podman-volume-create - Create a new volume
podman volume create [options]
Creates an empty volume and prepares it to be used by containers. The volume can be created with a specific name, if a name is not given a random name is generated. You can add metadata to the volume by using the --label flag and driver options can be set using the --opt flag.
Specify the volume driver name (default local). Setting this to a value other than local Podman attempts to create the volume using a volume plugin with the given name. Such plugins must be defined in the volume_plugins section of the containers.conf(5) configuration file.
Print usage statement
Set metadata for a volume (e.g., --label mykey=value).
Set driver specific options. For the default driver, local, this allows a volume to be configured to mount a filesystem on the host. For the local
driver the following options are supported: type
, device
, and o
. The type
option sets the type of the filesystem to be mounted, and is equivalent to the -t
flag to mount(8). The device
option sets the device to be mounted, and is equivalent to the device
argument to mount(8).
The o
option sets options for the mount, and is equivalent to the -o
flag to mount(8) with these exceptions:
The
o
option supportsuid
andgid
options to set the UID and GID of the created volume that are not normally supported by mount(8).The
o
option supports thesize
option to set the maximum size of the created volume and theinodes
option to set the maximum number of inodes for the volume. Currently these flags are only supported on "xfs" file system mounted with theprjquota
flag described in the xfs_quota(8) man page.Using volume options other then the UID/GID options with the local driver requires root privileges.
When not using the local driver, the given options are passed directly to the volume plugin. In this case, supported options are dictated by the plugin in question, not Podman.
$ podman volume create myvol $ podman volume create $ podman volume create --label foo=bar myvol # podman volume create --opt device=tmpfs --opt type=tmpfs --opt o=nodev,noexec myvol # podman volume create --opt device=tmpfs --opt type=tmpfs --opt o=uid=1000,gid=1000 testvol
podman volume create uses XFS project quota controls
for controlling the size and the number of inodes of builtin volumes. The directory used to store the volumes must be anXFS
file system and be mounted with the pquota
option.
Example /etc/fstab entry:
/dev/podman/podman-var /var xfs defaults,x-systemd.device-timeout=0,pquota 1 2
Podman generates project ids for each builtin volume, but these project ids need to be unique for the XFS file system. These project ids by default are generated randomly, with a potential for overlap with other quotas on the same file system.
The xfs_quota tool can be used to assign a project id to the storage driver directory, e.g.:
echo 100000:/var/lib/containers/storage/overlay >> /etc/projects echo 200000:/var/lib/containers/storage/volumes >> /etc/projects echo storage:100000 >> /etc/projid echo volumes:200000 >> /etc/projid xfs_quota -x -c 'project -s storage volumes' /<xfs mount point>
In the example above we are configuring the overlay storage driver for newly created containers as well as volumes to use project ids with a start offset. All containers will be assigned larger project ids (e.g. >= 100000). All volume assigned project ids larger project ids starting with 200000. This prevents xfs_quota management conflicts with containers/storage.
podman-volume(1), mount(8), containers.conf(5), xfs_quota(8), xfs_quota(8)
, projects(5)
, projid(5)
January 2020, updated with information on volume plugins by Matthew Heon mheon@redhat.com ⟨mailto:mheon@redhat.com⟩ November 2018, Originally compiled by Urvashi Mohnani umohnani@redhat.com ⟨mailto:umohnani@redhat.com⟩