Docker Storage

Docker Storage is part of the Docker & Containers section of the Ubuntu administration roadmap. This guide focuses on the practical checks, commands, and verification habits needed for this specific task.

Storage administration covers disks, partitions, filesystems, LVM, RAID, swap, performance, and safe expansion.

Storage administration connects physical or virtual disks to partitions, filesystems, mount points, and application data.

What you will learn

  • How Docker Storage fits into Ubuntu administration.
  • Which commands or files are involved.
  • How to inspect the current state before making changes.
  • How to verify the result after the work is complete.

Before you begin

Before storage work, identify disks, partitions, filesystems, mount points, and backups. Do not format, resize, or remove anything until you know what data lives there.

PreparationReason
Confirm Ubuntu versionCommands and package names can differ between releases.
Check current stateYou need a baseline before deciding whether the change worked.
Take notesProduction work should be repeatable and reviewable.
Know rollbackEvery important change should have a way back.
lsb_release -a
hostnamectl
whoami
pwd

Why this matters

Docker Storage matters because storage mistakes can cause data loss or prevent services from starting.

Think like an administrator: inspect first, change one thing at a time, verify the result, and keep a rollback path.

Quick reference

TaskTool
List diskslsblk
Check filesystemsblkid
Disk usagedf, du
LVMpvs, vgs, lvs
Swapswapon

Step-by-step lab

Use the lab below to practice Docker Storage in a controlled way. Run the inspection commands first, then make one small change, and finally verify the result.

Step 1 - Inspect the current state

Start with read-only commands. Your first job is to understand the server before changing it.

lsblk
blkid

Step 2 - Check related services, files, or resources

Most Ubuntu topics connect to a service, package, file path, user, network socket, or log. Use the next command to look at the related layer.

df -h

Step 3 - Make one controlled change in a lab

Only after you understand the current state should you make a change. In production, avoid combining many changes in one session. In a lab, you can experiment more freely, but still keep notes.

# Example lab note
# 1. What did I check?
# 2. What did I change?
# 3. What output proved the result?
# 4. How can I undo it?

Step 4 - Verify and record the result

Verification is the difference between guessing and administration. Run the same inspection commands again and compare before and after output.

lsblk
blkid
df -h

Commands to practice

Run these commands in a test VM first. Read the output carefully and compare it with your own system.

lsblk
blkid
df -h
sudo fdisk -l
sudo pvs
sudo vgs
sudo lvs
swapon --show

Example output

NAME   SIZE TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
sda     50G disk
sda1     1G part /boot
sda2    49G part /

How to verify your work

Do not stop after a command finishes successfully. A command can exit cleanly while the service, application, or user workflow is still broken. Verify from multiple angles.

Verification angleWhat to check
Command outputDoes the command show the expected state?
Service statusDoes systemctl status show healthy services when a service is involved?
LogsDo journalctl or files under /var/log show errors?
User impactCan the actual user, app, or connection do what it should?
PersistenceWill the change survive reboot if it needs to?
systemctl --failed
journalctl -p warning -n 30 --no-pager
df -h
free -h

Visual explanation

flowchart LR Disk["Disk"] --> Partition["Partition"] Partition --> Filesystem["Filesystem"] Filesystem --> Mount["Mount point"] Mount --> Data["Applications and data"]

Troubleshooting workflow

If something does not work, avoid random commands. Move through the layers in order. This keeps the investigation calm and makes your notes useful for future incidents.

  1. Define the exact symptom. What is failing, and who is affected?
  2. Check whether the problem is recent. Look for changes in packages, config, users, networking, or storage.
  3. Inspect service status and logs before restarting anything.
  4. Test one hypothesis at a time.
  5. Keep a note of every command and result.
  6. When fixed, write the root cause and prevention step.
date
uptime
systemctl --failed
journalctl -p err -n 50 --no-pager
ss -tulpn
ip route

Production notes

Take backups or snapshots before destructive storage changes. Verify mounts after reboot when persistence matters.

  • Take a backup or snapshot when the change can affect data or access.
  • Keep a rollback command or config copy ready.
  • Tell stakeholders what service could be affected.
  • Apply the change during a low-risk time if possible.
  • Watch logs immediately after the change.

Common mistakes

For Docker Storage, slow down and ask: what am I trying to prove, where is the configuration, where are the logs, and what does success look like?

  • Confusing disk names after reboot.
  • Editing fstab without testing.
  • Resizing without backup.
  • Checking df but not lsblk or mount state.

Summary

Docker Storage is a practical Ubuntu administration topic because it connects concept, command output, logs, and operational judgment. The more you practice this workflow, the easier it becomes to work on real servers without panic.

Use the commands above as a starting point, but always adapt them to the server in front of you. Check first, change carefully, verify clearly, and document the result.

FAQ

Is Docker Storage important for Ubuntu administrators?+

Yes. It supports practical Ubuntu administration because it connects directly to server reliability, security, troubleshooting, or daily operations.

Should I practice this on a live server?+

Use a lab VM first. After you understand the command output and rollback path, apply the workflow carefully on real systems.

What should I do after reading this article?+

Run the practice commands, write down what each one shows, and continue to the next article in the Ubuntu roadmap.

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