When mounting using docker, bind source path does not exist - docker

When trying to mount using docker, I tried all sorts of things like restarting docker and using different directories.
MacBook-Pro:user$ sudo docker run -p 8501:8501
--mount type=bind,
source=/user/Documents/Repo/models/userCategorization/saved_model/,target=/models/saved_model
-e MODEL_NAME=saved_model
-t tensorflow/serving
docker: Error response from daemon: invalid mount config for type "bind":
bind source path does not exist: /user/Documents/Repo/models/userCategorization/saved_model/.
Wanted to add that "Users/" directory is indeed in the file sharing preferences and the directory for the model file would be "Users/user/Documents/..etc".

As it turns out:
My first issue was that I was not targeting the correct directory, such as /model_folder
My second issue was that I was that I did not have a specific version in the model folder such ash
/model_folder/1/

Related

Run cypress test in a docker container?

How to run cypress test in a docker container ? I have created an account in docker and then as per link https://hub.docker.com/u/cypress and run the following command from my folder location in Desktop/Windows 10 : docker run -it -v $PWD:/e2e -w /e2e cypress/included:3.4.0
But I am getting following error. How can I resolve the error, can someone please advise.
docker: Error response from daemon: create $PWD: "$PWD" includes invalid characters for a local volume name, only "[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9_.-]" are allowed. If you intended to pass a host directory, use absolute path.
Depending on your OS you need to change $PWD to reflect your current folder (ex: $(pwd) on linux or MacOS).
If you can't figure it out just use an absolute path instead of $PWD, just like the docker hint indicates.

Docker-volume: I am trying to make a container by using a volume which is already made

I am working on this problem on Windows 10 and using Git-bash.
First, I have made a volume named "myvolume" with the command:
docker volume create myvolume
And I tried to make a Ubuntu container with the command:
docker run -i -t --name newvolume -v myvolume:/root/ ubuntu
However, I get the error message:
C:/Program Files/Docker/Docker/Resources/bin/docker.exe: Error response from daemon: create myvolume;C: "myvolume;C" includes invalid characters for a
local volume name, only "[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9_.-]" are allowed. If you intended to pass a host directory, use absolute path.
See 'C:/Program Files/Docker/Docker/Resources/bin/docker.exe run --help'.
I guess the problem occurs in Windows 10, and not in the Linux environment,
but I would like to figure out it in Windows.
Anyone know this problem?
Thank you in advance :)

When using docker option --mount the target folder is seen as not absolute, while there is no issue when using -v

I am playing around with docker and ran into an issue when mounting docker volumes with --mount instead of -v. It appears to me that the error popping up is not valid, but probably I am missing a small detail here.
The path to which I want bind the created image in the container is seen as not absolute in the --mount scenario.
I am running Docker on a windows 10 machine
I pulled the jenkins/jenkins:lts image and want to spin up 2 containers that use the same configuration. As said before I use this just to play around with docker, and am exploring how the volume system works.
What i did is create a docker volume that is used to share the configuarion.
docker volume create jenkins_cfg
Then I tried to run 2 containers. The first container started with:
docker run -d -p 8081:8080 --name jenkins2 -v jenkins_cfg:/var/jenkins_home jenkins/jenkins:lts
Which works fine..
The second container started with:
docker run -d -p 8085:8080 --name jenkin5 --mount source=jenkins_cfg,target=var/jenkins_home jenkins/jenkins:lts
This results in the error
"C:\Program Files\Docker\Docker\Resources\bin\docker.exe: Error response from daemon: invalid mount config for type "volume": invalid mount path: 'var/jenkins_home' mount path must be absolute.
See 'C:\Program Files\Docker\Docker\Resources\bin\docker.exe run --help'."
Also /var/jenkins_home is not working properly.
While the -v also asks for the same target folder , i would assume that this folder would also work in the target option of --mount. Probably, I am overlooking something here ...
I figured out that the target folder should be preceeded by //
so the docker command would look like
docker run -d -p 8085:8080 --name jenkin5 --mount source=jenkins_cfg,target=//var/jenkins_home jenkins/jenkins:lts
Still no clue why // has to be added, maybe someone can clarify on that one
Actually mount binds are like mounting a part of physical disk volume to the containers. But volumes are like virtual memory you can't access them independently without containers but bind mounts can be accessed independently
Your mount binds should be an absolute path in your host
Hope this helps your cause

Using volume for mounting a file

I'm creating a volume like this:
docker volume create php
and want to mount a single file /etc/php.ini while running the container:
docker run -it -v php:/etc/php.ini image-name
This throws an error:
docker: Error response from daemon: readdirent: not a directory.
See 'docker run --help'.
Can I use volumes for this purpose or they are meant to handle directories only? What could be the solution here?
According to this answer:
when you create a named volume and run a service/container with docker run -v my_volume:/root/volume my_container, data is stored in /var/lib/docker/volumes/my_volume/_data
Following this affirmation, it is unpossible to create a named volume and mount it as a file inside a container.

Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)?

I have a docker with version 17.06.0-ce. When I trying to install NGINX using docker with command:
docker run -p 80:80 -p 8080:8080 --name nginx -v $PWD/www:/www -v $PWD/conf/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf -v $PWD/logs:/wwwlogs -d nginx:latest
It shows that
docker: Error response from daemon: oci runtime error:
container_linux.go:262: starting container process caused
"process_linux.go:339: container init caused \"rootfs_linux.go:57:
mounting \\"/appdata/nginx/conf/nginx.conf\\" to rootfs
\\"/var/lib/docker/aufs/mnt/dcea22444e9ffda114593b18fc8b574adfada06947385aedc2ac09f199188fa0\\"
at
\\"/var/lib/docker/aufs/mnt/dcea22444e9ffda114593b18fc8b574adfada06947385aedc2ac09f199188fa0/etc/nginx/nginx.conf\\"
caused \\"not a directory\\"\""
: Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type.
If do not mount the nginx.conf file, everything is okay. So, how can I mount the configuration file?
This should no longer happen (since v2.2.0.0), see here
If you are using Docker for Windows, this error can happen if you have recently changed your password.
How to fix:
First make sure to delete the broken container's volume
docker rm -v <container_name>
Update: The steps below may work without needing to delete volumes first.
Open Docker Settings
Go to the "Shared Drives" tab
Click on the "Reset Credentials..." link on the bottom of the window
Re-Share the drives you want to use with Docker
You should be prompted to enter your username/password
Click "Apply"
Go to the "Reset" tab
Click "Restart Docker"
Re-create your containers/volumes
Credit goes to BaranOrnarli on GitHub for the solution.
TL;DR: Remove the volumes associated with the container.
Find the container name using docker ps -a then remove that container using:
docker rm -v <container_name>
Problem:
The error you are facing might occur if you previously tried running the docker run command while the file was not present at the location where it should have been in the host directory.
In this case docker daemon would have created a directory inside the container in its place, which later fails to map to the proper file when the correct files are put in the host directory and the docker command is run again.
Solution:
Remove the volumes that are associated with the container. If you are not concerned about other container volumes, you can also use:
# WARNING, THIS WILL REMOVE ALL VOLUMES
docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -q)
Because docker will recognize $PWD/conf/nginx.conf as a folder and not as a file. Check whether the $PWD/conf/ directory contains nginx.conf as a directory.
Test with
> cat $PWD/conf/nginx.conf
cat: nginx.conf/: Is a directory
Otherwise, open a Docker issue.
It's working fine for me with same configuration.
The explanation given by #Ayushya was the reason I hit this somewhat confusing error message and the necessary housekeeping can be done easily like this:
$ docker container prune
$ docker volume prune
Answer for people using Docker Toolbox
There have been at least 3 answers here touching on the problem, but not explaining it properly and not giving a full solution. This is just a folder mounting problem.
Description of the problem:
Docker Toolbox bypasses the Hyper-V requirement of Docker by creating a virtual machine (in VirtualBox, which comes bundled). Docker is installed and ran inside the VM. In order for Docker to function properly, it needs to have access to the from the host machine. Which here it doesn't.
After I installed Docker Toolbox it created the VirtualBox VM and only mounted C:\Users to the machine, as \c\Users\. My project was in C:\projects so nowhere on the mounted volume. When I was sending the path to the VM, it would not exist, as C:\projects isn't mounted. Hence, the error above.
Let's say I had my project containing my ngnix config in C:/projects/project_name/
Fixing it:
Go to VirtualBox, right click on Default (the VM from Docker) > Settings > Shared Folders
Clicking the small icon with the plus on the right side, Add a new share. I used the following settings:
The above will map C:\projects to /projects (ROOT/projects) in the VM, meaning that now you can reference any path in projects like this: /projects/project_name - because project_name from C:\projects\project_name is now mounted.
To use relative paths, please consider naming the path c/projects not projects
Restart everything and it should now work properly. I manually stopped the virtual machine in VirtualBox and restarted the Docker Toolbox CLI.
In my docker file, I now reference the nginx.conf like this:
volumes:
- /projects/project_name/docker_config/nginx/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf
Where nginx.conf actually resides in C:\projects\project_name\docker_config\nginx\nginx.conf
I had the same problem. I was using Docker Desktop with WSL in Windows 10 17.09.
Cause of the problem:
The problem is that Docker for Windows expects you to supply your volume paths in a format that matches this:
/c/Users/username/app
BUT, WSL instead uses the format:
/mnt/c/Users/username/app
This is confusing because when checking the file in the console I saw it, and for me everything was correct. I wasn't aware of the Docker for Windows expectations about the volume paths.
Solution to the problem:
I binded the custom mount points to fix Docker for Windows and WSL differences:
sudo mount --bind /mnt/c /c
Like suggested in this amazing guide: Setting Up Docker for Windows and WSL to Work Flawlessly and everything is working perfectly now.
Before I started using WSL I was using Git Bash and I had this problem as well.
On my Mac I had to uncheck the box "Use gRPC FUSE for file sharing" in Settings -> General
Maybe someone finds this useful. My compose file had following volume mounted
./file:/dir/file
As ./file did not exist, it was mounted into ABC (by default as folder).
In my case I had a container resulted from
docker commit ABC cool_image
When I later created ./file and ran docker-compose up , I had the error:
[...] Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type.
The container brought up from cool_image remembered that /dir/file was a directory and it conflicted with lately created and mounted ./file .
The solution was:
touch ./file
docker run abc_image --name ABC -v ./file:/dir/file
# ... desired changes to ABC
docker commit ABC cool_image
I am using Docker ToolBox for Windows. By default C Drive is mounted automatically, so in order to mount the files, make sure your files and folders are inside C DRIVE.
Example: C:\Users\%USERNAME%\Desktop
I'll share my case here as this may save a lot of time for someone else in the future.
I had a perfectly working docker-compose on my macos, until I start using docker-in-docker in Gitlab CI. I was only given permissions to work as Master in a repository, and the Gitlab CI is self-hosted and setup by someone else and no other info was shared, about how it's setup, etc.
The following caused the issue:
volumes:
- ./.docker/nginx/wordpress/wordpress.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf
Only when I noticed that this might be running under windows (hours scratching the head), I tried renaming the wodpress.conf to default.conf and just set the dir pathnames:
volumes:
- ./.docker/nginx/wordpress:/etc/nginx/conf.d
This solved the problem!
I had the same issue, docker-compose was creating a directory instead of file, then crashing mid-way.
What I did:
Run the container without any mapping.
Copy the .conf file to the host location:
docker cp containername:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf ./nginx.conf
Remove the container (docker-compose down).
Put the mapping back.
Re-mount the container.
Docker Compose will find the .conf file and map it, instead of trying to create a directory.
unknown: Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type
I had a similar error on niginx in Mac environment.
Docker didn't recognize the default.conf file correctly. Once changing the relative path to the absolute path, the error was fixed.
- ./nginx/default.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf
In Windows 10, I just get this error without changing anything in my docker-compose.yml file or Docker configuration in general.
In my case, I was using a VPN with a firewall policy that blocks port 445.
After disconnecting from the VPN the problem disappears.
So I recommend checking your firewall and not using a proxy or VPN when running Docker Desktop.
Check Docker for windows - Firewall rules for shared drives for more details.
I hope this will help someone else.
Could you please use the absolute/complete path instead of $PWD/conf/nginx.conf? Then it will work.
EX:docker run --name nginx-container5 --rm -v /home/sree/html/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf -d -p 90:80 nginx
b9ead15988a93bf8593c013b6c27294d38a2a40f4ac75b1c1ee362de4723765b
root#sree-VirtualBox:/home/sree/html# docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
b9ead15988a9 nginx "nginx -g 'daemon of…" 7 seconds ago Up 6 seconds 0.0.0.0:90->80/tcp nginx-container5
e2b195a691a4 nginx "/bin/bash" 16 minutes ago Up 16 minutes 0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp test-nginx
I experienced the same issue using Docker over WSL1 on Windows 10 with this command line:
echo $PWD
/mnt/d/nginx
docker run --name nginx -d \
-v $PWD/conf/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf \
nginx
I resolved it by changing the path for the file on the host system to a UNIX style absolute path:
docker run --name nginx -d \
-v /d/nginx/conf/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf \
nginx
or using an Windows style absolute path with / instead of \ as path separators:
docker run --name nginx -d \
-v D:/nginx/conf/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf \
nginx
To strip the /mnt that seems to cause problems from the path I use
bash variable extension:
-v ${PWD/mnt\/}/conf/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
Updating Virtual Box to 6.0.10 fixed this issue for Docker Toolbox
https://github.com/docker/toolbox/issues/844
I was experiencing this kind of error:
mlepisto#DESKTOP-VKJ76GO MINGW64 ~/G/Projects
$ touch resolv.conf
mlepisto#DESKTOP-VKJ76GO MINGW64 ~/G/Projects
$ docker run --rm -it -v $PWD/resolv.conf:/etc/resolv.conf ubuntu /bin/bash
C:\Program Files\Docker Toolbox\docker.exe: Error response from daemon: OCI runtime create failed: container_linux.go:345: starting container process caused "process_linux.go:430: container init caused \"rootfs_linux.go:58: mounting \\\"/c/Users/mlepisto/G/Projects/resolv.conf\\\" to rootfs \\\"/mnt/sda1/var/lib/docker/overlay2/61eabcfe9ed7e4a87f40bcf93c2a7d320a5f96bf241b2cf694a064b46c11db3f/merged\\\" at \\\"/mnt/sda1/var/lib/docker/overlay2/61eabcfe9ed7e4a87f40bcf93c2a7d320a5f96bf241b2cf694a064b46c11db3f/merged/etc/resolv.conf\\\" caused \\\"not a directory\\\"\"": unknown: Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type.
# mounting to some other file name inside the container did work just fine
mlepisto#DESKTOP-VKJ76GO MINGW64 ~/G/Projects/
$ docker run --rm -it -v $PWD/resolv.conf:/etc/resolv2.conf ubuntu /bin/bash
root#a5020b4d6cc2:/# exit
exit
After updating VitualBox all commands did work just fine 🎉
Had the same head scratch because I did not have the file locally so it created it as a folder.
mimas#Anttis-MBP:~/random/dockerize/tube$ ls
Dockerfile
mimas#Anttis-MBP:~/random/dockerize/tube$ docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/logs.txt:/usr/app/logs.txt devopsdockeruh/first_volume_exercise
docker: Error response from daemon: OCI runtime create failed: container_linux.go:345: starting container process caused "process_linux.go:430: container init caused \"rootfs_linux.go:58: mounting \\\"/Users/mimas/random/dockerize/tube/logs.txt\\\" to rootfs \\\"/var/lib/docker/overlay2/75891ea3688c58afb8f0fddcc977c78d0ac72334e4c88c80d7cdaa50624e688e/merged\\\" at \\\"/var/lib/docker/overlay2/75891ea3688c58afb8f0fddcc977c78d0ac72334e4c88c80d7cdaa50624e688e/merged/usr/app/logs.txt\\\" caused \\\"not a directory\\\"\"": unknown: Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type.
mimas#Anttis-MBP:~/random/dockerize/tube$ ls
Dockerfile logs.txt/
For me, this did not work:
volumes:
- ./:/var/www/html
- ./nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/site.conf
But this, works fine (obviously moved my config file inside a new directory too:
volumes:
- ./:/var/www/html
- ./nginx/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/site.conf
I had this problem under Windows 7 because my dockerfile was on different drive.
Here's what I did to fix the problem:
Open VirtualBox Manager
Select the "default" container and edit the settings.
Select Shared Folders and click the icon to add a new shared folder
Folder Path: x:\
Folder Name: /x
Check Auto-mount and Make Permanent
Restart the virtual machine
At this point, docker-compose up should work.
I got the same error on Windows10 after an update of Docker: 2.3.0.2 (45183).
... caused \\\"not a directory\\\"\"": unknown: Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type
I was using absolute paths like this //C/workspace/nginx/nginx.conf and everything worked like a charm.
The update broke my docker-compose, and I had to change the paths to /C/workspace/nginx/nginx.conf with a single / for the root.
Note that this situation will also occur if you try to mount a volume from the host which has not been added to the Resources > File Sharing section of Docker Preferences.
Adding the root path as a file sharing resource will now permit Docker to access the resource to mount it to the container. Note that you may need to erase the contents on your Docker container to attempt to re-mount the volume.
For example, if your application is located at /mysites/myapp, you will want to add /mysites as the file sharing resource location.
In my case it was a problem with Docker for Windows and use partition encrypted by Bitlocker. If you have project files on encrypted files after restart and unlock drive Dokcer doesn't see project files properly.
All you need to do is just need to restart Docker
CleanWebpackPlugin can be the problem. In my case, in my Docker file I copy a file like this:
COPY --chown=node:node dist/app.js /usr/app/app.js
and then during development I mount that file via docker-compose:
volumes:
- ./dist/app.js:/usr/app/app.js
I would intermittently get the Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file (or vice-versa)? Check if the specified host path exists and is the expected type. error or some version of it.
The problem was that the CleanWebpackPlugin was deleting the file and before webpack re-built. If Docker was trying to mount the file while it was deleted Docker would fail. It was intermittent.
Either remove CleanWebpackPlugin completely or configure its options to play nicer.
I had this happen when the json file on the host had the executable permission set. I don't know the reason behind this.
For me, it was enough to just do this:
docker compose down
docker compose up -d
l have solved the mount problem. I am using a Win 7 environment, and the same problem happened to me.
Are you trying to mount a directory onto a file?
The container has a default sync directory at C:\Users\, so I moved my project to C:\Users\, then recreated the project. Now it works.

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