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