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Docker Volume Loopback

Overview

The docker-volume-loopback is a Docker volume driver that allows creating volumes that are fixed in size. Fixed size volumes are valuable because they can be used to "reserve" disk space for a particular container and make sure it will be available later when needed or limit the disk space available to a container so that it won't abuse the host and affect other processes running there.

This plugin makes use of Linux loop devices that can be used to present a file on a filesystem as a regular block device. Using loop devices allow for great flexibility as there are next to 0 prerequisites and they can be used on arbitrary Linux hosts. Volumes themselves are stored as regular files and are very easy to manage or even can be moved between different hosts. All of that being said, there are some potential performance and durability implications one may need to take into account when using loop devices and this particular plugin - they are discussed in more detail in the "Known Issues and Limitations" section below.

Generally speaking, an LVM-based docker volume driver is a more reliable and efficient alternative in case one can use LVM or setting it up is feasible (e.g., may not be an option on managed hosts).

Demo

Features

Regular & Sparse volumes

The plugin supports ext4 and xfs filesystems that together with sparse option (see details in "Usage" section) can be used to achieve different levels of disk space reservation guarantees.

When sparse option is enabled (disabled by default) the driver would create a sparse file to back the volume. This means that even though file will appear to be of a given size, it's not going to be taking that much of disk space. Instead, its physical size is going to be equal to its actual usage but won't be able to grow beyond the certain size limit. This can be useful when there is a need to limit disk space available but it might not be necessary to ensure it actually will be available. As a side effect one can create volumes larger than there is actually disk space available for the purpose of "over-subscription" when volumes are rarely used to their full size.

When regular files are used to back volumes the driver will first attempt to allocate as much disk space as was requested ensure volume can fit onto disk. After that volume is formatted with a filesystem of choice and behavior differs. When xfs is used the volume data file remains a "regular file" and volume still uses as much disk space as was requested providing a guarantee that the entire disk space is going to be available. In case ext4 is used, the data file is being converted to a sparse file. In other words, both in both cases driver verifies that there is enough disk space available at the moment of creation but then relaxes the reservation (in case of ext4) or keeps it place (in case of xfs) depending on filesystem used.

The table below shows actual data file size on disk before and after formatting depending on whether sparse option is used and how volume is formatted.

FS Sparse Regular
xfs 0% / 1% 100% / 100%
ext4 0% / 3% 100% / 3%

Volume Root Credentials

Plugin provides means to adjust credentials (uid/gid/mode) on volume root upon creation. This makes driver suitable for use in scenarios that include user namespace remapping for enhanced security. See "Usage" for details.

Extensive Logging

The plugin is designed to be as reliable as possible and its code is written in way that is slightly more explicit than one could be used to just to make sure all exceptional situations are handled. Although, we are all mere human beings cannot predict everything and things may fail. When that happens its crucial to be able to reproduce the issue and get as many details as possible so that one can pin point the source of failure and come up with a solution. For that purpose plugin is built around a "tracing" concept where every call of any significant interest is being accompanied by a so-called trace identifier that one can use to get a complete overview of what the plugin does. This also can be used for audit purposes or to understand how exactly plugin works. One can chose between 5 log levels - from error to trace to get different levels of details.

There are log samples available for a somehow corner case scenario (so that we can get some warnings!) for a volume creation operation when the plugin has to store its data files on an older filesystem like ext3 that does not support fallocate and therefore it falls back to a slower dd:

Thorough Testing

Plugin comes with an extensive test suite covering all aspects of its behavior which helps to ensure that it works as expected and any new changes won't break existing features.

Installation

Automatic

Plugin is compatible with Docker's managed plugin system and therefore can be installed as simple as:

$ docker plugin install ashald/docker-volume-loopback
  Plugin "ashald/docker-volume-loopback" is requesting the following privileges:
   - mount: [/dev]
   - mount: [/]
   - allow-all-devices: [true]
   - capabilities: [CAP_SYS_ADMIN]
  Do you grant the above permissions? [y/N] y
  latest: Pulling from ashald/docker-volume-loopback
  ...
  Installed plugin ashald/docker-volume-loopback

Manual

Plugin can be run "manually" - just as an executable on the same host as Docker daemon. Plugin default options are such that it should be possible to run it with minimum or no configuration. Plugin itself does not talk to Docker but it's the other way around - Docker expects to find plugin's socket in one of few pre-defined locations.

Configuration

Regardless of the way plugin is installed certain aspects of its behavior can be controlled. Both command line arguments and environment variables are supported.

Env Var Argument Default Comment
DATA_DIR --data-dir /var/lib/docker-volume-loopback Persistent dir to store volumes' data
MOUNT_DIR --mount-dir /mnt Dir to mount volumes so Docker can access them
STATE_DIR --state-dir /run/docker-volume-loopback Volatile dir to keep track of currently used volumes
LOG_LEVEL --log-level 2 0-4 for error/warning/info/debug/trace
LOG_FORMAT --log-format nice json / text / nice
SOCKET --socket /run/docker/plugins/docker-volume-loopback.sock Name of the socket determines plugin name
DEFAULT_SIZE --default-size 1GiB

When Docker's managed plugin system configuration can be adjusted via environment variables with the exception for SOCKET and MOUNT_DIR that have to be set to specific values. As for STATE_DIR and DATA_DIR they adjusted to /srv/run/docker-volume-loopback and /srv/var/lib/docker-volume-loopback respectively - host's file system can be accessed via /srv prefix.

Usage

Examples

Please note that examples below assume that the driver is run in manual mode and therefore is available as -d docker-volume-loopback. In managed mode (automatic installation) that will become -d ashald/docker-volume-loopback.

Create a regular volume using default filesystem (xfs) and size (1Gib):

$ docker volume create -d docker-volume-loopback foobar 

Create a sparse volume using custom filesystem (ext4) and size (100Mib):

$ docker volume create -d docker-volume-loopback foobar -o sparse=true -o fs=ext4 -o size=100MiB 

Create a regular volume using default filesystem (xfs) and size (1Gib) but adjust volume's root ownership and permissions:

$ docker volume create -d docker-volume-loopback foobar -o uid=1000 -o gid=2000 -o mode=777 

Options

Option Default Comment
size Set by DEFAULT_SIZE driver config option Size in bytes or with a unit suffix K/M/T/P and Ki/Mi/Ti/Pi
sparse false Whether to reserve disk space or just set a limit: true or false
fs xfs Filesystem to format volume with: xfs or ext4
uid -1 UID to set as owner of the volume's root, -1 means do not adjust
gid -1 GID to set as owner of the volume's root, -1 means do not adjust
mode 0 Mode to set for volume's root, octal with up to 4 positions

Known Issues and Limitations

Platforms

Only designed to be working on Linux. Potentially may work on macOS given that it uses an Alpine VM behind the scenes but this has not been tested.

Minimum Size

The minimum allowed volume size is 20 MB (20,000,000 bytes) and is necessary to fit any of supported filesystems. If smaller volume is needed it's advised to consider using Docker's native tmpfs volume driver that also supports limiting disk space available.

Performance

Loop devices are notorious for their "bad" performance. While it's not arguable that they incur and some overhead both in terms of CPU and memory it, it always should be evaluated in a context of a concrete use case. Generally speaking, if one does not constantly fsync after each write to a filesystem based on a loopback device [and just let kernel do its job] the performance seems to be comparable to regular block devices. Although, it must be noted that in such cases write operations are susceptible to the "double caching" issue where data are cached first while being written to the loopback device backed filesystem and then data cached again while changes are bing finally committed to the backing block device. This means that there may be a delay (on average, up to a 2 x 30 seconds = 1 minute) before writes will become durable by being committed to the backing block device. Also, cache buffers are usually freed and committed more often when system runs low on memory which means that usage of loopback devices is unlikely to degrade performance of the system as a whole but system running low on memory is likely to have loopback devices performing worse. For the record, cache memory is not being counted against memory.max_usage_in_bytes cgroup controller and therefore is ignored by Docker.

Last but not least, the release of Linux kernel v4.4 includes "Faster and leaner loop device with Direct I/O and Asynchronous I/O support" which circumvents the "double buffering" issue.

In terms of CPU, while no comprehensive benchmarks have been done during development of the plugin, the overhead seem to be negligible.

Filesystem Compatibility

Each volume entirely stored on disk as a single file. The filesystem those files are stored on makes a difference in some cases. When using a sparse volume type its data file is being created with a call to truncate which works instantaneously. Otherwise, the driver would attempt using fallocate to create a "regular" file that would actually claim the disk space and works as fast as truncate. Unfortunately fallocate is only known to work with newer filesystems such as ext4 and xfs and therefore will fail if underlying filesystem is an older one (e.g., ext3). In this case plugin will detect a failure and fall back to using dd which is universally compatible but significantly slower: depending on backing block device its write throughput may very between 10s of MiB/s to several GiB/s.

Kernel Compatibility

When dealing with volumes based on XFS filesystem the driver depends on mkfs.xfs from xfsprogs package. Starting from v3.2.3 (released on 2015-06-10) of the package newly created XfS filesystems default to use of a newer metadata format that is only supported by Linux kernel v3.16 and above.

This manifests as a failure during an attempt to mount a volume - the filesystem will be initialized properly upon volume creation but kernel will not be able to mount it.

This is unlikely to be an issue if manual installation mode is used as the version of xfsprogs available via Linux distribution-specific package manager is likely to be compatible with the version of Linux kernel required. When automatic installation is used though the plugin is [effectively] distributed as a container image based on Alpine Linux which [at the moment of writing] uses at least v4.19.0 of xfsprogs package. This means that in case the plugin will be installed on a system based on older version of kernel it won't be able to use XFS filesystem.

There is a workaround available that can be used to circumvent the issue: use an extra -m crc=0 parameter when calling mkfs.xfs which will force use of older version of metadata compatible with older versions of kernel. Unfortunately this cannot be a default behavior as this flag was added only to xfsprogs starting from v3.2.0 and therefore is unlikely to be available on similar systems based on outdated versions of kernel [in case manual installation mode is used].

While the workaround is trivial in essence it is trickier to implement as would require fir amount of code to run dynamic checks for versions of kernel and mkfs.xfs. Hence a conscious decision to not implement this behavior initially. In case there will be interest if support for older systems it can be easily added and should be requested via a GitHub issue.

Below is the list of distributions known to be affected by this:

Distribution Version Release Date End of Life Date
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS Trusty Tahr 2014-04-17 2019-04-01

Entries are going to be removed from the table upon reaching EOL. May the list above be exhausted this notice will be dropped altogether.

Development

Contributions are welcome! See DEVELOPMENT.md for development guidelines.

License

See LICENSE.txt