I created a mysql container using the officially supported mysql image. I ran the image mounting a folder that contains a sql dump, then I created a new database in the cont
Based on the @dekin research, I did this to solve the issue:
Dockerfile:
FROM mysql:latest
RUN cp -r /var/lib/mysql /var/lib/mysql-no-volume
CMD ["--datadir", "/var/lib/mysql-no-volume"]
Build & run:
docker build . -t my-mysql
docker run -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=root -it my-mysql
Try to connect to the running container outside via the liking containers:
sudo docker run --name mysql-psat1 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=secret -d mysql:latest
docker run --rm -i -t -v /opt/Projets/P1/sqldumps:/mnt --link mysql-psat1:mysqlserver mysql:latest /bin/bash
> mysql --host $MYSQLSERVER_PORT_80_TCP_ADDR --port $MYSQLSERVER_PORT_80_TCP_PORT -uroot -psecret -e 'create database liferay_psat1;'
> mysql --host $MYSQLSERVER_PORT_80_TCP_ADDR --port $MYSQLSERVER_PORT_80_TCP_PORT -uroot -psecret liferay_psat1 < /mnt/liferay_sql_dump.sql
Then stop both containers and commit the servers container which has name mysql-psat1
Based on @Robert answer, I ended up with this Dockerfile
:
FROM mysql:5.6.22
RUN cp -r /var/lib/mysql /var/lib/mysql-no-volume
RUN sed -i -e "s|/var/lib/mysql|/var/lib/mysql-no-volume|" /etc/mysql/my.cnf
The CMD
override didn't work for me, container stopped with a strange error:
2019-02-21 15:18:50 1 [Note] Plugin 'FEDERATED' is disabled.
mysqld: Table 'mysql.plugin' doesn't exist
2019-02-21 15:18:50 1 [ERROR] Can't open the mysql.plugin table. Please run mysql_upgrade to create it.
I guess that the original CMD
command was doing more things that is now missing (in @Robert answer) so I did it in a different approach.
I didn't try it with latest
version but I think it should work.
The official mysql image stores data in a volume. Normally this is desired so that your data can persist beyond the life span of your container, but data volumes bypass the Union File System and are not committed to the image.
You can accomplish what you're trying to do by creating your own mysql base image with no volumes. You will then be able to add data and commit it to an image, but any data added to a running container after the commit will be lost when the container goes away.