0a29b59e14
Endpoints are now created at applications startup time, using notification configuration. The instances are then added to a Broadcaster instance, which becomes the main event sink for the application. At request time, an event bridge is configured to listen to repository method calls. The actor and source of the eventBridge are created from the requeest context and application, respectively. The result is notifications are dispatched with calls to the context's Repository instance and are queued to each endpoint via the broadcaster. This commit also adds the concept of a RequestID and App.InstanceID. The request id uniquely identifies each request and the InstanceID uniquely identifies a run of the registry. These identifiers can be used in the future to correlate log messages with generated events to support rich debugging. The fields of the app were slightly reorganized for clarity and a few horrid util functions have been removed. Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com> |
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configuration.go | ||
configuration_test.go | ||
parser.go | ||
README.md |
Docker-Registry Configuration
This document describes the registry configuration model and how to specify a custom configuration with a configuration file and/or environment variables.
Semantic-ish Versioning
The configuration file is designed with versioning in mind, such that most upgrades will not require a change in configuration files, and such that configuration files can be "upgraded" from one version to another.
The version is specified as a string of the form MajorVersion.MinorVersion
, where MajorVersion and MinorVersion are both non-negative integer values. Much like semantic versioning, minor version increases denote inherently backwards-compatible changes, such as the addition of optional fields, whereas major version increases denote a restructuring, such as renaming fields or adding required fields. Because of the explicit version definition in the configuration file, it should be possible to parse old configuration files and port them to the current configuration version, although this is not guaranteed for all future versions.
File Structure (as of Version 0.1)
The configuration structure is defined by the Configuration
struct in configuration.go
, and is best described by the following two examples:
version: 0.1
loglevel: info
storage:
s3:
region: us-east-1
bucket: my-bucket
rootpath: /registry
encrypt: true
secure: false
accesskey: SAMPLEACCESSKEY
secretkey: SUPERSECRET
host: ~
port: ~
auth:
silly:
realm: test-realm
service: my-service
reporting:
bugsnag:
apikey: mybugsnagapikey
releasestage: development
newrelic:
licensekey: mynewreliclicensekey
name: docker-distribution
http:
addr: 0.0.0.0:5000
secret: mytokensecret
version: 0.1
loglevel: debug
storage: inmemory
version
The version is expected to remain a top-level field, as to allow for a consistent version check before parsing the remainder of the configuration file.
loglevel
This specifies the log level of the registry.
Supported values:
error
warn
info
debug
storage
This specifies the storage driver, and may be provided either as a string (only the driver type) or as a driver name with a parameters map, as seen in the first example above.
The parameters map will be passed into the factory constructor of the given storage driver type.
auth
This specifies the authorization method the registry will use, and is provided as an auth type with a parameters map.
The parameters map will be passed into the factory constructor of the given auth type.
reporting
This specifies metrics/error reporting systems which the registry will forward information about stats/errors to. There are currently two supported systems, which are documented below.
bugsnag
Reports http errors and panics to bugsnag.
apikey
(Required for bugsnag use) Specifies the bugnsag API Key for authenticating to your account.
releasestage
(Optional) Tracks the stage at which the registry is deployed. For example: "production", "staging", "development".
endpoint
(Optional) Used for specifying an enterprise bugsnag endpoint other than https://bugsnag.com.
newrelic
Reports heap, goroutine, and http stats to NewRelic.
licensekey
(Required for newrelic use) Specifies the NewRelic License Key for authenticating to your account.
name
(Optional) Specifies the component name that is displayed in the NewRelic panel.
http
This is used for HTTP transport-specific configuration options.
addr
Specifies the bind address for the registry instance. Example: 0.0.0.0:5000
secret
Specifies the secret key with which query-string HMAC tokens are generated.
Notes
All keys in the configuration file must be provided as a string of lowercase letters and numbers only, and values must be string-like (booleans and numerical values are fine to parse as strings).
Environment Variables
To support the workflow of running a docker registry from a standard container without having to modify configuration files, the registry configuration also supports environment variables for overriding fields.
Any configuration field other than version can be replaced by providing an environment variable of the following form: REGISTRY_<uppercase key>[_<uppercase key>]...
.
For example, to change the loglevel to error
, one can provide REGISTRY_LOGLEVEL=error
, and to change the s3 storage driver's region parameter to us-west-1
, one can provide REGISTRY_STORAGE_S3_LOGLEVEL=us-west-1
.
Notes
If an environment variable changes a map value into a string, such as replacing the storage driver type with REGISTRY_STORAGE=filesystem
, then all sub-fields will be erased. As such, specifying the storage type in the environment will remove all parameters related to the old storage configuration.
By restricting all keys in the configuration file to lowercase letters and numbers, we can avoid any potential environment variable mapping ambiguity.