Reputation:
My docker-compose.yml
:
solr:
image: solr:8.6.2
container_name: myproject-solr
ports:
- "8983:8983"
volumes:
- ./data/solr:/var/solr/data
networks:
static-network:
ipv4_address: 172.20.1.42
After bringing up the docker with docker-compose up -d --build
, the solr container is down and the log (docker logs myproject-solr
) shows this:
Copying solr.xml
cp: cannot create regular file '/var/solr/data/solr.xml': Permission denied
I've noticed that if I give full permissions on my machine to the data directory sudo chmod 777 ./data/solr/ -R
and I run the Docker again, everything is fine.
I guess the issue comes when the solr
user is not my machine, because Docker creates the data/solr
folder with root:root
. Having my ./data
folder gitignored, I cannot manage these folder permissions.
I'd like to know a workaround to manage permissions properly with the purpose of persisting data
Upvotes: 8
Views: 13858
Reputation: 671
There is docker-compose-only solution :)
Docker mounts local folders with root permissions.
In Solr's docker image, the default user is solr
- for a good reason: Solr commands should be run with this user (you can force to run them with root
but that is not recommended).
Most Solr commands require write permissions to /var/solr/
, for data and logs storage.
In this context, when you run a solr command as the solr
user, you are rejected because you don't have write permission to /var/solr/
.
What you can do is to first start the container as root to change the permissions of /var/solr/
. And then switch to solr
user to run all necessary solr commands. You can't start our Solr server.
In the example below, we use solr-precreate to create a default core and start solr.
version: '3.7'
services:
solr:
image: solr:8.5.2
volumes:
- ./mnt/solr:/var/solr
ports:
- 8983:8983
user: root # run as root to change the permissions of the solr folder
# Change permissions of the solr folder, create a default core and start solr as solr user
command: bash -c "
chown -R 8983:8983 /var/solr
&& runuser -u solr -- solr-precreate default-core"
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 3782
It's possibly not exactly what you wanted as the files aren't persisted when rebuilding the container, but it solves the 'rights' problem. Copy the files over and chown them with a Dockerfile:
FROM solr:8.7.0
COPY --chown=solr ./data /var/solr/data
This is more useful if you're trying to initialise a single core:
FROM solr:8.7.0
COPY --chown=solr ./core /var/solr/data/someCollection
It also has the advantage that you can create an image for reuse.
For persistence, you can also create a volume (in this case core
) and copy the contents of a directory (also called core
here), assigning the rights to the files on the way:
docker container create --name temp -v core:/data tianon/true || exit $?
tar -cf - --directory core --owner 8983 --group 8983 . | docker cp - temp:/data
docker rm temp
This was adapted from these answers:
Then you can mount the named volume in your Docker Compose file:
version: '3'
services:
solr:
image: solr:8.7.0
networks:
- internal
ports:
- 8983:8983
volumes:
- core:/var/solr/data/someCollection
volumes:
core:
external: true
This solution persists the data without overriding the data on the host. And it doesn't need the extra build step. And can obviously be adapted for mounting the entire /var/solr/data
folder.
It doesn't seem to matter that the mounted volume/directory doesn't have the correct rights (/var/solr/data/someCollection
has owner root:root).
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 10681
It's a known "issue" with docker-compose: all files created by Docker engine are owned by root:root. Usually it's solved in one of the two ways:
solr
user. The solr
user and group ids are hardcoded inside the solr image: 8983 (Dockerfile.template)mkdir -p ./data/solr
sudo chown 8983:8983 ./data/solr
version: "3"
services:
initializer:
image: alpine
container_name: solr-initializer
restart: "no"
entrypoint: |
/bin/sh -c "chown 8983:8983 /solr"
volumes:
- ./data/solr:/solr
solr:
depends_on:
- initializer
image: solr:8.6.2
container_name: myproject-solr
ports:
- "8983:8983"
volumes:
- ./data/solr:/var/solr/data
networks:
static-network:
ipv4_address: 172.20.1.42
Upvotes: 15