Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
177 lines (114 loc) · 5.76 KB

deploying.md

File metadata and controls

177 lines (114 loc) · 5.76 KB

Deploying a registry server

You obviously need to install Docker (remember you need Docker version 1.6.0 or newer).

Getting started

Start your registry:

 $ docker run -d -p 5000:5000 \
 		--restart=always --name registry registry:2

That's it.

You can now tag an image and push it:

$ docker pull ubuntu && docker tag ubuntu localhost:5000/batman/ubuntu
$ docker push localhost:5000/batman/ubuntu

Then pull it back:

$ docker pull localhost:5000/batman/ubuntu

Where is my data?

By default, your registry stores its data on the local filesystem, inside the container.

In a production environment, it's highly recommended to use another storage backend, by configuring it.

If you want to stick with the local posix filesystem, you should store your data outside of the container.

This is achieved by mounting a volume into the container:

 $ docker run -d -p 5000:5000 \
    -e REGISTRY_STORAGE_FILESYSTEM_ROOTDIRECTORY=/var/lib/registry \
    -v /myregistrydata:/var/lib/registry \
    --restart=always --name registry registry:2

Making your Registry available

Now that your registry works on localhost, you probably want to make it available as well to other hosts.

Let assume your registry is accessible via the domain name myregistrydomain.com (still on port 5000).

If you try to docker pull myregistrydomain.com:5000/batman/ubuntu, you will see the following error message:

FATA[0000] Error response from daemon: v1 ping attempt failed with error:
Get https://myregistrydomain.com:5000/v1/_ping: tls: oversized record received with length 20527. 
If this private registry supports only HTTP or HTTPS with an unknown CA certificate,please add 
`--insecure-registry myregistrydomain.com:5000` to the daemon's arguments.
In the case of HTTPS, if you have access to the registry's CA certificate, no need for the flag;
simply place the CA certificate at /etc/docker/certs.d/myregistrydomain.com:5000/ca.crt

If trying to reach a non localhost registry, Docker requires that you secure it using https, or make it explicit that you want to run an insecure registry.

You basically have three different options to comply with that security requirement here.

1. buy a SSL certificate for your domain

This is the (highly) recommended solution.

You can buy a certificate for as cheap as 10$ a year (some registrars even offer certificates for free), and this will save you a lot of trouble.

Assuming you now have a domain.crt and domain.key inside a directory named certs:

# Stop your registry
docker stop registry && docker rm registry

# Start your registry with TLS enabled
docker run -d -p 5000:5000 \
	-v `pwd`/certs:/certs \
	-e REGISTRY_HTTP_TLS_CERTIFICATE=/certs/domain.crt \
	-e REGISTRY_HTTP_TLS_KEY=/certs/domain.key \
	--restart=always --name registry \
	registry:2

A certificate issuer may supply you with an intermediate certificate. In this case, you must combine your certificate with the intermediate's to form a certificate bundle. You can do this using the cat command:

$ cat server.crt intermediate-certificates.pem > server.with-intermediate.crt

You then configure the registry to use your certificate bundle by providing the REGISTRY_HTTP_TLS_CERTIFICATE environment variable.

Pros:

  • best solution
  • work without further ado (assuming you bought your certificate from a CA that is trusted by your operating system)

Cons:

  • ?

2. instruct docker to trust your registry as insecure

This basically tells Docker to entirely disregard security for your registry.

  1. edit the file /etc/default/docker so that there is a line that reads: DOCKER_OPTS="--insecure-registry myregistrydomain.com:5000" (or add that to existing DOCKER_OPTS). Restart docker.
  2. restart your Docker daemon: on ubuntu, this is usually service docker stop && service docker start

Pros:

  • easy to configure

Cons:

  • very insecure
  • you have to configure every docker daemon that wants to access your registry

3. use a self-signed certificate and configure docker to trust it

Alternatively, you can generate your own certificate:

mkdir -p certs && openssl req \
	-newkey rsa:4096 -nodes -sha256 -keyout certs/domain.key \
	-x509 -days 365 -out certs/domain.crt

Be sure to use the name myregistrydomain.com as a CN.

Now go to solution 1 above and stop and restart your registry.

Then you have to instruct every docker daemon to trust that certificate. This is done by copying the domain.crt file to /etc/docker/certs.d/myregistrydomain.com:5000/ca.crt (don't forget to restart docker after doing so).

Pros:

  • more secure than solution 2

Cons:

  • you have to configure every docker daemon that wants to access your registry

Using Compose

It's highly recommended to use Docker Compose to facilitate managing your Registry configuration.

Here is a simple docker-compose.yml that does setup your registry exactly as above, with TLS enabled.

registry:
  restart: always
  image: registry:2
  ports:
    - 5000:5000
  environment:
    REGISTRY_HTTP_TLS_CERTIFICATE: /certs/domain.crt
    REGISTRY_HTTP_TLS_KEY: /certs/domain.key
    REGISTRY_STORAGE_FILESYSTEM_ROOTDIRECTORY: /var/lib/registry
  volumes:
    - /path/registry-data:/var/lib/registry
    - /path/certs:/certs

You can then start your registry with a simple

$ docker-compose up -d

Next

You are now ready to explore the registry configuration