried it, it didn't work: Error: Cannot find module '/data/app.js'
wait.. your VOLUME and WORKDIR points to /app/ why is your CMD pointing to /data
That was an error! Thank you for catching that! Fixed, and now I get Error: Cannot find module 'express' I'm gonna try a few things now.
For windows containers, you'll want a windows style path like - .:c:/app (this tripped me up)
Side note. If you need to mount 1 dir above the host dir, just use standard .. syntax: - ../:/app works on Linux containers and - ..\:\app works on Windows containers. At least it works with Docker engine 20.10.11 for me.
B
Bonifacio2

There are a few options

Short Syntax

Using the host : guest format you can do any of the following:

volumes:
  # Just specify a path and let the Engine create a volume
  - /var/lib/mysql

  # Specify an absolute path mapping
  - /opt/data:/var/lib/mysql

  # Path on the host, relative to the Compose file
  - ./cache:/tmp/cache

  # User-relative path
  - ~/configs:/etc/configs/:ro

  # Named volume
  - datavolume:/var/lib/mysql

Long Syntax

As of docker-compose v3.2 you can use long syntax which allows the configuration of additional fields that can be expressed in the short form such as mount type (volume, bind or tmpfs) and read_only.

version: "3.2"
services:
  web:
    image: nginx:alpine
    ports:
      - "80:80"
    volumes:
      - type: volume
        source: mydata
        target: /data
        volume:
          nocopy: true
      - type: bind
        source: ./static
        target: /opt/app/static

networks:
  webnet:

volumes:
  mydata:

Check out https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/#long-syntax-3 for more info.


To add to your answer, there are also :cached and :delegated annotations in the short syntax. These matter if the host is Docker Desktop for Mac. They are documented in docker-docs.netlify.app/docker-for-mac/osxfs-caching but unfortunately not in the Docker Compose docs.
s
smac89

If you would like to mount a particular host directory (/disk1/prometheus-data in the following example) as a volume in the volumes section of the Docker Compose YAML file, you can do it as below, e.g.:

version: '3'

services:
  prometheus:
    image: prom/prometheus
    volumes:
      - prometheus-data:/prometheus

volumes:
  prometheus-data:
    driver: local
    driver_opts:
      o: bind
      type: none
      device: /disk1/prometheus-data

By the way, in prometheus's Dockerfile, You may find the VOLUME instruction as below, which marks it as holding externally mounted volumes from native host, etc. (Note however: this instruction is not a must though to mount a volume into a container.):

Dockerfile

...
VOLUME ["/prometheus"]
...

Refs:

https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v3/#driver

https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v3/#driver_opts


This worked. Thanks. Where is the documentation for the local driver type?
@mmell The documentation is the first Refs link (docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/#driver) It reads: Specify which volume driver should be used for this volume. Defaults to whatever driver the Docker Engine has been configured to use, which in most cases is local
@mmell, you can find more details from this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/42195334/…
@mmell Basically, those options are driver-dependent, and the built-in local driver on Linux accepts options similar to the linux mount command: man7.org/linux/man-pages/man8/mount.8.html. You can find more discussion at github.com/moby/moby/issues/19990#issuecomment-248955005, and stackoverflow.com/questions/35841241/…
This answer should be the accepted one for a separate question about how to mount a host directory across multiple containers; twas hard to find this!
B
Bonifacio2

It was two things:

I added the volume in docker-compose.yml:

node:
  volumes:
    - ./node:/app

I moved the npm install && nodemon app.js pieces into a CMD because RUN adds things to the Union File System, and my volume isn't part of UFS.

# Set the base image to Ubuntu
FROM    node:boron

# File Author / Maintainer
MAINTAINER Amin Shah Gilani <amin@gilani.me>

# Install nodemon
RUN npm install -g nodemon

# Add a /app volume
VOLUME ["/app"]

# Define working directory
WORKDIR /app

# Expose port
EXPOSE  8080

# Run npm install
CMD npm install && nodemon app.js

B
Bonifacio2

we have to create your own docker volume mapped with the host directory before we mention in the docker-compose.yml as external

1.Create volume named share

docker volume create --driver local \
--opt type=none \
--opt device=/home/mukundhan/share \
--opt o=bind share

2.Use it in your docker-compose

version: "3"

volumes:
  share:
    external: true

services:
  workstation:
    container_name: "workstation"
    image: "ubuntu"
    stdin_open: true
    tty: true
    volumes:
      - share:/share:consistent
      - ./source:/source:consistent
    working_dir: /source
    ipc: host
    privileged: true
    shm_size: '2gb'
  db:
    container_name: "db"
    image: "ubuntu"
    stdin_open: true
    tty: true
    volumes:
      - share:/share:consistent
    working_dir: /source
    ipc: host

This way we can share the same directory with many services running in different containers


why do I need to have ipc: host ?
that is only needed when we need to bind the network into host itself.
G
Good man

In docker-compose.yml you can use this format:

volumes:
    - host directory:container directory

according to their documentation


Does this volume belongs to services section or stand alone section?
X
XpressGeek

Here is my working example for Node.js application and MongoDB database :

docker-compose.yml

version: '3'
services: 
    my-app:
        container_name: my-app-container
        restart: always
        build: .
        volumes:
            - './storage:/usr/src/app/storage'
        ports: 
            - "3000:3000"
        links:
            - my-app-db
    
    my-app-db:
        container_name: my-app-db-container
        image: mongo
        restart: always
        volumes:
            - './data:/data/db'          
        ports:
            - "27017:27017"

Dockerfile

FROM node:16.13.2
RUN mkdir -p /usr/src/app
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
COPY package.json ./
RUN npm install
COPY . /usr/src/app/
EXPOSE 3000
CMD [ "npm", "start"]