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GitLab Container Registry
- Introduced in GitLab 8.8.
- Docker Registry manifest
v1
support was added in GitLab 8.9 to support Docker versions earlier than 1.10.- Starting from GitLab 8.12, if you have 2FA enabled in your account, you need to pass a personal access token instead of your password in order to login to GitLab's Container Registry.
- Multiple level image names support was added in GitLab 9.1.
NOTE: Note: This document is the user guide. To learn how to enable GitLab Container Registry across your GitLab instance, visit the administrator documentation.
With the Docker Container Registry integrated into GitLab, every project can have its own space to store its Docker images.
You can read more about Docker Registry at https://docs.docker.com/registry/introduction/.
Enable the Container Registry for your project
CAUTION: Warning: The Container Registry follows the visibility settings of the project. If the project is public, so is the Container Registry.
If you cannot find the Packages > Container Registry entry under your project's sidebar, it is not enabled in your GitLab instance. Ask your administrator to enable GitLab Container Registry following the administration documentation.
If you are using GitLab.com, this is enabled by default so you can start using the Registry immediately. Currently there is a soft (10GB) size restriction for Registry on GitLab.com, as part of the repository size limit.
Once enabled for your GitLab instance, to enable Container Registry for your project:
- Go to your project's Settings > General page.
- Expand the Visibility, project features, permissions section and enable the Container Registry feature on your project. For new projects this might be enabled by default. For existing projects (prior GitLab 8.8), you will have to explicitly enable it.
- Press Save changes for the changes to take effect. You should now be able to see the Packages > Container Registry link in the sidebar.
Control Container Registry from within GitLab
GitLab offers a simple Container Registry management panel. Go to your project and click Packages > Container Registry in the project menu.
This view will show you all Docker images in your project and will easily allow you to delete them.
Use images from GitLab Container Registry
To download and run a container from images hosted in GitLab Container Registry,
use docker run
:
docker run [options] registry.example.com/group/project/image [arguments]
For more information on running Docker containers, visit the Docker documentation.
Authenticating to the GitLab Container Registry
If you visit the Packages > Container Registry link under your project's menu, you can see the explicit instructions to login to the Container Registry using your GitLab credentials.
For example if the Registry's URL is registry.example.com
, then you should be
able to login with:
docker login registry.example.com
NOTE: Note: If you have 2 Factor Authentication enabled in your account, you need to pass a personal access token instead of your password in order to login to GitLab's Container Registry.
If a project is private, credentials will need to be provided for authorization. There are two ways to do this:
- By using a personal access token.
- By using a deploy token.
The minimum scope needed for both of them is read_registry
.
Example of using a token:
docker login registry.example.com -u <username> -p <token>
Build and push images from your local machine
Building and publishing images should be a straightforward process. Just make sure that you are using the Registry URL with the namespace and project name that is hosted on GitLab:
docker build -t registry.example.com/group/project/image .
docker push registry.example.com/group/project/image
Your image will be named after the following scheme:
<registry URL>/<namespace>/<project>/<image>
GitLab supports up to three levels of image repository names. The following examples of image tags are valid:
registry.example.com/group/project:some-tag
registry.example.com/group/project/image:latest
registry.example.com/group/project/my/image:rc1
Build and push images using GitLab CI/CD
While you can build and push your images from your local machine, the true power of the Container Registry comes when you combine it with GitLab CI/CD. You can then create workflows and automate any processes that involve testing, building, and eventually deploying your project from the Docker image you created.
Before diving into the details, some things you should be aware of:
- You must authenticate to the container registry
before running any commands. You can do this in the
before_script
if multiple jobs depend on it. - Using
docker build --pull
fetches any changes to base images before building in case your cache is stale. It takes slightly longer, but it means you don’t get stuck without security patches for base images. - Doing an explicit
docker pull
before eachdocker run
fetches the latest image that was just built. This is especially important if you are using multiple Runners that cache images locally. Using the Git SHA in your image tag makes this less necessary since each job will be unique and you shouldn't ever have a stale image. However, it's still possible to have a stale image if you re-build a given commit after a dependency has changed. - You don't want to build directly to
latest
tag in case there are multiple jobs happening simultaneously.
Authenticating to the Container Registry with GitLab CI/CD
There are three ways to authenticate to the Container Registry via GitLab CI/CD which depend on the visibility of your project.
Available for all projects, though more suitable for public ones:
-
Using the special
CI_REGISTRY_USER
variable: The user specified by this variable is created for you in order to push to the Registry connected to your project. Its password is automatically set with theCI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD
variable. This allows you to automate building and deploying your Docker images and has read/write access to the Registry. This is ephemeral, so it's only valid for one job. You can use the following example as-is:docker login -u $CI_REGISTRY_USER -p $CI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD $CI_REGISTRY
For private and internal projects:
-
Using a personal access token: You can create and use a personal access token in case your project is private:
- For read (pull) access, the scope should be
read_registry
. - For read/write (pull/push) access, use
api
.
Replace the
<username>
and<access_token>
in the following example:docker login -u <username> -p <access_token> $CI_REGISTRY
- For read (pull) access, the scope should be
-
Using the GitLab Deploy Token: You can create and use a special deploy token with your private projects. It provides read-only (pull) access to the Registry. Once created, you can use the special environment variables, and GitLab CI/CD will fill them in for you. You can use the following example as-is:
docker login -u $CI_DEPLOY_USER -p $CI_DEPLOY_PASSWORD $CI_REGISTRY
Container Registry examples with GitLab CI/CD
If you're using docker-in-docker on your Runners, this is how your .gitlab-ci.yml
should look similar to this:
build:
image: docker:19.03.1
stage: build
services:
- docker:19.03.1-dind
script:
- docker login -u $CI_REGISTRY_USER -p $CI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD $CI_REGISTRY
- docker build -t $CI_REGISTRY/group/project/image:latest .
- docker push $CI_REGISTRY/group/project/image:latest
You can also make use of other variables to avoid hardcoding:
build:
image: docker:19.03.1
stage: build
services:
- docker:19.03.1-dind
variables:
IMAGE_TAG: $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG
script:
- docker login -u $CI_REGISTRY_USER -p $CI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD $CI_REGISTRY
- docker build -t $IMAGE_TAG .
- docker push $IMAGE_TAG
Here, $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE
would be resolved to the address of the registry tied
to this project. Since $CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME
resolves to the branch or tag name,
and your branch-name can contain forward slashes (e.g., feature/my-feature), it is
safer to use $CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG
as the image tag. This is due to that image tags
cannot contain forward slashes. We also declare our own variable, $IMAGE_TAG
,
combining the two to save us some typing in the script
section.
Here's a more elaborate example that splits up the tasks into 4 pipeline stages,
including two tests that run in parallel. The build
is stored in the container
registry and used by subsequent stages, downloading the image
when needed. Changes to master
also get tagged as latest
and deployed using
an application-specific deploy script:
image: docker:19.03.1
services:
- docker:19.03.1-dind
stages:
- build
- test
- release
- deploy
variables:
# Use TLS https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/docker/using_docker_build.html#tls-enabled
DOCKER_HOST: tcp://docker:2376
DOCKER_TLS_CERTDIR: "/certs"
CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE: $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG
CONTAINER_RELEASE_IMAGE: $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:latest
before_script:
- docker login -u $CI_REGISTRY_USER -p $CI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD $CI_REGISTRY
build:
stage: build
script:
- docker build --pull -t $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE .
- docker push $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE
test1:
stage: test
script:
- docker pull $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE
- docker run $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE /script/to/run/tests
test2:
stage: test
script:
- docker pull $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE
- docker run $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE /script/to/run/another/test
release-image:
stage: release
script:
- docker pull $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE
- docker tag $CONTAINER_TEST_IMAGE $CONTAINER_RELEASE_IMAGE
- docker push $CONTAINER_RELEASE_IMAGE
only:
- master
deploy:
stage: deploy
script:
- ./deploy.sh
only:
- master
NOTE: Note:
This example explicitly calls docker pull
. If you prefer to implicitly pull the
built image using image:
, and use either the Docker
or Kubernetes executor,
make sure that pull_policy
is set to always
.
Using a docker-in-docker image from your Container Registry
If you want to use your own Docker images for docker-in-docker, there are a few things you need to do in addition to the steps in the docker-in-docker section:
- Update the
image
andservice
to point to your registry. - Add a service alias.
Below is an example of what your .gitlab-ci.yml
should look like:
build:
image: $CI_REGISTRY/group/project/docker:19.03.1
services:
- name: $CI_REGISTRY/group/project/docker:19.03.1-dind
alias: docker
stage: build
script:
- docker build -t my-docker-image .
- docker run my-docker-image /script/to/run/tests
If you forget to set the service alias, the docker:19.03.1
image won't find the
dind
service, and an error like the following will be thrown:
error during connect: Get http://docker:2376/v1.39/info: dial tcp: lookup docker on 192.168.0.1:53: no such host
Expiration policy
Introduced in GitLab 12.8.
It is possible to create a per-project expiration policy, so that you can make sure that older tags and images are regularly removed from the Container Registry.
The expiration policy algorithm starts by collecting all the tags for a given repository in a list, then goes through a process of excluding tags from it until only the ones to be deleted remain:
- Collect all the tags for a given repository in a list.
- Excludes the tag named
latest
from the list. - Evaluates the
name_regex
, excluding non-matching names from the list. - Excludes any tags that do not have a manifest (not part of the options).
- Orders the remaining tags by
created_date
. - Excludes from the list the N tags based on the
keep_n
value (Expiration latest). - Excludes from the list the tags older than the
older_than
value (Expiration interval). - Finally, the remaining tags in the list are deleted from the Container Registry.
Managing project expiration policy through the API
You can set, update, and disable the expiration policies using the GitLab API.
Examples:
-
Select all tags, keep at least 1 tag per image, expire any tag older than 14 days, run once a month, and the policy is enabled:
curl --request PUT --header 'Content-Type: application/json;charset=UTF-8' --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" --data-binary '{"container_expiration_policy_attributes":{"cadence":"1month","enabled":true,"keep_n":1,"older_than":"14d","name_regex":".*"}' 'https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/2'
-
Select only tags with a name that contains
stable
, keep at least 50 tag per image, expire any tag older than 7 days, run every day, and the policy is enabled:curl --request PUT --header 'Content-Type: application/json;charset=UTF-8' --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" --data-binary '{"container_expiration_policy_attributes":{"cadence":"1day","enabled":true,"keep_n":50"older_than":"7d","name_regex":"*stable"}' 'https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/2'
See the API documentation for further details: Edit project.
Managing project expiration policy through the UI
To manage project expiration policy, navigate to Settings > CI/CD > Container Registry tag expiration policy.
The UI allows you to configure the following:
- Expiration policy: enable or disable the expiration policy.
- Expiration interval: how long tags are exempt from being deleted.
- Expiration schedule: how often the cron job checking the tags should run.
- Expiration latest: how many tags to always keep for each image.
- Docker tags with names matching this regex pattern will expire: the regex used to determine what tags should be expired. To qualify all tags for expiration, use the default value of
.*
.
Limitations
Moving or renaming existing Container Registry repositories is not supported once you have pushed images, because the images are signed, and the signature includes the repository name. To move or rename a repository with a Container Registry, you will have to delete all existing images.
Troubleshooting the GitLab Container Registry
Docker connection error
A Docker connection error can occur when there are special characters in either the group, project or branch name. Special characters can include:
- Leading underscore
- Trailing hyphen/dash
To get around this, you can change the group path, change the project path or change the branch name.
Troubleshoot as a GitLab server admin
Troubleshooting the GitLab Container Registry, most of the times, requires administration access to the GitLab server.