Signed-off-by: ianlv <sunlvyun@outlook.com>
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Setting up private docker registry for Compute-to-Data environment | Learn how to setup your own docker registry and push images for running algorithms in a C2D environment. |
C2D - Private Docker Registry
The document is intended for a production setup. The tutorial provides the steps to set up a private docker registry on the server for the following scenarios:
- Allow registry access only to the C2D environment.
- Anyone can pull the image from the registry but, only authenticated users will push images to the registry.
Setup 1: Allow registry access only to the C2D environment
To implement this use case, 1 domain will be required:
- example.com: This domain will allow only image pull operations
Note: Please change the domain names to your application-specific domain names.
1.1 Prerequisites
- A docker environment running on a Linux server.
- Docker compose is installed.
- C2D environment is running.
- The domain names are mapped to the server hosting the registry.
1.2 Generate certificates
# install certbot: https://certbot.eff.org/
sudo certbot certonly --standalone --cert-name example.com -d example.com
Note: Check the access right of the files/directories where certificates are stored. Usually, they are at /etc/letsencrypt/
.
1.3 Generate a password file
Replace content in <>
with appropriate content.
docker run \
--entrypoint htpasswd \
httpd:2 -Bbn <username> <password> > <path>/auth/htpasswd
1.4 Docker compose template file for registry
Copy the below yml
content to docker-compose.yml
file and replace content in <>
.
version: '3'
services:
registry:
restart: always
container_name: my-docker-registry
image: registry:2
ports:
- 5050:5000
environment:
REGISTRY_AUTH: htpasswd
REGISTRY_AUTH_HTPASSWD_PATH: /auth/htpasswd
REGISTRY_AUTH_HTPASSWD_REALM: Registry Realm
REGISTRY_HTTP_SECRET: <secret>
volumes:
- <path>/data:/var/lib/registry
- <path>/auth:/auth
nginx:
image: nginx:latest
container_name: nginx
volumes:
- <path>/nginx/logs:/app/logs/
- nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
- /etc/letsencrypt/:/etc/letsencrypt/
ports:
- 80:80
- 443:443
depends_on:
- registry
1.5 Nginx configuration
Copy the below nginx configuration to a nginx.conf
file.
events {}
http {
access_log /app/logs/access.log;
error_log /app/logs/error.log;
server {
client_max_body_size 4096M;
listen 80 default_server;
server_name _;
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
server {
# Allowed request size should be large enough to allow pull operations
client_max_body_size 4096M;
listen 443 ssl;
server_name example.com;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/privkey.pem;
location / {
proxy_connect_timeout 75s;
proxy_pass http://registry-read-only:5000;
}
}
}
1.6 Create Kubernetes secret in C2D server
Login into the compute-to-data environment and run the following command with the appropriate credentials:
kubectl create secret docker-registry regcred --docker-server=example.com --docker-username=<username> --docker-password=<password> --docker-email=<email_id> -n ocean-compute
1.7 Update operator-engine configuration
Add PULL_SECRET
property with value regcred
in the operator.yml file of operator-engine configuration. For more details on operator-engine properties refer to the operator-engine readme.
Apply updated operator-engine configuration.
kubectl config set-context --current --namespace ocean-compute
kubectl apply -f operator-engine/kubernetes/operator.yml
Steup 2: Allow anonymous pull
operations
To implement this use case, 2 domains will be required:
- example.com: This domain will only allow image push/pull operations from authenticated users.
- readonly.example.com: This domain will allow only image pull operations
Note: Please change the domain names to your application-specific domain names.
2.1 Prerequisites
- Running docker environment on the Linux server.
- Docker compose is installed.
- 2 domain names are mapped to the same server IP address.
2.2 Generate certificates
# install certbot: https://certbot.eff.org/
sudo certbot certonly --standalone --cert-name example.com -d example.com
sudo certbot certonly --standalone --cert-name readonly.example.com -d readonly.example.com
Note: Do check the access right of the files/directories where certificates are stored. Usually, they are at /etc/letsencrypt/
.
2.3 Generate a password file
Replace content in <>
with appropriate content.
docker run \
--entrypoint htpasswd \
httpd:2 -Bbn <username> <password> > <path>/auth/htpasswd
2.4 Docker compose template file for registry
Copy the below yml
content to docker-compose.yml
file and replace content in <>
. Here, we will be creating two services of the docker registry so that anyone can pull
the images from the registry but, only authenticated users can push
the images.
version: '3'
services:
registry:
restart: always
container_name: my-docker-registry
image: registry:2
ports:
- 5050:5000
environment:
REGISTRY_AUTH: htpasswd
REGISTRY_AUTH_HTPASSWD_PATH: /auth/htpasswd
REGISTRY_AUTH_HTPASSWD_REALM: Registry Realm
REGISTRY_HTTP_SECRET: <secret>
volumes:
- <path>/data:/var/lib/registry
- <path>/auth:/auth
registry-read-only:
restart: always
container_name: my-registry-read-only
image: registry:2
read_only: true
ports:
- 5051:5000
environment:
REGISTRY_HTTP_SECRET: ${REGISTRY_HTTP_SECRET}
volumes:
- <path>/docker-registry/data:/var/lib/registry:ro
depends_on:
- registry
nginx:
image: nginx:latest
container_name: nginx
volumes:
- <path>/nginx/logs:/app/logs/
- nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
- /etc/letsencrypt/:/etc/letsencrypt/
ports:
- 80:80
- 443:443
depends_on:
- registry-read-only
2.5 Nginx configuration
Copy the below nginx configuration to a nginx.conf
file.
events {}
http {
access_log /app/logs/access.log;
error_log /app/logs/error.log;
server {
client_max_body_size 4096M;
listen 80 default_server;
server_name _;
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
server {
# Allowed request size should be large enough to allow push operations
client_max_body_size 4096M;
listen 443 ssl;
server_name readonly.example.com;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/readonly.example.com/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/readonly.example.com/privkey.pem;
location / {
proxy_connect_timeout 75s;
proxy_pass http://registry:5000;
}
}
server {
# Allowed request size should be large enough to allow pull operations
client_max_body_size 4096M;
listen 443 ssl;
server_name example.com;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/privkey.pem;
location / {
proxy_connect_timeout 75s;
proxy_pass http://registry-read-only:5000;
}
}
}
Start the registry
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up
Working with registry
Login to registry
docker login example.com -u <username> -p <password>
Build and push an image to the registry
Use the commands below to build an image from a Dockerfile
and push it to your private registry.
docker build . -t example.com/my-algo:latest
docker image push example.com/my-algo:latest
List images in the registry
curl -X GET -u <username>:<password> https://example.com/v2/_catalog
Pull an image from the registry
Use the commands below to build an image from a Dockerfile
and push it to your private registry.
# requires login
docker image pull example.com/my-algo:latest
# allows anonymous pull if 2nd setup scenario is implemented
docker image pull readonly.example.com/my-algo:latest
Next step
You can publish an algorithm asset with the metadata containing the registry URL, image, and tag information to enable users to run C2D jobs.