You can just mount the SMB volume using docker-compose.
I think have some example compose files if you need some example.
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You can just mount the SMB volume using docker-compose.
I think have some example compose files if you need some example.
@Catsrules Thanks. This specific to Immich. The upload location in the docker-compose is picked from .env file. I, for the life of me, cannot figure out how to mount the portainer SMB volume in the .env file. What I ended up doing was to select the containers using the upload location and edit the volume to attach the SMB share volume from portainer. I hope what I said makes sense. I am just a newbie learning docker right now.
I am kind of just making this up as I go along so odds are this won't work but it will hopefully get you closer. I only modified the very end under the volumes from their default compose file here https://github.com/immich-app/immich/releases/latest/download/docker-compose.yml
You will need to change the IP address to the address of you SMB server as well as the user name and password your going to be using. You may need to change the uid and gid I think you want those to be the id of whatever user is running immich. 1000 is usually a good default if you don't know.
In the .env file try just putting in upload-volume as the upload location. Like this
UPLOAD_LOCATION=upload-volume
Oh I almost forgot your host computer (the one running docker) needs to have cifs-utils installed or the cifs volume will not work and you will get a bunch of errors (Ask me how I know).
Modified Compose file
version: "3.8"
services:
immich-server:
container_name: immich_server
image: ghcr.io/immich-app/immich-server:${IMMICH_VERSION:-release}
command: [ "start.sh", "immich" ]
volumes:
- ${UPLOAD_LOCATION}:/usr/src/app/upload
env_file:
- .env
depends_on:
- redis
- database
- typesense
restart: always
immich-microservices:
container_name: immich_microservices
image: ghcr.io/immich-app/immich-server:${IMMICH_VERSION:-release}
# extends:
# file: hwaccel.yml
# service: hwaccel
command: [ "start.sh", "microservices" ]
volumes:
- ${UPLOAD_LOCATION}:/usr/src/app/upload
env_file:
- .env
depends_on:
- redis
- database
- typesense
restart: always
immich-machine-learning:
container_name: immich_machine_learning
image: ghcr.io/immich-app/immich-machine-learning:${IMMICH_VERSION:-release}
volumes:
- model-cache:/cache
env_file:
- .env
restart: always
immich-web:
container_name: immich_web
image: ghcr.io/immich-app/immich-web:${IMMICH_VERSION:-release}
env_file:
- .env
restart: always
typesense:
container_name: immich_typesense
image: typesense/typesense:0.24.1@sha256:9bcff2b829f12074426ca044b56160ca9d777a0c488303469143dd9f8259d4dd
environment:
- TYPESENSE_API_KEY=${TYPESENSE_API_KEY}
- TYPESENSE_DATA_DIR=/data
volumes:
- tsdata:/data
restart: always
redis:
container_name: immich_redis
image: redis:6.2-alpine@sha256:70a7a5b641117670beae0d80658430853896b5ef269ccf00d1827427e3263fa3
restart: always
database:
container_name: immich_postgres
image: postgres:14-alpine@sha256:28407a9961e76f2d285dc6991e8e48893503cc3836a4755bbc2d40bcc272a441
env_file:
- .env
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: ${DB_PASSWORD}
POSTGRES_USER: ${DB_USERNAME}
POSTGRES_DB: ${DB_DATABASE_NAME}
volumes:
- pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
restart: always
immich-proxy:
container_name: immich_proxy
image: ghcr.io/immich-app/immich-proxy:${IMMICH_VERSION:-release}
environment:
# Make sure these values get passed through from the env file
- IMMICH_SERVER_URL
- IMMICH_WEB_URL
ports:
- 2283:8080
depends_on:
- immich-server
- immich-web
restart: always
volumes:
pgdata:
model-cache:
tsdata:
upload-volume:
driver: local
driver_opts:
type: cifs
device: "//172.1.1.6/changetoshare"
o: addr=172.1.1.6,username=changetouser,password=changeme,vers=2.0,uid=1000,gid=1000
You'd mount the volume in the docker-compose.yml using the volumes:
node.
You can try to automatically generate the compose file via this command:
docker run --rm \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
ghcr.io/red5d/docker-autocompose \
your-current-container-name-or-id-goes-here \
another-container-should-there-be-more-than-one
Don’t add the mount in the container. Just open Portainer, go to your container, click “Duplicate/Edit”, scroll down, and do this:
@Dirk thanks. That's how I did it but I am not sure if updating using docker compose would overwrite it. Portainer is running on a VM so I will make sure to snapshot it and try so I can restore it if needed.
You’re using Portainer, why manually mess with docker compose?
@LordChaos82 @selfhosted you can create a compose file, and in it, state the volumes are external (so compose knows to reuse existing volumes).