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  2. NocoDB
  3. Filesystem Mount inside Container

Filesystem Mount inside Container

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  • SupaikuS Supaiku

    @girish that makes sense - I didn't see anything about this list or how it's hardcoded in the Docs, did I just miss that or is it not mentioned there?

    girishG Offline
    girishG Offline
    girish
    Staff
    wrote on last edited by girish
    #10

    @Supaiku indeed, it's not listed anywhere in the docs. I will get that sorted out.

    edit: added note in https://docs.cloudron.io/volumes/#filesystem

    SupaikuS 2 Replies Last reply
    1
    • girishG girish

      @Supaiku indeed, it's not listed anywhere in the docs. I will get that sorted out.

      edit: added note in https://docs.cloudron.io/volumes/#filesystem

      SupaikuS Offline
      SupaikuS Offline
      Supaiku
      wrote on last edited by
      #11

      @girish w00t! 🙂

      Interestingly in my case I was trying to add something mounted under /media/ but it wasn't working. Perhaps something else was amiss there or it was updated since.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • girishG girish

        @Supaiku indeed, it's not listed anywhere in the docs. I will get that sorted out.

        edit: added note in https://docs.cloudron.io/volumes/#filesystem

        SupaikuS Offline
        SupaikuS Offline
        Supaiku
        wrote on last edited by
        #12

        @girish I actually discovered that what I thought had worked didn't, the symlinks to the mounted drive do not work (I had accidentally just used directories inside of directories that weren't properly symlinked, and there are also symlinked directories which do work), they give the same "hostPath does not exist" error even inside /srv/ (and also inside their non-symlinked mount point inside media)

        Why wouldn't these mount points be visible to cloudron?

        /etc/fstab line:

        UUID=29608fe1-0f6c-4326-b10f-94750492ba49 /media/r00buntu/Data ext4 defaults,users,rw,auto 0 0
        

        As you can see it's mounted within /media
        But it's also symlinked within the srv directory for example: /srv/rzn-bk/backups-sym and when trying to add that it won't add. Same goes for just /srv/backups-sym

        All host path does not exist...

        nebulonN girishG 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • SupaikuS Supaiku

          @girish I actually discovered that what I thought had worked didn't, the symlinks to the mounted drive do not work (I had accidentally just used directories inside of directories that weren't properly symlinked, and there are also symlinked directories which do work), they give the same "hostPath does not exist" error even inside /srv/ (and also inside their non-symlinked mount point inside media)

          Why wouldn't these mount points be visible to cloudron?

          /etc/fstab line:

          UUID=29608fe1-0f6c-4326-b10f-94750492ba49 /media/r00buntu/Data ext4 defaults,users,rw,auto 0 0
          

          As you can see it's mounted within /media
          But it's also symlinked within the srv directory for example: /srv/rzn-bk/backups-sym and when trying to add that it won't add. Same goes for just /srv/backups-sym

          All host path does not exist...

          nebulonN Offline
          nebulonN Offline
          nebulon
          Staff
          wrote on last edited by
          #13

          @Supaiku have you tried to add a volume in Cloudron with the existing mountpoint option? The symlink as such will not work as Cloudron will resolve the mount point directly

          1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • SupaikuS Supaiku

            @girish I actually discovered that what I thought had worked didn't, the symlinks to the mounted drive do not work (I had accidentally just used directories inside of directories that weren't properly symlinked, and there are also symlinked directories which do work), they give the same "hostPath does not exist" error even inside /srv/ (and also inside their non-symlinked mount point inside media)

            Why wouldn't these mount points be visible to cloudron?

            /etc/fstab line:

            UUID=29608fe1-0f6c-4326-b10f-94750492ba49 /media/r00buntu/Data ext4 defaults,users,rw,auto 0 0
            

            As you can see it's mounted within /media
            But it's also symlinked within the srv directory for example: /srv/rzn-bk/backups-sym and when trying to add that it won't add. Same goes for just /srv/backups-sym

            All host path does not exist...

            girishG Offline
            girishG Offline
            girish
            Staff
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            @Supaiku on Cloudron, the only way to expose paths from host into apps is to use Volumes.

            If you want to manage the mount on host yourself, first add a Volume using File system (mountpoint) - https://docs.cloudron.io/volumes/#filesystem-mountpoint . If possible, I would actually use one of the "managed" mount types instead of editing fstab directly, but I don't know your setup.

            After you have created the volume, you have to then "mount" this into whichever app(s) you want - https://docs.cloudron.io/apps/#mounts

            SupaikuS 1 Reply Last reply
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            • girishG girish

              @Supaiku on Cloudron, the only way to expose paths from host into apps is to use Volumes.

              If you want to manage the mount on host yourself, first add a Volume using File system (mountpoint) - https://docs.cloudron.io/volumes/#filesystem-mountpoint . If possible, I would actually use one of the "managed" mount types instead of editing fstab directly, but I don't know your setup.

              After you have created the volume, you have to then "mount" this into whichever app(s) you want - https://docs.cloudron.io/apps/#mounts

              SupaikuS Offline
              SupaikuS Offline
              Supaiku
              wrote on last edited by Supaiku
              #15

              @girish I also use the volume in my linux install on my home server for other services, so it's mounted when the server boots up

              trying to add it via the filesystem mountpoint results in the same error:
              d2ee227b-8297-4fc5-9b23-14fe70b99e9f-image.png

              It is a EXT4 formatted disk, so I tried that one and got this:
              c35b10c5-2cec-4768-86ba-6838d2c91f2d-image.png

              Perhaps because it's already mounted?
              9659986f-775d-430c-aceb-cfb7d92d963e-image.png

              I'll find an extra drive and hook it up and see if I can get it work with something fresh.

              girishG benborgesB 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • SupaikuS Supaiku

                @girish I also use the volume in my linux install on my home server for other services, so it's mounted when the server boots up

                trying to add it via the filesystem mountpoint results in the same error:
                d2ee227b-8297-4fc5-9b23-14fe70b99e9f-image.png

                It is a EXT4 formatted disk, so I tried that one and got this:
                c35b10c5-2cec-4768-86ba-6838d2c91f2d-image.png

                Perhaps because it's already mounted?
                9659986f-775d-430c-aceb-cfb7d92d963e-image.png

                I'll find an extra drive and hook it up and see if I can get it work with something fresh.

                girishG Offline
                girishG Offline
                girish
                Staff
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                @Supaiku said in Filesystem Mount inside Container:

                It is a EXT4 formatted disk, so I tried that one and got this:

                There is a typo - it says /dev/diesk instead of /dev/disk . Could it be that?

                SupaikuS 1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • SupaikuS Supaiku

                  @girish I also use the volume in my linux install on my home server for other services, so it's mounted when the server boots up

                  trying to add it via the filesystem mountpoint results in the same error:
                  d2ee227b-8297-4fc5-9b23-14fe70b99e9f-image.png

                  It is a EXT4 formatted disk, so I tried that one and got this:
                  c35b10c5-2cec-4768-86ba-6838d2c91f2d-image.png

                  Perhaps because it's already mounted?
                  9659986f-775d-430c-aceb-cfb7d92d963e-image.png

                  I'll find an extra drive and hook it up and see if I can get it work with something fresh.

                  benborgesB Offline
                  benborgesB Offline
                  benborges
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  @Supaiku When I needed filesystems mount a few months ago (on top of sshfs mounts) I remember I struggled quite a bit to mount filesystems folders, but one thing worked :

                  • Create /srv/YourFolder
                  • Symlink that folder to the folder you want on the filesystem
                  • mount that path inside Cloudron

                  0cfe3d69-62a1-4038-b72e-23f19f86c9fd-image.png

                  That's how I read SQLite files from other apps from say NocoDB or other cloudron apps.

                  BenB

                  robiR SupaikuS 2 Replies Last reply
                  2
                  • benborgesB benborges

                    @Supaiku When I needed filesystems mount a few months ago (on top of sshfs mounts) I remember I struggled quite a bit to mount filesystems folders, but one thing worked :

                    • Create /srv/YourFolder
                    • Symlink that folder to the folder you want on the filesystem
                    • mount that path inside Cloudron

                    0cfe3d69-62a1-4038-b72e-23f19f86c9fd-image.png

                    That's how I read SQLite files from other apps from say NocoDB or other cloudron apps.

                    robiR Offline
                    robiR Offline
                    robi
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    @girish is this documented? app to app mounts?

                    Conscious tech

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • benborgesB benborges

                      @Supaiku When I needed filesystems mount a few months ago (on top of sshfs mounts) I remember I struggled quite a bit to mount filesystems folders, but one thing worked :

                      • Create /srv/YourFolder
                      • Symlink that folder to the folder you want on the filesystem
                      • mount that path inside Cloudron

                      0cfe3d69-62a1-4038-b72e-23f19f86c9fd-image.png

                      That's how I read SQLite files from other apps from say NocoDB or other cloudron apps.

                      SupaikuS Offline
                      SupaikuS Offline
                      Supaiku
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      @benborges I did try that, but for some reason it wasn't working with the folders on other mounted drives.

                      I just went with the mount point mounts on a new hard drive, but it is odd I couldn't get it to work.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • girishG girish

                        @Supaiku said in Filesystem Mount inside Container:

                        It is a EXT4 formatted disk, so I tried that one and got this:

                        There is a typo - it says /dev/diesk instead of /dev/disk . Could it be that?

                        SupaikuS Offline
                        SupaikuS Offline
                        Supaiku
                        wrote on last edited by Supaiku
                        #20

                        @girish 😥 could be - at least for the uid one, but not for the file one

                        I just put another disk on that was fresh and used that with the filesystem mount.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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