From 52e66c507d75813800d2f9339e104996182bb059 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tilo Spannagel Date: Sun, 18 Jun 2017 09:00:53 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Fix Typos --- README.md | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index fdf5f24..450bc7d 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -36,12 +36,12 @@ $ docker run -d nextcloud:fpm As the fastCGI-Process is not capable of serving static files (style sheets, images, ...) the webserver needs access to these files. This can be achieved with the `volumes-from` option. You can find more information in the docker-compose section. ## Using an external database -By default this container uses SQLite for data storage, but the Nextcloud setup wizard (appears on first run) allows connecting to an existing MySQL/MariaDB or PostgreSQL database. You can also link a database container, e.g. `--link my-mysql:mysql`, and then use `mysql` as the database host on setup. More info is in the docker-compose section. +By default this container uses SQLite for data storage, but the Nextcloud setup wizard (appears on first run) allows connecting to an existing MySQL/MariaDB or PostgreSQL database. You can also link a database container, e. g. `--link my-mysql:mysql`, and then use `mysql` as the database host on setup. More info is in the docker-compose section. ## Persistent data 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. -To make your data persistant 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. +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. Nextcloud: - `/var/www/html/` folder where all nextcloud data lives @@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ $ docker run -d mariadb \ ``` If you want to get fine grained access to your individual files, you can mount additional volumes for data, config, your theme and custom apps. -The `data`, `config` are stored in respective subfolders inside `/var/www/html/`. The apps are split into core `apps` (wich are shipped with Nextcloud and you don't need to take care of) and a `custom_apps` folder. If you use a custom theme it would go into the `themes` subfolder. +The `data`, `config` are stored in respective subfolders inside `/var/www/html/`. The apps are split into core `apps` (which are shipped with Nextcloud and you don't need to take care of) and a `custom_apps` folder. If you use a custom theme it would go into the `themes` subfolder. Overview of the folders that can be mounted as volumes: