Docker Engine volume plugins enable Engine deployments to be integrated with
external storage systems, such as Amazon EBS, and enable data volumes to persist
beyond the lifetime of a single Engine host. See the
[plugin documentation](legacy_plugins.md) for more information.
## Changelog
### 1.12.0
- Add `Status` field to `VolumeDriver.Get` response ([#21006](https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/21006#))
- Add `VolumeDriver.Capabilities` to get capabilities of the volume driver([#22077](https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/22077))
### 1.10.0
- Add `VolumeDriver.Get` which gets the details about the volume ([#16534](https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/16534))
- Add `VolumeDriver.List` which lists all volumes owned by the driver ([#16534](https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/16534))
### 1.8.0
- Initial support for volume driver plugins ([#14659](https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/14659))
## Command-line changes
A volume plugin makes use of the `-v`and `--volume-driver` flag on the `docker run` command. The `-v` flag accepts a volume name and the `--volume-driver` flag a driver type, for example:
$ docker run -ti -v volumename:/data --volume-driver=flocker busybox sh
This command passes the `volumename` through to the volume plugin as a
user-given name for the volume. The `volumename` must not begin with a `/`.
By having the user specify a `volumename`, a plugin can associate the volume
with an external volume beyond the lifetime of a single container or container
host. This can be used, for example, to move a stateful container from one
server to another.
By specifying a `volumedriver` in conjunction with a `volumename`, users can use plugins such as [Flocker](https://clusterhq.com/docker-plugin/) to manage volumes external to a single host, such as those on EBS.
## Create a VolumeDriver
The container creation endpoint (`/containers/create`) accepts a `VolumeDriver`
field of type `string` allowing to specify the name of the driver. It's default
value of `"local"` (the default driver for local volumes).
## Volume plugin protocol
If a plugin registers itself as a `VolumeDriver` when activated, then it is
expected to provide writeable paths on the host filesystem for the Docker
daemon to provide to containers to consume.
The Docker daemon handles bind-mounting the provided paths into user
containers.
> **Note**: Volume plugins should *not* write data to the `/var/lib/docker/`
> directory, including `/var/lib/docker/volumes`. The `/var/lib/docker/`
> directory is reserved for Docker.
### /VolumeDriver.Create
**Request**:
```json
{
"Name": "volume_name",
"Opts": {}
}
```
Instruct the plugin that the user wants to create a volume, given a user
specified volume name. The plugin does not need to actually manifest the
volume on the filesystem yet (until Mount is called).
Opts is a map of driver specific options passed through from the user request.
**Response**:
```json
{
"Err": ""
}
```
Respond with a string error if an error occurred.
### /VolumeDriver.Remove
**Request**:
```json
{
"Name": "volume_name"
}
```
Delete the specified volume from disk. This request is issued when a user invokes `docker rm -v` to remove volumes associated with a container.