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I have deployed a genezys/gitlab docker image on a host:

docker run --name gitlab_data genezys/gitlab:7.5.2 /bin/true
docker run --detach --name gitlab --publish 8080:80 --publish 2222:22 --volumes-from gitlab_data genezys/gitlab:7.5.2

Now I want to backup the code repository in case the host is crashed.

I am a little confused about the backup policy: Since I have created gitlab_data container for storage purpose, should I backup the whole gitlab_data docker image? Or I just use gitlab rake to backup the code repository? Or are there any better methods?

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  • The important things is the restore, backup everything you need to do that restore in the time you have to do the restore. You should then try a restore to make sure you haven't missed anything. May 4, 2015 at 9:26

2 Answers 2

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Only the official backup process should be needed.

Backup of the image should not: you would only docker run the same image again, with the right parameter to restore the app:

docker run --name=gitlab -it --rm [OPTIONS] \
  sameersbn/gitlab:7.10.1 app:rake gitlab:backup:restore

Backuping the image doesn't really make sense: the image should only be the app, which can be save and exported with docker save. Any persistent data should be backed up independently.
Plus:

  • An application backup (like the app:rake task) isn't the same as "saving an image" (an image is just a filesystem).
    When you do an application backup (app:rake here), you can do additional jobs in order to ensure the consistency and integrity of the data you are about to backup. You are not simply compressing folders.
  • Thomasleveil adds in the comments:

You cannot backup your git repo by making a backup of the docker container into a docker image... because the gitlab image defines volumes for /home/git/data and /var/log/gitlab.
So any data written to those paths in the docker container IS NOT written on the docker container file system. As a result the docker export or docker commit commands would not include the content of those paths

In case of a data container, the OP adds:

I use docker commit to save gitlab_data container as a new image, then restart the gitlab container using the new image as a volume, but find all the previous data doesn't exist (including code repository).

You don't restart gitlab with "the new (data) image": you need to create a container from that gitlab_data_image you have committed, and then restart gitlab using the new_gitlab_data container created from the committed gitlab_data_image.

docker create --name="new_gitlab_data" gitlab_data_image
docker run gitlab --volumes-from=new_gitlab_data 
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  • I use docker commit to save gitlab_data container as a new image, then restart the gitlab container using the new image as a volume, but find all the previous data doesn't exist (including code repository). Any comments or clues? Thanks!
    – Nan Xiao
    May 6, 2015 at 7:23
  • @NanXiao you don't restart gitlab with "the new (data) image": you need to create a container from that image you have committed, and then restart gitlab using the new data container created from the committed image.
    – VonC
    May 6, 2015 at 7:24
  • @VonC: Why the gitlab and gitlab_data should be the same image? I think the gitlab_data is just a storage.
    – Nan Xiao
    May 6, 2015 at 7:26
  • @NanXiao I never say they were: one reference the other with the --volumes-from option.
    – VonC
    May 6, 2015 at 7:27
  • @VonC: Sorry, I misunderstood your meaning. Yes, I think I do as you mentioned: (1) Create a new image: docker commit e93cecab3c3c nanxiao:testimage; (2) Remove all containers; (3) Use new image as storage: docker run --name gitlab_data nanxiao:testimage /bin/true; (4) Start new gitlab: docker run --detach --name gitlab --publish 8080:80 --publish 2222:22 --volumes-from gitlab_data genezys/gitlab:7.5.2. But no previous data can see, including the modified password. It seems a new clean gitlab.
    – Nan Xiao
    May 6, 2015 at 7:41
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Additional information:

Data stored on a volume from a "data container" is not actually "in" the container. It is actually in a non-obvious directory on the host. So docker commit of the data container does not include the data stored on the volume.

To back up data from a Docker data container, you should mount a volume from the host and use --volumes-from your_data_container to access the data container data. Then copy from the data container to the mounted host volume. That process is described with more detail in the Docker docs, but here is a shorthand version:

docker run --volumes-from dbdata -v $(pwd):/backup ubuntu tar cvf /backup/backup.tar /dbdatadir

Where "dbdata" is your data container and "dbdatadir" is the location of the data you want to back up in the container.

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