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Cloudron Forum

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  1. Cloudron Forum
  2. Feature Requests
  3. Storage limits per-app

Storage limits per-app

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  • M msbt

    @girish what about https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run/#set-storage-driver-options-per-container (from https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38542426/docker-container-specific-disk-quota)

    girishG Offline
    girishG Offline
    girish
    Staff
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    @msbt Interesting link, thanks. I wonder if it works for volumes also. It says it depends on the "volume plugin". Have to investigate. On Cloudron, the data directory is just a normal volume and doesn't use any plugin and it's unclear if that standard thing supports storage-opt.

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    • MooCloud_MattM MooCloud_Matt

      @robi said in Storage limits per-app:

      MayaData.com

      I think they use OpenEBS, and as all the distributed storage solutions are complicated to set up, we use Ceph and need a dedicated port on the cluster server for the sync job, not as a requirement but as a need for reasonable performance to be able to use there features.

      robiR Offline
      robiR Offline
      robi
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      @moocloud_matt said in Storage limits per-app:

      OpenEBS

      Yes, but there is a more advanced version at MayaData.

      @staff and I have spoken with them before.

      Conscious tech

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      • AizatA Offline
        AizatA Offline
        Aizat
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        Any news about this? This is very useful especially if we're giving access to our clients who may overuse the storage in some of the apps on Cloudron.

        girishG 1 Reply Last reply
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        • AizatA Aizat

          Any news about this? This is very useful especially if we're giving access to our clients who may overuse the storage in some of the apps on Cloudron.

          girishG Offline
          girishG Offline
          girish
          Staff
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          @Aizat Still looking for suggestions to my comment https://forum.cloudron.io/topic/5103/storage-limits-per-app/7

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          • girishG girish referenced this topic on
          • girishG Offline
            girishG Offline
            girish
            Staff
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            Maybe we have use usrquota - https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-filesystem-quotas-on-ubuntu-18-04 . I guess this involves creating a user per app.

            XFS has pquota - https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/managing_file_systems/assembly_limiting-storage-space-usage-on-xfs-with-quotas_managing-file-systems . EXT4 has prjquota - https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/managing_file_systems/assembly_limiting-storage-space-usage-on-ext4-with-quotas_managing-file-systems

            Also, found that there is a --storage-size when using XFS in Docker - https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run/#set-storage-driver-options-per-container

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            • robiR robi

              @moocloud_matt said in Storage limits per-app:

              OpenEBS

              Yes, but there is a more advanced version at MayaData.

              @staff and I have spoken with them before.

              robiR Offline
              robiR Offline
              robi
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              This was also addressed in OpenEBS - https://github.com/openebs/dynamic-localpv-provisioner/issues/13

              Conscious tech

              girishG 1 Reply Last reply
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              • robiR robi

                This was also addressed in OpenEBS - https://github.com/openebs/dynamic-localpv-provisioner/issues/13

                girishG Offline
                girishG Offline
                girish
                Staff
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                @robi Nice find, looks like they implemented this as XFS only. Most VPS providers use EXT4 by default afaik.

                robiR 1 Reply Last reply
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                • girishG girish

                  @robi Nice find, looks like they implemented this as XFS only. Most VPS providers use EXT4 by default afaik.

                  robiR Offline
                  robiR Offline
                  robi
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  @girish It does not matter that VPS providers use as you control what happens inside containers.

                  If you choose to attach container volumes they can be XFS layers with all the nice tools XFS comes with, which EXT4 lacks.

                  Similarly for attaching external volumes of additional space apart from the default FS the OS is installed on.

                  Conscious tech

                  girishG 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • robiR robi

                    @girish It does not matter that VPS providers use as you control what happens inside containers.

                    If you choose to attach container volumes they can be XFS layers with all the nice tools XFS comes with, which EXT4 lacks.

                    Similarly for attaching external volumes of additional space apart from the default FS the OS is installed on.

                    girishG Offline
                    girishG Offline
                    girish
                    Staff
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    @robi the volumes can be XFS, but it requires a backing device. On a standard VPS, this means that we have to create a (big enough) file on EXT4 file system and then format it as XFS. This setup has the usual issues of loopback devices - what size this initial file should be, how to resize it live to increase/decrease storage etc. Not sure how well this performs either.

                    robiR AizatA 2 Replies Last reply
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                    • girishG girish

                      @robi the volumes can be XFS, but it requires a backing device. On a standard VPS, this means that we have to create a (big enough) file on EXT4 file system and then format it as XFS. This setup has the usual issues of loopback devices - what size this initial file should be, how to resize it live to increase/decrease storage etc. Not sure how well this performs either.

                      robiR Offline
                      robiR Offline
                      robi
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      @girish yep, or do a little parted scripting first to have a device backed partition avoiding loopback issues for a more static setup..

                      wanna make changes? restore from remote backup.

                      For a more dynamic setup integrate OpenEBS/MayaData so you can keep attaching additional extent layers or do virtual migrations to different sized container attached storage mounts.

                      Conscious tech

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                      • girishG girish

                        @robi the volumes can be XFS, but it requires a backing device. On a standard VPS, this means that we have to create a (big enough) file on EXT4 file system and then format it as XFS. This setup has the usual issues of loopback devices - what size this initial file should be, how to resize it live to increase/decrease storage etc. Not sure how well this performs either.

                        AizatA Offline
                        AizatA Offline
                        Aizat
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #22

                        @girish Hi, is there any news about the storage limits per-app implementation?

                        girishG 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • AizatA Aizat

                          @girish Hi, is there any news about the storage limits per-app implementation?

                          girishG Offline
                          girishG Offline
                          girish
                          Staff
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          @Aizat No plans yet. But as a workaround, you can always do this:

                          • Setup a block storage of appropriate size
                          • Then, add it as Cloudron Volume
                          • Move app's data directory into the Volume

                          That way, the app cannot use more data than the volume itself. This does not cover databasize size which is stored outside the volume.

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                          • girishG Offline
                            girishG Offline
                            girish
                            Staff
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #24

                            Atleast, postgres does not have a way to limit db size - https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37822195/restrict-database-size

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