this post was submitted on 01 Feb 2025
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What are the pros and cons of using Named vs Anonymous volumes in Docker for self-hosting?

I've always used "regular" Anonymous volumes, and that's what is usually in official docker-compose.yml examples for various apps:

volumes:
  - ./myAppDataFolder:/data

where myAppDataFolder/ is in the same folder as the docker-compose.yml file.

As a self-hoster I find this neat and tidy; my docker folder has a subfolder for each app. Each app folder has a docker-compose.yml, .env and one or more data-folders. I version-control the compose files, and back up the data folders.

However some apps have docker-compose.yml examples using named volumes:

services:
  mealie:
    volumes:
      - mealie-data:/app/data/
volumes:
  mealie-data:

I had to google documentation https://docs.docker.com/engine/storage/volumes/ to find that the volume is actually called mealie_mealie-data

$ docker volume ls
DRIVER    VOLUME NAME
...
local     mealie_mealie-data

and it is stored in /var/lib/docker/volumes/mealie_mealie-data/_data

$ docker volume inspect mealie_mealie-data
...
  "Mountpoint": "/var/lib/docker/volumes/mealie_mealie-data/_data",
...

I tried googling the why of named volumes, but most answers were talking about things that sounded very enterprise'y, docker swarms, and how all state information should be stored in "the database" so you shouldnt need to ever touch the actual files backing the volume for any container.

So to summarize: Named volumes, why? Or why not? What are your preferences? Given the context that we are self-hosting, and not running huge enterprise clusters.

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[–] Semi_Hemi_Demigod 27 points 1 week ago (7 children)

Named volumes let you specify more details like the type of driver to use.

For example, say you wanted to store your data in Minio, which is like S3, rather than on the local file system. You’d make a named volume and use the s3 driver.

Plus it helps with cross-container stuff. Like if you wanted sabnzbd and sonarr and radarr to use the same directory you just need to specify it once.

[–] just_another_person 5 points 1 week ago

On a simpler level, it's just an organizational thing. There are lots of other ways data from docker is consumed, and looking through a bunch of random hashes and trying to figure out what is what is insane.

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