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562 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Docker Volume Plugin"
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description: "Docker Volume Plugin"
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versionIntroduced: "v1.56"
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---
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# Docker Volume Plugin
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## Introduction
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Docker 1.9 has added support for creating
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[named volumes](https://docs.docker.com/storage/volumes/) via
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[command-line interface](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/volume_create/)
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and mounting them in containers as a way to share data between them.
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Since Docker 1.10 you can create named volumes with
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[Docker Compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/) by descriptions in
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[docker-compose.yml](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v2/#volume-configuration-reference)
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files for use by container groups on a single host.
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As of Docker 1.12 volumes are supported by
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[Docker Swarm](https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/key-concepts/)
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included with Docker Engine and created from descriptions in
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[swarm compose v3](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v3/#volume-configuration-reference)
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files for use with _swarm stacks_ across multiple cluster nodes.
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[Docker Volume Plugins](https://docs.docker.com/engine/extend/plugins_volume/)
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augment the default `local` volume driver included in Docker with stateful
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volumes shared across containers and hosts. Unlike local volumes, your
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data will _not_ be deleted when such volume is removed. Plugins can run
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managed by the docker daemon, as a native system service
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(under systemd, _sysv_ or _upstart_) or as a standalone executable.
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Rclone can run as docker volume plugin in all these modes.
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It interacts with the local docker daemon
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via [plugin API](https://docs.docker.com/engine/extend/plugin_api/) and
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handles mounting of remote file systems into docker containers so it must
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run on the same host as the docker daemon or on every Swarm node.
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## Getting started
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In the first example we will use the [SFTP](/sftp/)
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rclone volume with Docker engine on a standalone Ubuntu machine.
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Start from [installing Docker](https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/)
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on the host.
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The _FUSE_ driver is a prerequisite for rclone mounting and should be
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installed on host:
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```
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sudo apt-get -y install fuse
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```
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Create two directories required by rclone docker plugin:
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```
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sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/docker-plugins/rclone/config
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sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/docker-plugins/rclone/cache
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```
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Install the managed rclone docker plugin for your architecture (here `amd64`):
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```
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docker plugin install rclone/docker-volume-rclone:amd64 args="-v" --alias rclone --grant-all-permissions
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docker plugin list
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```
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Create your [SFTP volume](/sftp/#standard-options):
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```
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docker volume create firstvolume -d rclone -o type=sftp -o sftp-host=_hostname_ -o sftp-user=_username_ -o sftp-pass=_password_ -o allow-other=true
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```
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Note that since all options are static, you don't even have to run
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`rclone config` or create the `rclone.conf` file (but the `config` directory
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should still be present). In the simplest case you can use `localhost`
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as _hostname_ and your SSH credentials as _username_ and _password_.
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You can also change the remote path to your home directory on the host,
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for example `-o path=/home/username`.
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Time to create a test container and mount the volume into it:
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```
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docker run --rm -it -v firstvolume:/mnt --workdir /mnt ubuntu:latest bash
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```
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If all goes well, you will enter the new container and change right to
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the mounted SFTP remote. You can type `ls` to list the mounted directory
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or otherwise play with it. Type `exit` when you are done.
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The container will stop but the volume will stay, ready to be reused.
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When it's not needed anymore, remove it:
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```
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docker volume list
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docker volume remove firstvolume
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```
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Now let us try **something more elaborate**:
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[Google Drive](/drive/) volume on multi-node Docker Swarm.
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You should start from installing Docker and FUSE, creating plugin
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directories and installing rclone plugin on _every_ swarm node.
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Then [setup the Swarm](https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/swarm-mode/).
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Google Drive volumes need an access token which can be setup via web
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browser and will be periodically renewed by rclone. The managed
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plugin cannot run a browser so we will use a technique similar to the
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[rclone setup on a headless box](/remote_setup/).
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Run [rclone config](/commands/rclone_config_create/)
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on _another_ machine equipped with _web browser_ and graphical user interface.
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Create the [Google Drive remote](/drive/#standard-options).
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When done, transfer the resulting `rclone.conf` to the Swarm cluster
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and save as `/var/lib/docker-plugins/rclone/config/rclone.conf`
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on _every_ node. By default this location is accessible only to the
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root user so you will need appropriate privileges. The resulting config
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will look like this:
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```
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[gdrive]
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type = drive
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scope = drive
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drive_id = 1234567...
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root_folder_id = 0Abcd...
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token = {"access_token":...}
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```
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Now create the file named `example.yml` with a swarm stack description
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like this:
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```
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version: '3'
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services:
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heimdall:
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image: linuxserver/heimdall:latest
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ports: [8080:80]
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volumes: [configdata:/config]
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volumes:
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configdata:
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driver: rclone
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driver_opts:
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remote: 'gdrive:heimdall'
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allow_other: 'true'
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vfs_cache_mode: full
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poll_interval: 0
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```
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and run the stack:
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```
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docker stack deploy example -c ./example.yml
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```
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After a few seconds docker will spread the parsed stack description
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over cluster, create the `example_heimdall` service on port _8080_,
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run service containers on one or more cluster nodes and request
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the `example_configdata` volume from rclone plugins on the node hosts.
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You can use the following commands to confirm results:
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```
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docker service ls
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docker service ps example_heimdall
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docker volume ls
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```
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Point your browser to `http://cluster.host.address:8080` and play with
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the service. Stop it with `docker stack remove example` when you are done.
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Note that the `example_configdata` volume(s) created on demand at the
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cluster nodes will not be automatically removed together with the stack
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but stay for future reuse. You can remove them manually by invoking
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the `docker volume remove example_configdata` command on every node.
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## Creating Volumes via CLI
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Volumes can be created with [docker volume create](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/volume_create/).
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Here are a few examples:
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```
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docker volume create vol1 -d rclone -o remote=storj: -o vfs-cache-mode=full
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docker volume create vol2 -d rclone -o remote=:storj,access_grant=xxx:heimdall
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docker volume create vol3 -d rclone -o type=storj -o path=heimdall -o storj-access-grant=xxx -o poll-interval=0
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```
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Note the `-d rclone` flag that tells docker to request volume from the
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rclone driver. This works even if you installed managed driver by its full
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name `rclone/docker-volume-rclone` because you provided the `--alias rclone`
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option.
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Volumes can be inspected as follows:
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```
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docker volume list
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docker volume inspect vol1
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```
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## Volume Configuration
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Rclone flags and volume options are set via the `-o` flag to the
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`docker volume create` command. They include backend-specific parameters
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as well as mount and _VFS_ options. Also there are a few
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special `-o` options:
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`remote`, `fs`, `type`, `path`, `mount-type` and `persist`.
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`remote` determines an existing remote name from the config file, with
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trailing colon and optionally with a remote path. See the full syntax in
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the [rclone documentation](/docs/#syntax-of-remote-paths).
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This option can be aliased as `fs` to prevent confusion with the
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_remote_ parameter of such backends as _crypt_ or _alias_.
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The `remote=:backend:dir/subdir` syntax can be used to create
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[on-the-fly (config-less) remotes](/docs/#backend-path-to-dir),
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while the `type` and `path` options provide a simpler alternative for this.
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Using two split options
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```
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-o type=backend -o path=dir/subdir
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```
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is equivalent to the combined syntax
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```
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-o remote=:backend:dir/subdir
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```
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but is arguably easier to parameterize in scripts.
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The `path` part is optional.
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[Mount and VFS options](/commands/rclone_serve_docker/#options)
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as well as [backend parameters](/flags/#backend-flags) are named
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like their twin command-line flags without the `--` CLI prefix.
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Optionally you can use underscores instead of dashes in option names.
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For example, `--vfs-cache-mode full` becomes
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`-o vfs-cache-mode=full` or `-o vfs_cache_mode=full`.
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Boolean CLI flags without value will gain the `true` value, e.g.
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`--allow-other` becomes `-o allow-other=true` or `-o allow_other=true`.
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Please note that you can provide parameters only for the backend immediately
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referenced by the backend type of mounted `remote`.
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If this is a wrapping backend like _alias, chunker or crypt_, you cannot
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provide options for the referred to remote or backend. This limitation is
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imposed by the rclone connection string parser. The only workaround is to
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feed plugin with `rclone.conf` or configure plugin arguments (see below).
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## Special Volume Options
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`mount-type` determines the mount method and in general can be one of:
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`mount`, `cmount`, or `mount2`. This can be aliased as `mount_type`.
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It should be noted that the managed rclone docker plugin currently does
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not support the `cmount` method and `mount2` is rarely needed.
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This option defaults to the first found method, which is usually `mount`
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so you generally won't need it.
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`persist` is a reserved boolean (true/false) option.
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In future it will allow to persist on-the-fly remotes in the plugin
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`rclone.conf` file.
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## Connection Strings
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The `remote` value can be extended
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with [connection strings](/docs/#connection-strings)
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as an alternative way to supply backend parameters. This is equivalent
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to the `-o` backend options with one _syntactic difference_.
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Inside connection string the backend prefix must be dropped from parameter
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names but in the `-o param=value` array it must be present.
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For instance, compare the following option array
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```
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-o remote=:sftp:/home -o sftp-host=localhost
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```
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with equivalent connection string:
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```
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-o remote=:sftp,host=localhost:/home
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```
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This difference exists because flag options `-o key=val` include not only
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backend parameters but also mount/VFS flags and possibly other settings.
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Also it allows to discriminate the `remote` option from the `crypt-remote`
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(or similarly named backend parameters) and arguably simplifies scripting
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due to clearer value substitution.
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## Using with Swarm or Compose
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Both _Docker Swarm_ and _Docker Compose_ use
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[YAML](http://yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html)-formatted text files to describe
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groups (stacks) of containers, their properties, networks and volumes.
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_Compose_ uses the [compose v2](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v2/#volume-configuration-reference) format,
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_Swarm_ uses the [compose v3](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v3/#volume-configuration-reference) format.
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They are mostly similar, differences are explained in the
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[docker documentation](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-versioning/#upgrading).
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Volumes are described by the children of the top-level `volumes:` node.
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Each of them should be named after its volume and have at least two
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elements, the self-explanatory `driver: rclone` value and the
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`driver_opts:` structure playing the same role as `-o key=val` CLI flags:
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```
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volumes:
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volume_name_1:
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driver: rclone
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driver_opts:
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remote: 'gdrive:'
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allow_other: 'true'
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vfs_cache_mode: full
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token: '{"type": "borrower", "expires": "2021-12-31"}'
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poll_interval: 0
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```
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Notice a few important details:
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- YAML prefers `_` in option names instead of `-`.
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- YAML treats single and double quotes interchangeably.
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Simple strings and integers can be left unquoted.
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- Boolean values must be quoted like `'true'` or `"false"` because
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these two words are reserved by YAML.
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- The filesystem string is keyed with `remote` (or with `fs`).
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Normally you can omit quotes here, but if the string ends with colon,
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you **must** quote it like `remote: "storage_box:"`.
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- YAML is picky about surrounding braces in values as this is in fact
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another [syntax for key/value mappings](http://yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2790832).
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For example, JSON access tokens usually contain double quotes and
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surrounding braces, so you must put them in single quotes.
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## Installing as Managed Plugin
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Docker daemon can install plugins from an image registry and run them managed.
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We maintain the
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[docker-volume-rclone](https://hub.docker.com/p/rclone/docker-volume-rclone/)
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plugin image on [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com).
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Rclone volume plugin requires **Docker Engine >= 19.03.15**
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The plugin requires presence of two directories on the host before it can
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be installed. Note that plugin will **not** create them automatically.
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By default they must exist on host at the following locations
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(though you can tweak the paths):
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- `/var/lib/docker-plugins/rclone/config`
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is reserved for the `rclone.conf` config file and **must** exist
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even if it's empty and the config file is not present.
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- `/var/lib/docker-plugins/rclone/cache`
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holds the plugin state file as well as optional VFS caches.
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You can [install managed plugin](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/plugin_install/)
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with default settings as follows:
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```
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docker plugin install rclone/docker-volume-rclone:amd64 --grant-all-permissions --alias rclone
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```
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The `:amd64` part of the image specification after colon is called a _tag_.
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Usually you will want to install the latest plugin for your architecture. In
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this case the tag will just name it, like `amd64` above. The following plugin
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architectures are currently available:
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- `amd64`
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- `arm64`
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- `arm-v7`
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Sometimes you might want a concrete plugin version, not the latest one.
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Then you should use image tag in the form `:ARCHITECTURE-VERSION`.
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For example, to install plugin version `v1.56.2` on architecture `arm64`
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you will use tag `arm64-1.56.2` (note the removed `v`) so the full image
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specification becomes `rclone/docker-volume-rclone:arm64-1.56.2`.
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We also provide the `latest` plugin tag, but since docker does not support
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multi-architecture plugins as of the time of this writing, this tag is
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currently an **alias for `amd64`**.
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By convention the `latest` tag is the default one and can be omitted, thus
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both `rclone/docker-volume-rclone:latest` and just `rclone/docker-volume-rclone`
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will refer to the latest plugin release for the `amd64` platform.
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Also the `amd64` part can be omitted from the versioned rclone plugin tags.
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For example, rclone image reference `rclone/docker-volume-rclone:amd64-1.56.2`
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can be abbreviated as `rclone/docker-volume-rclone:1.56.2` for convenience.
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However, for non-intel architectures you still have to use the full tag as
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`amd64` or `latest` will fail to start.
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Managed plugin is in fact a special container running in a namespace separate
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from normal docker containers. Inside it runs the `rclone serve docker`
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command. The config and cache directories are bind-mounted into the
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container at start. The docker daemon connects to a unix socket created
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by the command inside the container. The command creates on-demand remote
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mounts right inside, then docker machinery propagates them through kernel
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mount namespaces and bind-mounts into requesting user containers.
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You can tweak a few plugin settings after installation when it's disabled
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(not in use), for instance:
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```
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docker plugin disable rclone
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docker plugin set rclone RCLONE_VERBOSE=2 config=/etc/rclone args="--vfs-cache-mode=writes --allow-other"
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docker plugin enable rclone
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docker plugin inspect rclone
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```
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Note that if docker refuses to disable the plugin, you should find and
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remove all active volumes connected with it as well as containers and
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swarm services that use them. This is rather tedious so please carefully
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plan in advance.
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You can tweak the following settings:
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`args`, `config`, `cache`, `HTTP_PROXY`, `HTTPS_PROXY`, `NO_PROXY`
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and `RCLONE_VERBOSE`.
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It's _your_ task to keep plugin settings in sync across swarm cluster nodes.
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`args` sets command-line arguments for the `rclone serve docker` command
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(_none_ by default). Arguments should be separated by space so you will
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normally want to put them in quotes on the
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[docker plugin set](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/plugin_set/)
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command line. Both [serve docker flags](/commands/rclone_serve_docker/#options)
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and [generic rclone flags](/flags/) are supported, including backend
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parameters that will be used as defaults for volume creation.
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Note that plugin will fail (due to [this docker bug](https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/v20.10.7/plugin/v2/plugin.go#L195))
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if the `args` value is empty. Use e.g. `args="-v"` as a workaround.
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`config=/host/dir` sets alternative host location for the config directory.
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Plugin will look for `rclone.conf` here. It's not an error if the config
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file is not present but the directory must exist. Please note that plugin
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can periodically rewrite the config file, for example when it renews
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storage access tokens. Keep this in mind and try to avoid races between
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the plugin and other instances of rclone on the host that might try to
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change the config simultaneously resulting in corrupted `rclone.conf`.
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You can also put stuff like private key files for SFTP remotes in this
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directory. Just note that it's bind-mounted inside the plugin container
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at the predefined path `/data/config`. For example, if your key file is
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named `sftp-box1.key` on the host, the corresponding volume config option
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should read `-o sftp-key-file=/data/config/sftp-box1.key`.
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`cache=/host/dir` sets alternative host location for the _cache_ directory.
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The plugin will keep VFS caches here. Also it will create and maintain
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the `docker-plugin.state` file in this directory. When the plugin is
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restarted or reinstalled, it will look in this file to recreate any volumes
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that existed previously. However, they will not be re-mounted into
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consuming containers after restart. Usually this is not a problem as
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the docker daemon normally will restart affected user containers after
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failures, daemon restarts or host reboots.
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`RCLONE_VERBOSE` sets plugin verbosity from `0` (errors only, by default)
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to `2` (debugging). Verbosity can be also tweaked via `args="-v [-v] ..."`.
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Since arguments are more generic, you will rarely need this setting.
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The plugin output by default feeds the docker daemon log on local host.
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Log entries are reflected as _errors_ in the docker log but retain their
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actual level assigned by rclone in the encapsulated message string.
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`HTTP_PROXY`, `HTTPS_PROXY`, `NO_PROXY` customize the plugin proxy settings.
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You can set custom plugin options right when you install it, _in one go_:
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```
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docker plugin remove rclone
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docker plugin install rclone/docker-volume-rclone:amd64 \
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--alias rclone --grant-all-permissions \
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args="-v --allow-other" config=/etc/rclone
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docker plugin inspect rclone
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```
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## Healthchecks
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The docker plugin volume protocol doesn't provide a way for plugins
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to inform the docker daemon that a volume is (un-)available.
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As a workaround you can setup a healthcheck to verify that the mount
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is responding, for example:
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```
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|
services:
|
|
my_service:
|
|
image: my_image
|
|
healthcheck:
|
|
test: ls /path/to/rclone/mount || exit 1
|
|
interval: 1m
|
|
timeout: 15s
|
|
retries: 3
|
|
start_period: 15s
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Running Plugin under Systemd
|
|
|
|
In most cases you should prefer managed mode. Moreover, MacOS and Windows
|
|
do not support native Docker plugins. Please use managed mode on these
|
|
systems. Proceed further only if you are on Linux.
|
|
|
|
First, [install rclone](/install/).
|
|
You can just run it (type `rclone serve docker` and hit enter) for the test.
|
|
|
|
Install _FUSE_:
|
|
```
|
|
sudo apt-get -y install fuse
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Download two systemd configuration files:
|
|
[docker-volume-rclone.service](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rclone/rclone/master/contrib/docker-plugin/systemd/docker-volume-rclone.service)
|
|
and [docker-volume-rclone.socket](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rclone/rclone/master/contrib/docker-plugin/systemd/docker-volume-rclone.socket).
|
|
|
|
Put them to the `/etc/systemd/system/` directory:
|
|
```
|
|
cp docker-volume-plugin.service /etc/systemd/system/
|
|
cp docker-volume-plugin.socket /etc/systemd/system/
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Please note that all commands in this section must be run as _root_ but
|
|
we omit `sudo` prefix for brevity.
|
|
Now create directories required by the service:
|
|
```
|
|
mkdir -p /var/lib/docker-volumes/rclone
|
|
mkdir -p /var/lib/docker-plugins/rclone/config
|
|
mkdir -p /var/lib/docker-plugins/rclone/cache
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Run the docker plugin service in the socket activated mode:
|
|
```
|
|
systemctl daemon-reload
|
|
systemctl start docker-volume-rclone.service
|
|
systemctl enable docker-volume-rclone.socket
|
|
systemctl start docker-volume-rclone.socket
|
|
systemctl restart docker
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Or run the service directly:
|
|
- run `systemctl daemon-reload` to let systemd pick up new config
|
|
- run `systemctl enable docker-volume-rclone.service` to make the new
|
|
service start automatically when you power on your machine.
|
|
- run `systemctl start docker-volume-rclone.service`
|
|
to start the service now.
|
|
- run `systemctl restart docker` to restart docker daemon and let it
|
|
detect the new plugin socket. Note that this step is not needed in
|
|
managed mode where docker knows about plugin state changes.
|
|
|
|
The two methods are equivalent from the user perspective, but I personally
|
|
prefer socket activation.
|
|
|
|
## Troubleshooting
|
|
|
|
You can [see managed plugin settings](https://docs.docker.com/engine/extend/#debugging-plugins)
|
|
with
|
|
```
|
|
docker plugin list
|
|
docker plugin inspect rclone
|
|
```
|
|
Note that docker (including latest 20.10.7) will not show actual values
|
|
of `args`, just the defaults.
|
|
|
|
Use `journalctl --unit docker` to see managed plugin output as part of
|
|
the docker daemon log. Note that docker reflects plugin lines as _errors_
|
|
but their actual level can be seen from encapsulated message string.
|
|
|
|
You will usually install the latest version of managed plugin for your platform.
|
|
Use the following commands to print the actual installed version:
|
|
```
|
|
PLUGID=$(docker plugin list --no-trunc | awk '/rclone/{print$1}')
|
|
sudo runc --root /run/docker/runtime-runc/plugins.moby exec $PLUGID rclone version
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
You can even use `runc` to run shell inside the plugin container:
|
|
```
|
|
sudo runc --root /run/docker/runtime-runc/plugins.moby exec --tty $PLUGID bash
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Also you can use curl to check the plugin socket connectivity:
|
|
```
|
|
docker plugin list --no-trunc
|
|
PLUGID=123abc...
|
|
sudo curl -H Content-Type:application/json -XPOST -d {} --unix-socket /run/docker/plugins/$PLUGID/rclone.sock http://localhost/Plugin.Activate
|
|
```
|
|
though this is rarely needed.
|
|
|
|
## Caveats
|
|
|
|
Finally I'd like to mention a _caveat with updating volume settings_.
|
|
Docker CLI does not have a dedicated command like `docker volume update`.
|
|
It may be tempting to invoke `docker volume create` with updated options
|
|
on existing volume, but there is a gotcha. The command will do nothing,
|
|
it won't even return an error. I hope that docker maintainers will fix
|
|
this some day. In the meantime be aware that you must remove your volume
|
|
before recreating it with new settings:
|
|
```
|
|
docker volume remove my_vol
|
|
docker volume create my_vol -d rclone -o opt1=new_val1 ...
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
and verify that settings did update:
|
|
```
|
|
docker volume list
|
|
docker volume inspect my_vol
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
If docker refuses to remove the volume, you should find containers
|
|
or swarm services that use it and stop them first.
|