Persist the State of the SuperLink¶
By default, the Flower SuperLink keeps its state in-memory. When using the Docker flag
--rm
, the state is not persisted between container starts.
If you want to persist the state of the SuperLink on your host system, all you need to do is specify a directory where you want to save the file on your host system and a name for the database file.
By default, the SuperLink container runs with a non-root user called app
with the
user ID 49999
. It is recommended to create a new directory and change the user ID of
the directory to 49999
to ensure the mounted directory has the proper permissions.
If you later want to delete the directory, you can change the user ID back to the
current user ID by running sudo chown -R $USER:$(id -gn) state
.
Example¶
In the example below, we create a new directory called state
, change the user ID and
tell Docker via the flag --volume
to mount the local state
directory into the
/app/state
directory of the container. Lastly, we use the flag --database
to
specify the name of the database file.
$ mkdir state
$ sudo chown -R 49999:49999 state
$ docker run --rm \
--volume ./state/:/app/state flwr/superlink:1.12.0 \
--database state.db \
...
As soon as the SuperLink starts, the file state.db
is created in the state
directory on your host system. If the file already exists, the SuperLink tries to
restore the state from the file. To start the SuperLink with an empty database, ensure
that there is no database called state.db
in the state
directory (rm
state.db
) before you execute the docker run
command above.