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VirtioFS changes in 4.34 break initial startup of PostgreSQL container #7415
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I've run into this issue as well, and I confirmed that downgrading to Docker Desktop Note, the description overlaps with #7406 somewhat. |
Same result and same solution on mac mini. Reverting to 4.33.0 is working. |
I think is probably an exact description. |
new java system comment ... |
Description
We're on MacOS 14.6.1 using Docker Desktop 4.34.0 and we're using the image postgres:16.4-bookworm.
We mount an empty directory onto /mnt/data and set PGDATA=/mnt/data/postgresql. If it doesn't already exist, we create PGDATA on container startup (using mkdir), before invoking the default entrypoint with
exec /usr/local/bin/docker-entrypoint.sh postgres
. To remove vulnerabilities from the image, in our Dockerfile we runrm /usr/local/bin/gosu
as part of a general purge of unused code in the container, and we also setUSER postgres
. This code has been working unchanged since March on older versions of Docker Desktop which use VirtioFS. Our container definition also works fine on other platforms, including e.g. OpenShift.Upon upgrading to 4.34.0 a teammate reported that some tests were failing locally on their Mac because Postgres was no longer able to start up, due to a permissions issue. While debugging the problem, I added the following logs to the container entrypoint script:
I think this shows that the user starting the postgres server is the owner of the data directory.
And yet when the database starts, it immediately crashes:
Changing the file sharing implementation in Docker Desktop from VirtioFS to gRPC FUSE fixes the problem immediately but is a bad solution because it requires everyone in the team to know about the problem and know how to fix it. I also unsuccessfully tried to use
chmod -R
andchown -R
to make sure that the created directory has the right permissions, but this had no effect, and why would it? - Thestat
call above suggests that the directory is owned by the postgres user with uid 999. I don't know that there's anything I can do within the container to fix this problem.This seems like a bug in Docker to me, but let me know if you think there's something else in our image definition I should try. Let me know if I can help further, thanks.
This may look similar to #6270 but this affects a much more recent version and is a different problem.
Reproduce
As described above.
Expected behavior
The PostgreSQL container should start up without issue, as it did in 4.33.0.
docker version
Client: Version: 27.2.0 API version: 1.47 Go version: go1.21.13 Git commit: 3ab4256 Built: Tue Aug 27 14:14:45 2024 OS/Arch: darwin/arm64 Context: desktop-linux Server: Docker Desktop 4.34.0 (165256) Engine: Version: 27.2.0 API version: 1.47 (minimum version 1.24) Go version: go1.21.13 Git commit: 3ab5c7d Built: Tue Aug 27 14:15:41 2024 OS/Arch: linux/arm64 Experimental: false containerd: Version: 1.7.20 GitCommit: 8fc6bcff51318944179630522a095cc9dbf9f353 runc: Version: 1.1.13 GitCommit: v1.1.13-0-g58aa920 docker-init: Version: 0.19.0 GitCommit: de40ad0
docker info
Diagnostics ID
Uploading of company data is probably not allowed.
Additional Info
No response
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