Merge pull request #1121 from thaJeztah/fix-doc-emoji

Docs: replace emoji with regular warning
This commit is contained in:
Richard Scothern 2015-10-22 17:13:33 -07:00
commit 1c5f8166e4
2 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

View file

@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ Except for registries running on secure local networks, registries should always
The simplest way to achieve access restriction is through basic authentication (this is very similar to other web servers' basic authentication mechanism).
:warning: You **cannot** use authentication with an insecure registry. You have to [configure TLS first](#running-a-domain-registry) for this to work.
> **Warning**: You **cannot** use authentication with an insecure registry. You have to [configure TLS first](#running-a-domain-registry) for this to work.
First create a password file with one entry for the user "testuser", with password "testpassword":
@ -213,7 +213,7 @@ registry:
- /path/auth:/auth
```
:warning: replace `/path` by whatever directory that holds your `certs` and `auth` folder from above.
> **Warning**: replace `/path` by whatever directory that holds your `certs` and `auth` folder from above.
You can then start your registry with a simple

View file

@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ You have to understand the downsides in doing so, and the extra burden in config
## Deploying a plain HTTP registry
> :warning: it's not possible to use an insecure registry with basic authentication
> **Warning**: it's not possible to use an insecure registry with basic authentication
This basically tells Docker to entirely disregard security for your registry.
@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ This basically tells Docker to entirely disregard security for your registry.
## Using self-signed certificates
> :warning: using this along with basic authentication requires to **also** trust the certificate into the OS cert store for some versions of docker (see below)
> **Warning**: using this along with basic authentication requires to **also** trust the certificate into the OS cert store for some versions of docker (see below)
Generate your own certificate: