So I recently moved most of my docker storage to a second hard drive, called “storage.” After a system restart, docker is creating a folder called “storage,” forcing the physical drive to be renamed “storage1.” How do I prevent this from happening?
I am using Xubuntu.
Edit: As suggested, it was indeed my system spinning up Docker before mounting the internal disk. The solution (should work on most Unix-like systems) was to manually add a line to /etc/fstab as follows: First get the UUID for the problem drive
~$ sudo blkid -s UUID
The output will show your drives and the UUID of each. Then edit the following file:
~$ sudo mousepad /etc/fstab #{or use your choice of editor, i.e. nano}
Add the following line:
/dev/disk/by-uuid/{UUID number copied from blkid output} /destination/of/your/drive ext4 defaults 0 0
Of course replace {UUID number copied from blkid output}
and /destination/of/your/drive
and set defaults & parameters as needed. These worked for me.
Restart the system and the drive should be forced to mount before docker starts. This seems to be a known issue with certain docker setups.
So is the issue that your extra drive mounts to /storage, but that happens after Docker has already started and taken over the directory, so the mount fails? Normally I’d expect it to happen in the other order. Is this a weird race condition?
This might be a good thing to run through with ChatGPT- there are probably ways to delay the Docker container start, but maybe there’s a more significant misconfiguration you can deal with.