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Rephrase README's "Named Volumes" Paragraph
Signed-off-by: Jonas Thelemann <e-mail@jonas-thelemann.de>
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@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ By default this container uses SQLite for data storage, but the Nextcloud setup
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## Persistent data
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## Persistent data
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The Nextcloud installation and all data beyond what lives in the database (file uploads, etc) is stored in the [unnamed docker volume](https://docs.docker.com/engine/tutorials/dockervolumes/#adding-a-data-volume) volume `/var/www/html`. The docker daemon will store that data within the docker directory `/var/lib/docker/volumes/...`. That means your data is saved even if the container crashes, is stopped or deleted.
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The Nextcloud installation and all data beyond what lives in the database (file uploads, etc) is stored in the [unnamed docker volume](https://docs.docker.com/engine/tutorials/dockervolumes/#adding-a-data-volume) volume `/var/www/html`. The docker daemon will store that data within the docker directory `/var/lib/docker/volumes/...`. That means your data is saved even if the container crashes, is stopped or deleted.
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To make your data persistent to upgrading and get access for backups is using named docker volume or mount a host folder. To achieve this you need one volume for your database container and Nextcloud.
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A named Docker volume or a mounted host directory should be used for upgrades and backups. To achieve this you need one volume for your database container and one for Nextcloud.
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Nextcloud:
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Nextcloud:
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- `/var/www/html/` folder where all nextcloud data lives
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- `/var/www/html/` folder where all nextcloud data lives
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