distribution/docs/registry.go

997 lines
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2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
package registry
import (
"bytes"
"crypto/sha256"
_ "crypto/sha512"
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
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"crypto/tls"
"crypto/x509"
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"encoding/json"
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"errors"
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"fmt"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"net"
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"net/http"
"net/http/cookiejar"
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"net/url"
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
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"os"
"path"
"regexp"
"runtime"
"strconv"
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"strings"
"time"
"github.com/dotcloud/docker/dockerversion"
"github.com/dotcloud/docker/utils"
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)
var (
ErrAlreadyExists = errors.New("Image already exists")
ErrInvalidRepositoryName = errors.New("Invalid repository name (ex: \"registry.domain.tld/myrepos\")")
errLoginRequired = errors.New("Authentication is required.")
)
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Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
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type TimeoutType uint32
const (
NoTimeout TimeoutType = iota
ReceiveTimeout
ConnectTimeout
)
func newClient(jar http.CookieJar, roots *x509.CertPool, cert *tls.Certificate, timeout TimeoutType) *http.Client {
tlsConfig := tls.Config{RootCAs: roots}
if cert != nil {
tlsConfig.Certificates = append(tlsConfig.Certificates, *cert)
}
httpTransport := &http.Transport{
DisableKeepAlives: true,
Proxy: http.ProxyFromEnvironment,
TLSClientConfig: &tlsConfig,
}
switch timeout {
case ConnectTimeout:
httpTransport.Dial = func(proto string, addr string) (net.Conn, error) {
// Set the connect timeout to 5 seconds
conn, err := net.DialTimeout(proto, addr, 5*time.Second)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// Set the recv timeout to 10 seconds
conn.SetDeadline(time.Now().Add(10 * time.Second))
return conn, nil
}
case ReceiveTimeout:
httpTransport.Dial = func(proto string, addr string) (net.Conn, error) {
conn, err := net.Dial(proto, addr)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
conn = utils.NewTimeoutConn(conn, 1*time.Minute)
return conn, nil
}
}
return &http.Client{
Transport: httpTransport,
CheckRedirect: AddRequiredHeadersToRedirectedRequests,
Jar: jar,
}
}
func doRequest(req *http.Request, jar http.CookieJar, timeout TimeoutType) (*http.Response, *http.Client, error) {
hasFile := func(files []os.FileInfo, name string) bool {
for _, f := range files {
if f.Name() == name {
return true
}
}
return false
}
hostDir := path.Join("/etc/docker/certs.d", req.URL.Host)
fs, err := ioutil.ReadDir(hostDir)
if err != nil && !os.IsNotExist(err) {
return nil, nil, err
}
var (
pool *x509.CertPool
certs []*tls.Certificate
)
for _, f := range fs {
if strings.HasSuffix(f.Name(), ".crt") {
if pool == nil {
pool = x509.NewCertPool()
}
data, err := ioutil.ReadFile(path.Join(hostDir, f.Name()))
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
} else {
pool.AppendCertsFromPEM(data)
}
}
if strings.HasSuffix(f.Name(), ".cert") {
certName := f.Name()
keyName := certName[:len(certName)-5] + ".key"
if !hasFile(fs, keyName) {
return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("Missing key %s for certificate %s", keyName, certName)
} else {
cert, err := tls.LoadX509KeyPair(path.Join(hostDir, certName), path.Join(hostDir, keyName))
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
certs = append(certs, &cert)
}
}
if strings.HasSuffix(f.Name(), ".key") {
keyName := f.Name()
certName := keyName[:len(keyName)-4] + ".cert"
if !hasFile(fs, certName) {
return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("Missing certificate %s for key %s", certName, keyName)
}
}
}
if len(certs) == 0 {
client := newClient(jar, pool, nil, timeout)
res, err := client.Do(req)
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
return res, client, nil
} else {
for i, cert := range certs {
client := newClient(jar, pool, cert, timeout)
res, err := client.Do(req)
if i == len(certs)-1 {
// If this is the last cert, always return the result
return res, client, err
} else {
// Otherwise, continue to next cert if 403 or 5xx
if err == nil && res.StatusCode != 403 && !(res.StatusCode >= 500 && res.StatusCode < 600) {
return res, client, err
}
}
}
}
return nil, nil, nil
}
func pingRegistryEndpoint(endpoint string) (RegistryInfo, error) {
if endpoint == IndexServerAddress() {
// Skip the check, we now this one is valid
// (and we never want to fallback to http in case of error)
return RegistryInfo{Standalone: false}, nil
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
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req, err := http.NewRequest("GET", endpoint+"_ping", nil)
if err != nil {
return RegistryInfo{Standalone: false}, err
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
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resp, _, err := doRequest(req, nil, ConnectTimeout)
if err != nil {
return RegistryInfo{Standalone: false}, err
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
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defer resp.Body.Close()
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jsonString, err := ioutil.ReadAll(resp.Body)
if err != nil {
return RegistryInfo{Standalone: false}, fmt.Errorf("Error while reading the http response: %s", err)
}
// If the header is absent, we assume true for compatibility with earlier
// versions of the registry. default to true
info := RegistryInfo{
Standalone: true,
}
if err := json.Unmarshal(jsonString, &info); err != nil {
utils.Debugf("Error unmarshalling the _ping RegistryInfo: %s", err)
// don't stop here. Just assume sane defaults
}
if hdr := resp.Header.Get("X-Docker-Registry-Version"); hdr != "" {
utils.Debugf("Registry version header: '%s'", hdr)
info.Version = hdr
}
utils.Debugf("RegistryInfo.Version: %q", info.Version)
standalone := resp.Header.Get("X-Docker-Registry-Standalone")
utils.Debugf("Registry standalone header: '%s'", standalone)
// Accepted values are "true" (case-insensitive) and "1".
if strings.EqualFold(standalone, "true") || standalone == "1" {
info.Standalone = true
} else if len(standalone) > 0 {
// there is a header set, and it is not "true" or "1", so assume fails
info.Standalone = false
}
utils.Debugf("RegistryInfo.Standalone: %q", info.Standalone)
return info, nil
}
func validateRepositoryName(repositoryName string) error {
var (
namespace string
name string
)
nameParts := strings.SplitN(repositoryName, "/", 2)
if len(nameParts) < 2 {
namespace = "library"
name = nameParts[0]
} else {
namespace = nameParts[0]
name = nameParts[1]
}
validNamespace := regexp.MustCompile(`^([a-z0-9_]{4,30})$`)
if !validNamespace.MatchString(namespace) {
return fmt.Errorf("Invalid namespace name (%s), only [a-z0-9_] are allowed, size between 4 and 30", namespace)
}
validRepo := regexp.MustCompile(`^([a-z0-9-_.]+)$`)
if !validRepo.MatchString(name) {
return fmt.Errorf("Invalid repository name (%s), only [a-z0-9-_.] are allowed", name)
}
return nil
}
// Resolves a repository name to a hostname + name
func ResolveRepositoryName(reposName string) (string, string, error) {
if strings.Contains(reposName, "://") {
// It cannot contain a scheme!
return "", "", ErrInvalidRepositoryName
}
nameParts := strings.SplitN(reposName, "/", 2)
if len(nameParts) == 1 || (!strings.Contains(nameParts[0], ".") && !strings.Contains(nameParts[0], ":") &&
nameParts[0] != "localhost") {
// This is a Docker Index repos (ex: samalba/hipache or ubuntu)
err := validateRepositoryName(reposName)
return IndexServerAddress(), reposName, err
}
hostname := nameParts[0]
reposName = nameParts[1]
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if strings.Contains(hostname, "index.docker.io") {
return "", "", fmt.Errorf("Invalid repository name, try \"%s\" instead", reposName)
}
if err := validateRepositoryName(reposName); err != nil {
return "", "", err
}
return hostname, reposName, nil
}
// this method expands the registry name as used in the prefix of a repo
// to a full url. if it already is a url, there will be no change.
// The registry is pinged to test if it http or https
func ExpandAndVerifyRegistryUrl(hostname string) (string, error) {
if strings.HasPrefix(hostname, "http:") || strings.HasPrefix(hostname, "https:") {
// if there is no slash after https:// (8 characters) then we have no path in the url
if strings.LastIndex(hostname, "/") < 9 {
// there is no path given. Expand with default path
hostname = hostname + "/v1/"
}
if _, err := pingRegistryEndpoint(hostname); err != nil {
return "", errors.New("Invalid Registry endpoint: " + err.Error())
}
return hostname, nil
}
endpoint := fmt.Sprintf("https://%s/v1/", hostname)
if _, err := pingRegistryEndpoint(endpoint); err != nil {
utils.Debugf("Registry %s does not work (%s), falling back to http", endpoint, err)
endpoint = fmt.Sprintf("http://%s/v1/", hostname)
if _, err = pingRegistryEndpoint(endpoint); err != nil {
//TODO: triggering highland build can be done there without "failing"
return "", errors.New("Invalid Registry endpoint: " + err.Error())
}
}
return endpoint, nil
}
func setTokenAuth(req *http.Request, token []string) {
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if req.Header.Get("Authorization") == "" { // Don't override
req.Header.Set("Authorization", "Token "+strings.Join(token, ","))
}
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
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func (r *Registry) doRequest(req *http.Request) (*http.Response, *http.Client, error) {
return doRequest(req, r.jar, r.timeout)
}
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// Retrieve the history of a given image from the Registry.
// Return a list of the parent's json (requested image included)
func (r *Registry) GetRemoteHistory(imgID, registry string, token []string) ([]string, error) {
2013-08-02 07:08:08 +00:00
req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("GET", registry+"images/"+imgID+"/ancestry", nil)
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
setTokenAuth(req, token)
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
if err != nil {
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return nil, err
}
defer res.Body.Close()
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
if res.StatusCode == 401 {
return nil, errLoginRequired
}
return nil, utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("Server error: %d trying to fetch remote history for %s", res.StatusCode, imgID), res)
}
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jsonString, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
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return nil, fmt.Errorf("Error while reading the http response: %s", err)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
utils.Debugf("Ancestry: %s", jsonString)
history := new([]string)
if err := json.Unmarshal(jsonString, history); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return *history, nil
}
// Check if an image exists in the Registry
// TODO: This method should return the errors instead of masking them and returning false
func (r *Registry) LookupRemoteImage(imgID, registry string, token []string) bool {
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req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("GET", registry+"images/"+imgID+"/json", nil)
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if err != nil {
utils.Errorf("Error in LookupRemoteImage %s", err)
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return false
}
setTokenAuth(req, token)
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
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if err != nil {
utils.Errorf("Error in LookupRemoteImage %s", err)
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return false
}
2013-06-03 19:20:52 +00:00
res.Body.Close()
return res.StatusCode == 200
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}
// Retrieve an image from the Registry.
func (r *Registry) GetRemoteImageJSON(imgID, registry string, token []string) ([]byte, int, error) {
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// Get the JSON
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req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("GET", registry+"images/"+imgID+"/json", nil)
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if err != nil {
return nil, -1, fmt.Errorf("Failed to download json: %s", err)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
setTokenAuth(req, token)
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
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if err != nil {
return nil, -1, fmt.Errorf("Failed to download json: %s", err)
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}
defer res.Body.Close()
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
return nil, -1, utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("HTTP code %d", res.StatusCode), res)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
// if the size header is not present, then set it to '-1'
imageSize := -1
if hdr := res.Header.Get("X-Docker-Size"); hdr != "" {
imageSize, err = strconv.Atoi(hdr)
if err != nil {
return nil, -1, err
}
}
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jsonString, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
return nil, -1, fmt.Errorf("Failed to parse downloaded json: %s (%s)", err, jsonString)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
return jsonString, imageSize, nil
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
func (r *Registry) GetRemoteImageLayer(imgID, registry string, token []string, imgSize int64) (io.ReadCloser, error) {
var (
retries = 5
headRes *http.Response
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
client *http.Client
hasResume bool = false
imageURL = fmt.Sprintf("%simages/%s/layer", registry, imgID)
)
headReq, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("HEAD", imageURL, nil)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Error while getting from the server: %s\n", err)
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
setTokenAuth(headReq, token)
for i := 1; i <= retries; i++ {
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
headRes, client, err = r.doRequest(headReq)
if err != nil && i == retries {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Eror while making head request: %s\n", err)
} else if err != nil {
time.Sleep(time.Duration(i) * 5 * time.Second)
continue
}
break
}
if headRes.Header.Get("Accept-Ranges") == "bytes" && imgSize > 0 {
hasResume = true
}
req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("GET", imageURL, nil)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Error while getting from the server: %s\n", err)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
setTokenAuth(req, token)
if hasResume {
utils.Debugf("server supports resume")
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
return utils.ResumableRequestReader(client, req, 5, imgSize), nil
}
utils.Debugf("server doesn't support resume")
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
if err != nil {
return nil, err
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
res.Body.Close()
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Server error: Status %d while fetching image layer (%s)",
res.StatusCode, imgID)
}
return res.Body, nil
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
2013-05-15 18:50:52 +00:00
func (r *Registry) GetRemoteTags(registries []string, repository string, token []string) (map[string]string, error) {
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
if strings.Count(repository, "/") == 0 {
// This will be removed once the Registry supports auto-resolution on
// the "library" namespace
repository = "library/" + repository
}
for _, host := range registries {
endpoint := fmt.Sprintf("%srepositories/%s/tags", host, repository)
2013-07-03 15:24:43 +00:00
req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("GET", endpoint, nil)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
setTokenAuth(req, token)
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
2013-06-03 19:20:52 +00:00
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
utils.Debugf("Got status code %d from %s", res.StatusCode, endpoint)
2013-06-03 19:20:52 +00:00
defer res.Body.Close()
if res.StatusCode != 200 && res.StatusCode != 404 {
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
continue
} else if res.StatusCode == 404 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Repository not found")
}
result := make(map[string]string)
2013-06-04 18:00:22 +00:00
rawJSON, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
2013-06-04 18:00:22 +00:00
if err := json.Unmarshal(rawJSON, &result); err != nil {
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return nil, err
}
return result, nil
}
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Could not reach any registry endpoint")
}
func buildEndpointsList(headers []string, indexEp string) ([]string, error) {
var endpoints []string
parsedUrl, err := url.Parse(indexEp)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
var urlScheme = parsedUrl.Scheme
// The Registry's URL scheme has to match the Index'
for _, ep := range headers {
epList := strings.Split(ep, ",")
for _, epListElement := range epList {
endpoints = append(
endpoints,
fmt.Sprintf("%s://%s/v1/", urlScheme, strings.TrimSpace(epListElement)))
}
}
return endpoints, nil
}
func (r *Registry) GetRepositoryData(remote string) (*RepositoryData, error) {
indexEp := r.indexEndpoint
repositoryTarget := fmt.Sprintf("%srepositories/%s/images", indexEp, remote)
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utils.Debugf("[registry] Calling GET %s", repositoryTarget)
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req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("GET", repositoryTarget, nil)
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if r.authConfig != nil && len(r.authConfig.Username) > 0 {
req.SetBasicAuth(r.authConfig.Username, r.authConfig.Password)
}
req.Header.Set("X-Docker-Token", "true")
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
defer res.Body.Close()
if res.StatusCode == 401 {
return nil, errLoginRequired
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}
// TODO: Right now we're ignoring checksums in the response body.
// In the future, we need to use them to check image validity.
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
return nil, utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("HTTP code: %d", res.StatusCode), res)
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}
var tokens []string
if res.Header.Get("X-Docker-Token") != "" {
tokens = res.Header["X-Docker-Token"]
}
var endpoints []string
if res.Header.Get("X-Docker-Endpoints") != "" {
endpoints, err = buildEndpointsList(res.Header["X-Docker-Endpoints"], indexEp)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
} else {
// Assume the endpoint is on the same host
u, err := url.Parse(indexEp)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
endpoints = append(endpoints, fmt.Sprintf("%s://%s/v1/", u.Scheme, req.URL.Host))
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}
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checksumsJSON, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
remoteChecksums := []*ImgData{}
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if err := json.Unmarshal(checksumsJSON, &remoteChecksums); err != nil {
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return nil, err
}
// Forge a better object from the retrieved data
imgsData := make(map[string]*ImgData)
for _, elem := range remoteChecksums {
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imgsData[elem.ID] = elem
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}
return &RepositoryData{
ImgList: imgsData,
Endpoints: endpoints,
Tokens: tokens,
}, nil
}
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func (r *Registry) PushImageChecksumRegistry(imgData *ImgData, registry string, token []string) error {
utils.Debugf("[registry] Calling PUT %s", registry+"images/"+imgData.ID+"/checksum")
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req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("PUT", registry+"images/"+imgData.ID+"/checksum", nil)
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if err != nil {
return err
}
setTokenAuth(req, token)
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req.Header.Set("X-Docker-Checksum", imgData.Checksum)
req.Header.Set("X-Docker-Checksum-Payload", imgData.ChecksumPayload)
2013-07-17 19:13:22 +00:00
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
2013-07-17 19:13:22 +00:00
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("Failed to upload metadata: %s", err)
}
defer res.Body.Close()
if len(res.Cookies()) > 0 {
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
r.jar.SetCookies(req.URL, res.Cookies())
2013-07-17 19:13:22 +00:00
}
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
errBody, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("HTTP code %d while uploading metadata and error when trying to parse response body: %s", res.StatusCode, err)
}
var jsonBody map[string]string
if err := json.Unmarshal(errBody, &jsonBody); err != nil {
errBody = []byte(err.Error())
} else if jsonBody["error"] == "Image already exists" {
return ErrAlreadyExists
}
return fmt.Errorf("HTTP code %d while uploading metadata: %s", res.StatusCode, errBody)
}
return nil
}
// Push a local image to the registry
2013-06-04 18:00:22 +00:00
func (r *Registry) PushImageJSONRegistry(imgData *ImgData, jsonRaw []byte, registry string, token []string) error {
2013-07-17 19:13:22 +00:00
utils.Debugf("[registry] Calling PUT %s", registry+"images/"+imgData.ID+"/json")
2013-08-02 07:08:08 +00:00
req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("PUT", registry+"images/"+imgData.ID+"/json", bytes.NewReader(jsonRaw))
if err != nil {
return err
}
req.Header.Add("Content-type", "application/json")
setTokenAuth(req, token)
2013-05-15 18:30:40 +00:00
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("Failed to upload metadata: %s", err)
}
defer res.Body.Close()
if res.StatusCode == 401 && strings.HasPrefix(registry, "http://") {
return utils.NewHTTPRequestError("HTTP code 401, Docker will not send auth headers over HTTP.", res)
}
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
errBody, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
2013-08-09 23:52:05 +00:00
return utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("HTTP code %d while uploading metadata and error when trying to parse response body: %s", res.StatusCode, err), res)
}
var jsonBody map[string]string
if err := json.Unmarshal(errBody, &jsonBody); err != nil {
errBody = []byte(err.Error())
} else if jsonBody["error"] == "Image already exists" {
2013-05-15 20:22:57 +00:00
return ErrAlreadyExists
}
return utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("HTTP code %d while uploading metadata: %s", res.StatusCode, errBody), res)
}
2013-05-15 18:30:40 +00:00
return nil
}
func (r *Registry) PushImageLayerRegistry(imgID string, layer io.Reader, registry string, token []string, jsonRaw []byte) (checksum string, checksumPayload string, err error) {
2013-07-17 19:13:22 +00:00
utils.Debugf("[registry] Calling PUT %s", registry+"images/"+imgID+"/layer")
tarsumLayer := &utils.TarSum{Reader: layer}
h := sha256.New()
h.Write(jsonRaw)
h.Write([]byte{'\n'})
checksumLayer := &utils.CheckSum{Reader: tarsumLayer, Hash: h}
req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("PUT", registry+"images/"+imgID+"/layer", checksumLayer)
if err != nil {
return "", "", err
}
2013-05-15 18:30:40 +00:00
req.ContentLength = -1
req.TransferEncoding = []string{"chunked"}
setTokenAuth(req, token)
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
if err != nil {
return "", "", fmt.Errorf("Failed to upload layer: %s", err)
}
2013-12-19 20:32:58 +00:00
if rc, ok := layer.(io.Closer); ok {
if err := rc.Close(); err != nil {
return "", "", err
2013-12-19 20:32:58 +00:00
}
}
2013-05-15 18:30:40 +00:00
defer res.Body.Close()
2013-05-15 18:30:40 +00:00
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
errBody, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
return "", "", utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("HTTP code %d while uploading metadata and error when trying to parse response body: %s", res.StatusCode, err), res)
}
return "", "", utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("Received HTTP code %d while uploading layer: %s", res.StatusCode, errBody), res)
}
checksumPayload = "sha256:" + checksumLayer.Sum()
return tarsumLayer.Sum(jsonRaw), checksumPayload, nil
}
// push a tag on the registry.
// Remote has the format '<user>/<repo>
2013-05-15 18:30:40 +00:00
func (r *Registry) PushRegistryTag(remote, revision, tag, registry string, token []string) error {
// "jsonify" the string
revision = "\"" + revision + "\""
2013-07-03 15:24:43 +00:00
path := fmt.Sprintf("repositories/%s/tags/%s", remote, tag)
2013-07-03 15:24:43 +00:00
req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("PUT", registry+path, strings.NewReader(revision))
if err != nil {
return err
}
req.Header.Add("Content-type", "application/json")
setTokenAuth(req, token)
req.ContentLength = int64(len(revision))
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
if err != nil {
return err
}
res.Body.Close()
if res.StatusCode != 200 && res.StatusCode != 201 {
return utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("Internal server error: %d trying to push tag %s on %s", res.StatusCode, tag, remote), res)
}
return nil
}
func (r *Registry) PushImageJSONIndex(remote string, imgList []*ImgData, validate bool, regs []string) (*RepositoryData, error) {
cleanImgList := []*ImgData{}
indexEp := r.indexEndpoint
if validate {
for _, elem := range imgList {
if elem.Checksum != "" {
cleanImgList = append(cleanImgList, elem)
}
}
} else {
cleanImgList = imgList
}
imgListJSON, err := json.Marshal(cleanImgList)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
2013-05-16 21:33:29 +00:00
var suffix string
if validate {
suffix = "images"
}
u := fmt.Sprintf("%srepositories/%s/%s", indexEp, remote, suffix)
utils.Debugf("[registry] PUT %s", u)
2013-10-26 00:50:40 +00:00
utils.Debugf("Image list pushed to index:\n%s", imgListJSON)
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req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("PUT", u, bytes.NewReader(imgListJSON))
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
req.Header.Add("Content-type", "application/json")
req.SetBasicAuth(r.authConfig.Username, r.authConfig.Password)
2013-06-04 18:00:22 +00:00
req.ContentLength = int64(len(imgListJSON))
req.Header.Set("X-Docker-Token", "true")
if validate {
req.Header["X-Docker-Endpoints"] = regs
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
defer res.Body.Close()
// Redirect if necessary
for res.StatusCode >= 300 && res.StatusCode < 400 {
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utils.Debugf("Redirected to %s", res.Header.Get("Location"))
2013-07-03 15:24:43 +00:00
req, err = r.reqFactory.NewRequest("PUT", res.Header.Get("Location"), bytes.NewReader(imgListJSON))
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
req.SetBasicAuth(r.authConfig.Username, r.authConfig.Password)
2013-06-04 18:00:22 +00:00
req.ContentLength = int64(len(imgListJSON))
req.Header.Set("X-Docker-Token", "true")
if validate {
req.Header["X-Docker-Endpoints"] = regs
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
defer res.Body.Close()
}
2013-05-16 21:33:29 +00:00
var tokens, endpoints []string
if !validate {
if res.StatusCode != 200 && res.StatusCode != 201 {
errBody, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return nil, utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("Error: Status %d trying to push repository %s: %s", res.StatusCode, remote, errBody), res)
2013-05-16 21:33:29 +00:00
}
if res.Header.Get("X-Docker-Token") != "" {
tokens = res.Header["X-Docker-Token"]
utils.Debugf("Auth token: %v", tokens)
} else {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Index response didn't contain an access token")
}
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if res.Header.Get("X-Docker-Endpoints") != "" {
endpoints, err = buildEndpointsList(res.Header["X-Docker-Endpoints"], indexEp)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
2013-05-16 21:33:29 +00:00
} else {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Index response didn't contain any endpoints")
}
}
if validate {
if res.StatusCode != 204 {
2013-06-04 13:51:12 +00:00
errBody, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return nil, utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("Error: Status %d trying to push checksums %s: %s", res.StatusCode, remote, errBody), res)
}
}
return &RepositoryData{
Tokens: tokens,
Endpoints: endpoints,
}, nil
}
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
2013-05-15 18:50:52 +00:00
func (r *Registry) SearchRepositories(term string) (*SearchResults, error) {
utils.Debugf("Index server: %s", r.indexEndpoint)
u := r.indexEndpoint + "search?q=" + url.QueryEscape(term)
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req, err := r.reqFactory.NewRequest("GET", u, nil)
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if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if r.authConfig != nil && len(r.authConfig.Username) > 0 {
req.SetBasicAuth(r.authConfig.Username, r.authConfig.Password)
}
req.Header.Set("X-Docker-Token", "true")
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
res, _, err := r.doRequest(req)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
defer res.Body.Close()
if res.StatusCode != 200 {
return nil, utils.NewHTTPRequestError(fmt.Sprintf("Unexepected status code %d", res.StatusCode), res)
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
rawData, err := ioutil.ReadAll(res.Body)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
result := new(SearchResults)
err = json.Unmarshal(rawData, result)
return result, err
}
func (r *Registry) GetAuthConfig(withPasswd bool) *AuthConfig {
2013-05-24 14:23:43 +00:00
password := ""
if withPasswd {
password = r.authConfig.Password
}
return &AuthConfig{
Username: r.authConfig.Username,
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Password: password,
2013-05-16 00:31:11 +00:00
Email: r.authConfig.Email,
}
}
type SearchResult struct {
StarCount int `json:"star_count"`
IsOfficial bool `json:"is_official"`
Name string `json:"name"`
IsTrusted bool `json:"is_trusted"`
Description string `json:"description"`
}
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type SearchResults struct {
Query string `json:"query"`
NumResults int `json:"num_results"`
Results []SearchResult `json:"results"`
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
type RepositoryData struct {
ImgList map[string]*ImgData
Endpoints []string
Tokens []string
}
type ImgData struct {
ID string `json:"id"`
Checksum string `json:"checksum,omitempty"`
ChecksumPayload string `json:"-"`
Tag string `json:",omitempty"`
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
type RegistryInfo struct {
Version string `json:"version"`
Standalone bool `json:"standalone"`
}
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
type Registry struct {
authConfig *AuthConfig
2013-10-22 18:57:48 +00:00
reqFactory *utils.HTTPRequestFactory
indexEndpoint string
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
jar *cookiejar.Jar
timeout TimeoutType
}
func trustedLocation(req *http.Request) bool {
var (
trusteds = []string{"docker.com", "docker.io"}
hostname = strings.SplitN(req.Host, ":", 2)[0]
)
if req.URL.Scheme != "https" {
return false
}
for _, trusted := range trusteds {
if hostname == trusted || strings.HasSuffix(hostname, "."+trusted) {
return true
}
}
return false
}
func AddRequiredHeadersToRedirectedRequests(req *http.Request, via []*http.Request) error {
if via != nil && via[0] != nil {
if trustedLocation(req) && trustedLocation(via[0]) {
req.Header = via[0].Header
} else {
for k, v := range via[0].Header {
if k != "Authorization" {
for _, vv := range v {
req.Header.Add(k, vv)
}
}
}
}
}
return nil
}
func NewRegistry(authConfig *AuthConfig, factory *utils.HTTPRequestFactory, indexEndpoint string, timeout bool) (r *Registry, err error) {
r = &Registry{
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
authConfig: authConfig,
indexEndpoint: indexEndpoint,
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
Add support for client certificates for registries This lets you specify custom client TLS certificates and CA root for a specific registry hostname. Docker will then verify the registry against the CA and present the client cert when talking to that registry. This allows the registry to verify that the client has a proper key, indicating that the client is allowed to access the images. A custom cert is configured by creating a directory in /etc/docker/certs.d with the same name as the registry hostname. Inside this directory all *.crt files are added as CA Roots (if none exists, the system default is used) and pair of files <filename>.key and <filename>.cert indicate a custom certificate to present to the registry. If there are multiple certificates each one will be tried in alphabetical order, proceeding to the next if we get a 403 of 5xx response. So, an example setup would be: /etc/docker/certs.d/ └── localhost ├── client.cert ├── client.key └── localhost.crt A simple way to test this setup is to use an apache server to host a registry. Just copy a registry tree into the apache root, here is an example one containing the busybox image: http://people.gnome.org/~alexl/v1.tar.gz Then add this conf file as /etc/httpd/conf.d/registry.conf: # This must be in the root context, otherwise it causes a re-negotiation # which is not supported by the tls implementation in go SSLVerifyClient optional_no_ca <Location /v1> Action cert-protected /cgi-bin/cert.cgi SetHandler cert-protected Header set x-docker-registry-version "0.6.2" SetEnvIf Host (.*) custom_host=$1 Header set X-Docker-Endpoints "%{custom_host}e" </Location> And this as /var/www/cgi-bin/cert.cgi #!/bin/bash if [ "$HTTPS" != "on" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Not using SSL" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi if [ "$SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY" == "NONE" ]; then echo "Status: 403 Client certificate invalid" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo exit 0 fi echo "Content-length: $(stat --printf='%s' $PATH_TRANSLATED)" echo "x-docker-registry-version: 0.6.2" echo "X-Docker-Endpoints: $SERVER_NAME" echo "X-Docker-Size: 0" echo cat $PATH_TRANSLATED This will return 403 for all accessed to /v1 unless *any* client cert is presented. Obviously a real implementation would verify more details about the certificate. Example client certs can be generated with: openssl genrsa -out client.key 1024 openssl req -new -x509 -text -key client.key -out client.cert Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com> (github: alexlarsson)
2013-12-04 14:03:51 +00:00
if timeout {
r.timeout = ReceiveTimeout
}
r.jar, err = cookiejar.New(nil)
2013-06-28 21:12:12 +00:00
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
2013-08-02 07:08:08 +00:00
// If we're working with a standalone private registry over HTTPS, send Basic Auth headers
// alongside our requests.
if indexEndpoint != IndexServerAddress() && strings.HasPrefix(indexEndpoint, "https://") {
info, err := pingRegistryEndpoint(indexEndpoint)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if info.Standalone {
utils.Debugf("Endpoint %s is eligible for private registry registry. Enabling decorator.", indexEndpoint)
dec := utils.NewHTTPAuthDecorator(authConfig.Username, authConfig.Password)
factory.AddDecorator(dec)
}
}
2013-08-02 07:08:08 +00:00
r.reqFactory = factory
2013-06-28 21:12:12 +00:00
return r, nil
2013-05-15 01:41:39 +00:00
}
func HTTPRequestFactory(metaHeaders map[string][]string) *utils.HTTPRequestFactory {
// FIXME: this replicates the 'info' job.
httpVersion := make([]utils.VersionInfo, 0, 4)
httpVersion = append(httpVersion, &simpleVersionInfo{"docker", dockerversion.VERSION})
httpVersion = append(httpVersion, &simpleVersionInfo{"go", runtime.Version()})
httpVersion = append(httpVersion, &simpleVersionInfo{"git-commit", dockerversion.GITCOMMIT})
if kernelVersion, err := utils.GetKernelVersion(); err == nil {
httpVersion = append(httpVersion, &simpleVersionInfo{"kernel", kernelVersion.String()})
}
httpVersion = append(httpVersion, &simpleVersionInfo{"os", runtime.GOOS})
httpVersion = append(httpVersion, &simpleVersionInfo{"arch", runtime.GOARCH})
ud := utils.NewHTTPUserAgentDecorator(httpVersion...)
md := &utils.HTTPMetaHeadersDecorator{
Headers: metaHeaders,
}
factory := utils.NewHTTPRequestFactory(ud, md)
return factory
}
// simpleVersionInfo is a simple implementation of
// the interface VersionInfo, which is used
// to provide version information for some product,
// component, etc. It stores the product name and the version
// in string and returns them on calls to Name() and Version().
type simpleVersionInfo struct {
name string
version string
}
func (v *simpleVersionInfo) Name() string {
return v.name
}
func (v *simpleVersionInfo) Version() string {
return v.version
}