I use docker-compose which ups a stack.
Relative code:
db:
  build: ./dockerfiles/postgres
  container_name: postgres-container
  volumes:
    - ./dockerfiles/postgres/pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
    - ./dockerfiles/postgres/backups:/pg_backups
Dockerfile for Postgres:
FROM postgres:latest
RUN mkdir /pg_backups && > /etc/cron.d/pg_backup-cron && echo "00 22 * * * /backup.sh" >> /etc/cron.d/pg_backup-cron
ADD ./backup.sh /
RUN chmod +x /backup.sh
backup.sh
#!/bin/sh
# Dump DBs
now=$(date +"%d-%m-%Y_%H-%M")
pg_dump -h db -U postgres -d postgres > "/pg_backups/db_dump_$now.sql"
# remove all files (type f) modified longer than 30 days ago under /pg_backups
find /pg_backups -name "*.sql" -type f -mtime +30 -delete
exit 0
Cron simply does not launch the script. How to fix that?
FINAL VERSION
Based on @Farhad Farahi answer, below is the final result:
On host I made a script:
#!/bin/bash
# Creates Cron Job which backups DB in Docker everyday at 22:00 host time
croncmd_backup="docker exec -it postgres-container bash -c '/pg_backups/backup.sh'"
cronjob_backup="00 22 * * * $croncmd_backup"
if [[ $# -eq 0 ]] ; then
    echo -e 'Please provide one of the arguments (example: ./run_after_install.sh add-cron-db-backup):
    1) add-cron-db-backup
    2) remove-cron-db-backup'
# In order to avoid task duplications in cron, the script checks, if there is already back-up job in cron
elif [[ $1 == add-cron-db-backup ]]; then
    ( crontab -l | grep -v -F "$croncmd_backup" ; echo "$cronjob_backup" ) | crontab -
    echo "==>>> Backup task added to Cron"
# Remove back-up job from cron
elif [[ $1 == remove-cron-db-backup ]]; then
    ( crontab -l | grep -v -F "$croncmd_backup" ) | crontab -
    echo "==>>> Backup task removed from Cron"
fi
This script adds cron task to host, which launches the script backup.sh (see above) in a container.
For this implementation there is no need to use Dockerfile for Postgres, so relevant part of docker-compose.yml should look like:
version: '2'
services:
  db:
    image: postgres:latest
    container_name: postgres-container
    volumes:
      - ./dockerfiles/postgres/pgdata:/var/lib/postgresql/data
      - ./dockerfiles/postgres/backups:/pg_backups
                Things you should know:
cron service is not started by default in postgres library image.
when you change cron config, you need to reload cron service.
Recommendation:
Use docker host's cron and use docker exec to launch the periodic tasks.
Advantages of this approach:
Unified Configuration for all containers.
Avoids running multiple cron services in multiple containers (Better usage of system resources aswell as less management overhead.
Microservices Philosophy.Based on the Farhad's answer I created a file postgres_backup.sh on the host with the next content:
#!/bin/bash
# Creates Cron Job which backups DB in Docker everyday at 22:00 host time
croncmd_backup="docker exec -it postgres-container bash -c '/db_backups/script/backup.sh'"
cronjob_backup="00 22 * * * $croncmd_backup"
if [[ $# -eq 0 ]] ; then
    echo -e 'Please provide one of the arguments (example: ./postgres_backup.sh add-cron-db-backup):
    1 > add-cron-db-backup
    2 > remove-cron-db-backup
elif [[ $1 == add-cron-db-backup ]]; then
    ( crontab -l | grep -v -F "$croncmd_backup" ; echo "$cronjob_backup" ) | crontab -
    echo "==>>> Backup task added to Local (not container) Cron"
elif [[ $1 == remove-cron-db-backup ]]; then
    ( crontab -l | grep -v -F "$croncmd_backup" ) | crontab -
    echo "==>>> Backup task removed from Cron"
fi
and I added a file /db_backups/script/backup.sh to Docker's Postgres Image with the content:
#!/bin/sh
# Dump DBs
now=$(date +"%d-%m-%Y_%H-%M")
pg_dump -h db -U postgres -d postgres > "/db_backups/backups/db_dump_$now.sql"
# remove all files (type f) modified longer than 30 days ago under /db_backups/backups
find /db_backups/backups -name "*.sql" -type f -mtime +30 -delete
exit 0
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