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description | keywords | title |
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Deploying a Registry in an insecure fashion | registry, on-prem, images, tags, repository, distribution, insecure | Test an insecure registry |
{% include registry.md %}
While it's highly recommended to secure your registry using a TLS certificate issued by a known CA, you can choose to use self-signed certificates, or use your registry over an unencrypted HTTP connection. Either of these choices involves security trade-offs and additional configuration steps.
Deploy a plain HTTP registry
Warning
: It's not possible to use an insecure registry with basic authentication. {:.warning}
This procedure configures Docker to entirely disregard security for your registry. This is very insecure and is not recommended. It exposes your registry to trivial man-in-the-middle (MITM) attacks. Only use this solution for isolated testing or in a tightly controlled, air-gapped environment.
-
Edit the
daemon.json
file, whose default location is/etc/docker/daemon.json
on Linux orC:\ProgramData\docker\config\daemon.json
on Windows Server. If you use Docker Desktop for Mac or Docker Desktop for Windows, click the Docker icon, choose Preferences, and choose +Daemon.If the
daemon.json
file does not exist, create it. Assuming there are no other settings in the file, it should have the following contents:{ "insecure-registries" : ["myregistrydomain.com:5000"] }
Substitute the address of your insecure registry for the one in the example.
With insecure registries enabled, Docker goes through the following steps:
- First, try using HTTPS.
- If HTTPS is available but the certificate is invalid, ignore the error about the certificate.
- If HTTPS is not available, fall back to HTTP.
- First, try using HTTPS.
-
Restart Docker for the changes to take effect.
Repeat these steps on every Engine host that wants to access your registry.
Use 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}
This is more secure than the insecure registry solution.
-
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. -
Use the result to start your registry with TLS enabled.
-
Instruct every Docker daemon to trust that certificate. The way to do this depends on your OS.
-
Linux: Copy the
domain.crt
file to/etc/docker/certs.d/myregistrydomain.com:5000/ca.crt
on every Docker host. You do not need to restart Docker. -
Windows Server:
-
Open Windows Explorer, right-click the
domain.crt
file, and choose Install certificate. When prompted, select the following options:| Store location | local machine | | Place all certificates in the following store | selected |
-
Click Browser and select Trusted Root Certificate Authorities.
-
Click Finish. Restart Docker.
-
-
Docker Desktop for Mac: Follow the instructions on Adding custom CA certificates{: target="blank" class=""}. Restart Docker.
-
Docker Desktop for Windows: Follow the instructions on Adding custom CA certificates{: target="blank" class=""}. Restart Docker.
-
Troubleshoot insecure registry
This section lists some common failures and how to recover from them.
Failing...
Failing to configure the Engine daemon and trying to pull from a registry that is not using TLS results in the following 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, 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
Docker still complains about the certificate when using authentication?
When using authentication, some versions of Docker also require you to trust the certificate at the OS level.
Ubuntu
$ cp certs/domain.crt /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/myregistrydomain.com.crt
update-ca-certificates
Red Hat Enterprise Linux
cp certs/domain.crt /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/myregistrydomain.com.crt
update-ca-trust
Oracle Linux
$ update-ca-trust enable
Restart Docker for the changes to take effect.
Windows
Open Windows Explorer, right-click the certificate, and choose Install certificate.
Then, select the following options:
- Store location: local machine
- Check place all certificates in the following store
- Click Browser, and select Trusted Root Certificate Authorities
- Click Finish
Learn more about managing TLS certificates.
After adding the CA certificate to Windows, restart Docker Desktop for Windows.