I'm trying to deploy postgres and pgadmin as a swarm stack via docker stack deploy with this compose file
version: '3.7'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres
ports:
- "5432:5432"
volumes:
- postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
environment:
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=87654321
pgadmin:
image: dpage/pgadmin4
ports:
- "5433:80"
environment:
- PGADMIN_DEFAULT_EMAIL=developer#happycode.io
- PGADMIN_DEFAULT_PASSWORD=12345678
depends_on:
- postgres
volumes:
postgres-data:
With docker stack deploy - POSTGRES_PASSWORD is never applied to postgres, I can echo env variable inside the container and it contains correct value 87654321 but postgres still uses the default one. However if I use the same compose file with docker-compose everything works fine
I think the volume postgres-data has already all the data required for postgres.
try to delete it first and re-deploy the stack.
docker-compose down --remove-orphans --volumes
or stop the stack and run:
docker volume rm postgres-data
Related
This is my docker-compose.yml
version: '3.8'
services:
db:
container_name: "postgres"
image: postgres:14
restart: always
environment:
- POSTGRES_USER=postgres
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password
- POSTGRES_DB:database
ports:
- "127.0.0.1:5434:5432"
volumes:
- ./db:/var/lib/postgresql/data
Docker don't create database for this container, what is wrong?
IF IT IS NOT AN ISSUE WITH TYPO here - POSTGRES_DB:database instead of - POSTGRES_DB=database
Did you ever start the Postgres container without specifying the user and database?
This could happen when the docker volume had already stored data from previous runs, where you didn't set the user and DB, then later runs with different env variables will not change the users. That is only done on the first initialization.
So you need to run
docker volume prune
There is already a closed issue on GitHub about that, see: https://github.com/docker-library/postgres/issues/453
I am trying to link an external postgres to tryton/tryton from docker hub.
docker-compose.yaml
version: '3.7'
services:
tryton-postgres:
image: postgres
ports:
- 5432:5432
environment:
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password
- POSTGRES_DB=tryton
restart: always
gnuserver:
image: tryton/tryton:4.6
links:
- tryton-postgres:postgres
ports:
- 8000:8000
depends_on:
- tryton-postgres
entrypoint: /entrypoint.sh trytond
when i ssh into the container and run trytond-admin --all -d tryton it seems to be looking for sqlite file instead of the connected postgres database. Are there some env variagbles i must set? What am i missing in my docker compose file?
Instead of changing the configuration file, with Docker it is simpler to set environment variable like:
DB_USER=
DB_PASSWORD=
DB_HOSTNAME=tryton-postgres
DB_PORT=5432
you need to edit /etc/tryton/trytond.conf to look at postgresql:
uri = postgresql://USERNAME:PASSWORD#tryton-postgres:5432/
see the Docs
I have my docker installed in Windows. I am trying to install this application. It has given me the following docker-compose.yml file:
version: '2'
services:
web:
build:
context: .
dockerfile: Dockerfile-nginx
ports:
- "8085:80"
networks:
- attendizenet
volumes:
- .:/usr/share/nginx/html/attendize
depends_on:
- php
php:
build:
context: .
dockerfile: Dockerfile-php
depends_on:
- db
- maildev
- redis
volumes:
- .:/usr/share/nginx/html/attendize
networks:
- attendizenet
php-worker:
build:
context: .
dockerfile: Dockerfile-php
depends_on:
- db
- maildev
- redis
volumes:
- .:/usr/share/nginx/html/attendize
command: php artisan queue:work --daemon
networks:
- attendizenet
db:
image: postgres
environment:
- POSTGRES_USER=attendize
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=attendize
- POSTGRES_DB=attendize
ports:
- "5433:5432"
volumes:
- ./docker/pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
networks:
- attendizenet
maildev:
image: djfarrelly/maildev
ports:
- "1080:80"
networks:
- attendizenet
redis:
image: redis
networks:
- attendizenet
networks:
attendizenet:
driver: bridge
All the installation goes well, but the PostgreSQL container stops after starting for a moment giving following error.
2018-03-07 08:24:47.927 UTC [1] FATAL: data directory "/var/lib/postgresql/data" has wrong ownership
2018-03-07 08:24:47.927 UTC [1] HINT: The server must be started by the user that owns the data directory
A simple PostgreSQL container from Docker Hub works smoothly, but the error occurs when we try to attach a volume to the container.
I am new to docker, so please ignore usage of terms wrongly.
This is a documented problem with the Postgres Docker image on Windows [1][2][3][4]. Currently, there doesn't appear to be a way to correctly mount Windows directories as volumes. You could instead use a persistent Docker volume, for example:
db:
image: postgres
environment:
- POSTGRES_USER=attendize
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=attendize
- POSTGRES_DB=attendize
ports:
- "5433:5432"
volumes:
- pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
networks:
- attendizenet
volumes:
pgdata:
Other things that didn't work:
Set PGDATA to a subdirectory (See PGDATA Setting)
environment:
- PGDATA=/var/lib/postgresql/data/mnt
volumes:
- ./pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
Use a Bind Mount (docker-compose 3.2)
volumes:
- type: bind
source: ./pgdata
target: /var/lib/postgresql/data
Running as POSTGRES_USER=root
More Information:
GitHub
data directory "/var/lib/postgresql/data" has wrong ownership
Docker Forums
postgresql-data-pgdata-has-wrong-ownership
postgres-to-work-on-persistent-windows-mount
Please refer reinierkors' answer from here. The answer is as follows copied as is from the link here for reader's convenience and works for me
I solved this by mapping my local volume one directory below the one Postgres needs:
version: '3'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres
restart: on-failure
environment:
- POSTGRES_USER=postgres
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password
- PGDATA=/var/lib/postgresql/data/pgdata
- POSTGRES_DB=postgres
volumes:
- ./postgres_data:/var/lib/postgresql
ports:
- 5432:5432
I was having the same issue after downgrading my Docker from WSL 2 to WSL 1 and what Thomas Taylor's pertaining, I solved the issue by using named volume.
version: '3.8'
services:
postgres:
image: timescale/timescaledb:latest-pg12
...
volumes:
- pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
...
volumes:
pgdata:
Map the local volume (e.g. C:\docker\pgdata) to one level (one directory) above what PostgreSQL needs. You can also do it from command line when starting the docker:
docker run -itd -e POSTGRES_USER=pguser -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=pgpasswd \
-e PGDATA=/var/lib/postgresql/data/pgdata -p 5432:5432 \
-v c:\docker\pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql --name postgresql postgres
I met this issue when re-installed docker and used wsl-1 backend.
solution: switch docker to wsl-2 backend.
Even i had the problem i had to copy the data dir at regular intervals.
docker cp <container-name>:/var/lib/postgresql/data C:/docker/volumes/postgres
Owner for the data folder in postgres inside the container is Postgres user. Your current user may not have access privilege in the mounted folder. You need to give all permissions according to the requirements by given command below :
chmod 777 ./docker/pgdata
If this command is not helping to resolve this issue please refer the following link to do the user mapping from inside the container to outside the container.
https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/userns-remap/#prerequisites
version: '3'
services:
db:
image: postgres
web:
build: .
command: python3 manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000
volumes:
- .:/code
ports:
- "8000:8000"
depends_on:
- db
Why I don't lose data when running docker-compose build --force-em --no-cache. If this is normal, why do we need to create volume for data folder ?
When running the command docker-compose build --force-em --no-cache, this will only build the web Docker image from the Dockerfile which in your case is in the same directory.
This command will not stop the containers that you have previously started using this compose file, thus you want lose any data when running this command.
However, as soon as you remove the containers using docker-compose down or when containers are stopped docker-compose rm, you won't find the postgres data when you restart the container.
If you want to persist the data, and make the container pick it up when it is recreated, you need to give the postgres data volume a name as such.
version: '3'
services:
db:
image: postgres
volumes:
- pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
web:
build: .
command: python3 manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000
volumes:
- .:/code
ports:
- "8000:8000"
depends_on:
- db
Now the postgres data won't be lost when the containers are recreated.
I have a multiple container application, that is using the postgres image in docker-compose.yml file. Postgres container has volume on host machine for persistent storage.
When I run docker-compose up at first time all is fine, postgres creates db files in my host folder.
After it I need to shut down application temporarily with docker-compose down if I'll change code of web container.
When I run docker-compose up second time, postgres overwriting all db files, but I need that data not changes. How can I solve this issue?
My docker-compose.yml
version: '2'
services:
web:
build: ./web
command: python3 main.py
volumes:
- ./web:/app
ports:
- "80:80"
depends_on:
- db
- redis
links:
- db:db
- redis:redis
db:
image: postgres
ports:
- "5432:5432"
environment:
- POSTGRES_PASSWORD:0000
volumes:
- ./pgdb:/var/lib/postgresql/data
redis:
image: redis
ports:
- "6379:6379"
command: redis-server --appendonly yes
volumes:
- ./redisdb:/data
I solve this problem. It occurs probably because I changed permissions for pgdb directory with host root user. By default I couldn't open pgdb in host machine because owner is postgres user. I could be wrong but after I stopped to change the resolutions the problem was gone.