These functions allow a Named type to be combined with a tag or a
digest. WithTag will replace the ImageReference function in
github.com/docker/docker/utils as the Docker Engine transitions to the
reference package.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
In order to support valid hostnames as name components, supporting repeated dash was added.
Additionally double underscore is now allowed as a separator to loosen the restriction for previously supported names.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
Since reference itself may be represented by multiple types which implement the reference inteface, serialization can lead to ambiguous type which cannot be deserialized.
Field wraps the reference object to ensure that the correct type is always deserialized, requiring an extra unwrap of the reference after deserialization.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
There seems to be a need for a type that represents a way of pointing
to an image, irrespective of the implementation.
This patch defines a Reference interface and provides 3 implementations:
- TagReference: when only a tag is provided
- DigestReference: when a digest (according to the digest package) is
provided, can include optional tag as well
Validation of references are purely syntactic.
There is also a strong type for tags, analogous to digests, as well
as a strong type for Repository from which clients can access the
hostname alone, or the repository name without the hostname, or both
together via the String() method.
For Repository, the files names.go and names_test.go were moved from
the v2 package.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
of readers joining current downloads. Concurrent requests for the same blob
will not block, but only the first instance will be comitted locally.
Signed-off-by: Richard Scothern <richard.scothern@gmail.com>
Fixes https://github.com/docker/distribution/issues/1062
This relaxes the naming restrictions places on Docker images to permit
valid hostnames according to [RFC-2396](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt).
It deviates from the RFC in the following ways:
1) Allow underscores where we allow hyphens (hostnames don't allow
underscores, which we must for backwards compatibility).
2) Leave "top-level" name segments unrestricted (domains require an
alpha character to begin a top-level domain, e.g. "com").
3) DO NOT allow a trailing dot, as permitted by FQDNs.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moore <mattmoor@google.com>
It seems that enabling proxy stops my instance from accepting local pushes, but I can't find mention of that in the docs.
Signed-off-by: Jason Freidman <jason@periscope.io>
This allows the administrator to specify an externally-reachable URL for
the registry. It takes precedence over the X-Forwarded-Proto and
X-Forwarded-Host headers, and the hostname in the request.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
Associate HTTP 401s with Authentication errors rather than Authorization
errors. Changes the meaning of the UNAUTHORIZED error to be authentication
specific.
Defines DENIED error code to be associated with authorization
errors which result in HTTP 403 responses.
Add 'No Such Repository' errors to more endpoints.
Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Josh Hawn <josh.hawn@docker.com> (github: jlhawn)
This PR add some description to manifest spec.
It clarifies the relationship between `fsLayers` and `history` fields.
Signed-off-by: xiekeyang <xiekeyang@huawei.com>
The "testing" package adds some flags in its init function, so utilities
that import distribution code may print a page of extra testing flags in
their help output.
This commit solves the issue by moving an import of "testing" in the
registry/storage/cache package to a new
registry/storage/cache/cachecheck package, which is only imported by
tests.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
Add "readonly" under the storage/maintenance section. When this is set
to true, uploads and deletions will return 503 Service Unavailable
errors.
Document the parameter and add some unit testing.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <aaron.lehmann@docker.com>
In the S3 storage driver there is currently an initial access permission check by listing the bucket. If this check fails, registry will panic and exit.
However, this check is broken in two ways. First of all it strips the final slash from the root directory path, meaning that any access permissions which limit access to a single directory will fail, because S3 treats the path as strict prefix match. Secondly it fails to strip any leading slash that might be present, unlike the other access places, which means that the path used is different as a leading slash is allowed and significant in a filename in S3.
Since there is also a periodic health check which correctly checks access permissions and shows the error more cleanly, the best solution seems to be to just remove this initial access check.
Signed-off-by: Nuutti Kotivuori <nuutti.kotivuori@poplatek.fi>
Split the discussion of v2 authentication into two parts:
1) A specification of the handshake between the client, registry and
authentication service.
2) A description of how `docker/distribution` implements this using JWT.
This should make it clearer that `#2` is an implementation detail, and
that clients should regard tokens as opaque entities that only the
registry and authentication service should understand.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moore <mattmoor@google.com>
By adding WithVersion to the context package, we can simplify context setup in
the application. This avoids some odd bugs where instantiation order can lead
to missing instance.id or version from log messages.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>