$ oc get svc/docker-registry NAME LABELS SELECTOR IP(S) PORT(S) docker-registry docker-registry=default docker-registry=default 172.30.124.220 5000/TCP
By default, the OKD registry is secured during cluster installation so that it serves traffic via TLS. A passthrough route is also created by default to expose the service externally.
If for any reason your registry has not been secured or exposed, see the following sections for steps on how to manually do so.
To manually secure the registry to serve traffic via TLS:
Fetch the service IP and port of the registry:
$ oc get svc/docker-registry NAME LABELS SELECTOR IP(S) PORT(S) docker-registry docker-registry=default docker-registry=default 172.30.124.220 5000/TCP
You can use an existing server certificate, or create a key and server certificate valid for specified IPs and host names, signed by a specified CA. To create a server certificate for the registry service IP and the docker-registry.default.svc.cluster.local host name, run the following command from the first master listed in the Ansible host inventory file, by default /etc/ansible/hosts:
$ oc adm ca create-server-cert \ --signer-cert=/etc/origin/master/ca.crt \ --signer-key=/etc/origin/master/ca.key \ --signer-serial=/etc/origin/master/ca.serial.txt \ --hostnames='docker-registry.default.svc.cluster.local,docker-registry.default.svc,172.30.124.220' \ --cert=/etc/secrets/registry.crt \ --key=/etc/secrets/registry.key
If the router will be exposed externally, add the
public route host name in the --hostnames
flag:
--hostnames='mydocker-registry.example.com,docker-registry.default.svc.cluster.local,172.30.124.220 \
See Redeploying Registry and Router Certificates for additional details on updating the default certificate so that the route is externally accessible.
The |
Create the secret for the registry certificates:
$ oc create secret generic registry-certificates \ --from-file=/etc/secrets/registry.crt \ --from-file=/etc/secrets/registry.key
Add the secret to the registry pod’s service accounts (including the default service account):
$ oc secrets link registry registry-certificates $ oc secrets link default registry-certificates
Limiting secrets to only the service accounts that reference them is disabled by
default. This means that if |
Pause the docker-registry
service:
$ oc rollout pause dc/docker-registry
Add the secret volume to the registry deployment configuration:
$ oc volume dc/docker-registry --add --type=secret \ --secret-name=registry-certificates -m /etc/secrets
Enable TLS by adding the following environment variables to the registry deployment configuration:
$ oc set env dc/docker-registry \ REGISTRY_HTTP_TLS_CERTIFICATE=/etc/secrets/registry.crt \ REGISTRY_HTTP_TLS_KEY=/etc/secrets/registry.key
See the Configuring a registry section of the Docker documentation for more information.
Update the scheme used for the registry’s liveness probe from HTTP to HTTPS:
$ oc patch dc/docker-registry -p '{"spec": {"template": {"spec": {"containers":[{ "name":"registry", "livenessProbe": {"httpGet": {"scheme":"HTTPS"}} }]}}}}'
If your registry was initially deployed on OKD 1.1.2 or later, update the scheme used for the registry’s readiness probe from HTTP to HTTPS:
$ oc patch dc/docker-registry -p '{"spec": {"template": {"spec": {"containers":[{ "name":"registry", "readinessProbe": {"httpGet": {"scheme":"HTTPS"}} }]}}}}'
Resume the docker-registry
service:
$ oc rollout resume dc/docker-registry
Validate the registry is running in TLS mode. Wait until the latest docker-registry
deployment completes and verify the Docker logs for the registry container. You should
find an entry for listening on :5000, tls
.
$ oc logs dc/docker-registry | grep tls time="2015-05-27T05:05:53Z" level=info msg="listening on :5000, tls" instance.id=deeba528-c478-41f5-b751-dc48e4935fc2
Copy the CA certificate to the Docker certificates directory. This must be done on all nodes in the cluster:
$ dcertsdir=/etc/docker/certs.d $ destdir_addr=$dcertsdir/172.30.124.220:5000 $ destdir_name=$dcertsdir/docker-registry.default.svc.cluster.local:5000 $ sudo mkdir -p $destdir_addr $destdir_name $ sudo cp ca.crt $destdir_addr (1) $ sudo cp ca.crt $destdir_name
1 | The ca.crt file is a copy of /etc/origin/master/ca.crt on the master. |
When using authentication, some versions of docker
also require you to
configure your cluster to trust the certificate at the OS level.
Copy the certificate:
$ cp /etc/origin/master/ca.crt /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/myregistrydomain.com.crt
Run:
$ update-ca-trust enable
Remove the --insecure-registry
option only for this particular registry in
the /etc/sysconfig/docker file. Then, reload the daemon and restart the
docker service to reflect this configuration change:
$ sudo systemctl daemon-reload $ sudo systemctl restart docker
Validate the docker
client connection. Running
docker push
to the registry or
docker pull
from the registry should succeed. Make sure you have
logged into the registry.
$ docker tag|push <registry/image> <internal_registry/project/image>
For example:
$ docker pull busybox $ docker tag docker.io/busybox 172.30.124.220:5000/openshift/busybox $ docker push 172.30.124.220:5000/openshift/busybox ... cf2616975b4a: Image successfully pushed Digest: sha256:3662dd821983bc4326bee12caec61367e7fb6f6a3ee547cbaff98f77403cab55
Instead of logging in to the OKD registry from within the OKD cluster, you can gain external access to it by first securing the registry and then exposing it with a route. This allows you to log in to the registry from outside the cluster using the route address, and to tag and push images using the route host.
Each of the following prerequisite steps are performed by default during a typical cluster installation. If they have not been, perform them manually:
A passthrough route should have been created by default for the registry during the initial cluster installation:
Verify whether the route exists:
$ oc get route/docker-registry -o yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: Route metadata: name: docker-registry spec: host: <host> (1) to: kind: service name: docker-registry (2) tls: termination: passthrough (3)
1 | The host for your route. You must be able to resolve this name externally via DNS to the router’s IP address. |
2 | The service name for your registry. |
3 | Specifies this route as a passthrough route. |
Re-encrypt routes are also supported for exposing the secure registry. |
If it does not exist, create the route via the oc create route passthrough
command, specifying the registry as the route’s service. By default, the name of
the created route is the same as the service name:
Get the docker-registry service details:
$ oc get svc NAME CLUSTER_IP EXTERNAL_IP PORT(S) SELECTOR AGE docker-registry 172.30.69.167 <none> 5000/TCP docker-registry=default 4h kubernetes 172.30.0.1 <none> 443/TCP,53/UDP,53/TCP <none> 4h router 172.30.172.132 <none> 80/TCP router=router 4h
Create the route:
$ oc create route passthrough \ --service=docker-registry \(1) --hostname=<host> route "docker-registry" created (2)
1 | Specifies the registry as the route’s service. |
2 | The route name is identical to the service name. |
Next, you must trust the certificates being used for the registry on your host system to allow the host to push and pull images. The certificates referenced were created when you secured your registry.
$ sudo mkdir -p /etc/docker/certs.d/<host> $ sudo cp <ca_certificate_file> /etc/docker/certs.d/<host> $ sudo systemctl restart docker
Log in to the registry using the information from securing the registry. However, this time
point to the host name used in the route rather than your service IP. When
logging in to a secured and exposed registry, make sure you specify the registry
in the docker login
command:
# docker login -e user@company.com \ -u f83j5h6 \ -p Ju1PeM47R0B92Lk3AZp-bWJSck2F7aGCiZ66aFGZrs2 \ <host>
You can now tag and push images using the route host. For example, to tag and
push a busybox
image in a project called test
:
$ oc get imagestreams -n test NAME DOCKER REPO TAGS UPDATED $ docker pull busybox $ docker tag busybox <host>/test/busybox $ docker push <host>/test/busybox The push refers to a repository [<host>/test/busybox] (len: 1) 8c2e06607696: Image already exists 6ce2e90b0bc7: Image successfully pushed cf2616975b4a: Image successfully pushed Digest: sha256:6c7e676d76921031532d7d9c0394d0da7c2906f4cb4c049904c4031147d8ca31 $ docker pull <host>/test/busybox latest: Pulling from <host>/test/busybox cf2616975b4a: Already exists 6ce2e90b0bc7: Already exists 8c2e06607696: Already exists Digest: sha256:6c7e676d76921031532d7d9c0394d0da7c2906f4cb4c049904c4031147d8ca31 Status: Image is up to date for <host>/test/busybox:latest $ oc get imagestreams -n test NAME DOCKER REPO TAGS UPDATED busybox 172.30.11.215:5000/test/busybox latest 2 seconds ago
Your image streams will have the IP address and port of the registry service,
not the route name and port. See |
Instead of securing the registry in order to expose the registry, you can simply expose a non-secure registry for non-production OKD environments. This allows you to have an external route to the registry without using SSL certificates.
Only non-production environments should expose a non-secure registry to external access. |
To expose a non-secure registry:
Expose the registry:
# oc expose service docker-registry --hostname=<hostname> -n default
This creates the following JSON file:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Route metadata: creationTimestamp: null labels: docker-registry: default name: docker-registry spec: host: registry.example.com port: targetPort: "5000" to: kind: service name: docker-registry status: {}
Verify that the route has been created successfully:
# oc get route NAME HOST/PORT PATH service LABELS INSECURE POLICY TLS TERMINATION docker-registry registry.example.com docker-registry docker-registry=default
Check the health of the registry:
$ curl -v http://registry.example.com/healthz
Expect an HTTP 200/OK message.
After exposing the registry, update your /etc/sysconfig/docker file by
adding the port number to the OPTIONS
entry. For example:
OPTIONS='--selinux-enabled --insecure-registry=172.30.0.0/16 --insecure-registry registry.example.com:80'
The above options should be added on the client from which you are trying to log in. Also, ensure that Docker is running on the client. |
When
logging in to the non-secured and exposed registry, make sure you specify the registry
in the docker login
command. For example:
# docker login -e user@company.com \ -u f83j5h6 \ -p Ju1PeM47R0B92Lk3AZp-bWJSck2F7aGCiZ66aFGZrs2 \ <host>