Hello All,

I currently have a home server on a raspberry pi 4 with all my services running as docker containers. All containers have their own directories containing the config and database files. This makes it easy to backup and export then.

However, in the future I have plans to migrate to a more powerful server. This means I will probably not be using a CPU with an ARM architecture. So effectively, I will also have to use the corresponding docker images. So will this new x86 docker image work with my backup docker config volumes?

  • SnowyLocksmith@alien.topOPB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    I have never really built an app, so I don’t really know, but most of the docker containers I have used use some kind of linux base in the image. So then, since the config data is mounted as a volume, should its format be decided by the linux image, i.e. it should be more or less standard, right? Mostly the developer builds an app in some language, which are CPU agnostic.

    • -myxal@alien.topB
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      So then, since the config data is mounted as a volume, should its format be decided by the linux image, i.e. it should be more or less standard, right?

      The volume mechanism in docker is nothing more than a means of allowing a part of the container’s filesystem to be redirected to a directory on the host OS - not that dissimilar from networked file-sharing. It has no bearing on what’s in the saved files.

      The format of the config/data is determined by the app developer. The app developer makes a choice in how the config/data is written from the app’s memory to a file on a disk. If they write their data through libraries, using formats that are designed for CPU portability (Unicode text, sqlite DB, zip archive, etc.) then the data will be usable in the same app running under different CPU arch. But if they use non-portable formats, roll their own format, or just serialise objects from memory, those typically won’t open/de-serialise correctly without extra effort on developer’s part.

      In practice IMHO it’s down to what kind of apps you’re using. Most stuff that’s developed in the last 10 years or so, and not high-performance/custom code would default to using CPUarch-portable formats.