Pavel Nuzhdin
Pavel Nuzhdin

Reputation: 854

Mounting directory from host machine to container in Docker

How do I mount a directory from the host machine to a container in Docker?

Upvotes: 58

Views: 40990

Answers (6)

Mostafa Ghadimi
Mostafa Ghadimi

Reputation: 6766

Update July 2021

Dockerfile solution

Add the following line in your Dockerfile which copies the data from your host machine to the created image (container).

# Other lines of Dockerfile
COPY <relative-or-absolute-path-of-the-directory-in-host-machine> <relative-or-absolute-path-of-the-directory-in-container>
# Example:
# COPY ./redis/data/:/db_data

P.S.: Container is a running image.

Docker-compose solution

Volumes can be defined in various ways in docker-compose file. One of them is to mount the directory address of your host machine to the container. (like what we have in the dockerfile solution) as one part of your service:

volumes:
    - <relative-or-absolute-path-of-the-directory-in-host-machine>:<relative-or-absolute-path-of-the-directory-in-container>

Upvotes: 0

louisd
louisd

Reputation: 41

Trick for OS X and Windows

Two successive mounts: I guess many posts here might be using two boot2docker's. The reason you don't see anything is because you are mounting a directory from boot2docker, not from your host. You basically need two successive mounts: the first one to mount a directory from your host to your system and the second to mount the new directory from boot2docker to your container like this:

  1. Mount local system on boot2docker:

     sudo mount -t vboxsf hostfolder /boot2dockerfolder
    
  2. Mount boot2docker file on a Linux container

     docker run -v /boot2dockerfolder:/root/containerfolder -i -t imagename
    

Then when you do ls inside containerfolder you will see the content of your hostfolder

Upvotes: 4

Joost van der Laan
Joost van der Laan

Reputation: 2582

This IS possible in Docker:

Mount data into application container:

docker run -t -i -rm -volumes-from DATA -name client1 ubuntu bash

Upvotes: 4

Solomon Hykes
Solomon Hykes

Reputation: 211

*Update - see answer below. this is no longer the correct answer *

You can't mount them, by design, because Docker could no longer guarantee a repeatable execution environment.

However you can:

  1. Import the host's root filesystem and create a new image from it:

    tar -C / -c . | docker import - entend/custombase
    
  2. Import a bootstrap root filesystem, for example the result of running 'debootstrap'. (Note that this is how the official "base" image was created, so you might be better off simply running 'docker pull base')

    debootstrap precise ./bootstrap
    tar -C ./bootstrap -c . | docker import - entend/ubuntubase
    
  3. Inject the contents of a local directory into a container when running it.

    IMAGE=base; SRC=./stuff; DST=/tmp/stuff; CMD="echo hello world"; tar -C $src -c . | docker run $IMAGE -i /bin/sh -c "tar -C $DST -x; $CMD"
    

    This will run a container from $IMAGE, copy host directory $SRC into container directory $DST, then run command $CMD.

    This last example is typically used to insert source code before running a build command inside the container.

Upvotes: 13

user2089674
user2089674

Reputation: 2044

Just as a final update, this feature is now released in Docker (though the API has changed since the pull request linked by @imiric).

Simply use a command like

docker run -v /tmp:/root myImage

in order to mount /tmp from the host machine as /root within the image.

Source: https://docs.docker.com/engine/userguide/dockervolumes/

Upvotes: 160

imiric
imiric

Reputation: 9040

Just to update this question, this will soon be possible in Docker.

This pull request has actually implemented this feature and will be soon merged to master.

You can use it right now if you install this fork.

Upvotes: 5

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