Integrate a private docker registry
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@mehdi we're not on the same page here.
Girish has it right.
it's not about editing config files or specifying a registry, it's about the inability to follow the documentation when one can't use a public registry.
That is exactly what I am proposing having a bundled registry with the build app which go hand in hand.
I thought it would be more obvious than my initial post ;-/
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I understand what @robi wants since it gives the best UX. Just install something, and it's all integrated and working out of the box.
That said, I am still on the fence on what is the best approach to do this because a standalone registry is useful for many cases. Now the question is how much "pain" it is for an end user to configure other apps like build service, the docker registry ui, portus, gitlab etc to use this registry. In all likelihood, my opinion won't matter and it will be dictated by how these apps are designed There is also the case that if we put in docker registry into each app, someone will come and ask to have a shared registry that can be used across all these apps
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Since we're self-hosting here, I'm seeing the default being a push to the local registry with a push button option to also push publicly.
@girish said in Integrate a private docker registry:
There is also the case that if we put in docker registry into each app, someone will come and ask to have a shared registry that can be used across all these apps
each app? we only need 1. build app or registry app.
it can be used by any local app making it shared among all self-hosted apps.I don't see a reason for anguish.
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I'm with @robi on this one. At the moment I'm running my own docker-registry for app development on a virtual machine which I made somewhat maintainable over time, but it would be great if even that part could be handled by Cloudron as well.
An app which just runs the registry alongside the build server, of which I put the credentials in each Cloudron that gets apps pushed from it or something like that. I haven't checked out the thing @mario made, but it sounds something I might be interested in.
Edit: this probably really is an edge case, because most of the users are happy with the apps from the store, but if you do custom work for customers (especially if it's more than one), you would want an easy to set up, self-hosted docker registry that's password protected (which mine isn't at the moment, but all my apps are hosted on Cloudrons gitlab anyways).
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I'm in strong agreement with @robi and @msbt, I'm working on a custom app and using Cloudron as a stripped down much cheaper alternative to AWS for hosting and a private docker registry is the last missing puzzle piece since I don't want to publish the image in a public Docker registry. A Cloudron private docker registry would be greatly appreciated and I'd be happy to pitch in with testing from a Github Actions CI use case or local publishing.
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+1 on this for me too. Using Wappler to build no-code/low-code nodejs apps and need a private repo, ideally within cloudron
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I just came across the same issue. I would like to push my images to the Private Docker Registry app which is on Cloudron as well - and it would be totally in-brand to allow both apps to interact with each other.
I tried changing the link in the config file according to the docs, but the standard is still set to docker.io.
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I did adjust the config, but in the end, the tool just used docker.io/MY_LINK. If I use cloudron build without the build service, won't this build the image locally, but then push it into mr repository?
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I lost track of this thread. Can I just confirm the original question? It seems like the build service works only with docker.io.
I tried changing it in docker.json, but all it does is that it adds my repository address to docker.io/library, which fails. I also tried cloudron build --set-repository, but that leads to the same result.
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I got it. So, apparently, this works for me when I set the --set-repository using this structure: mydocker.registry.com/my-repo. It probably works then as well if I put the repo into the build service config, but then I could only push to one repo.
So, the solution seems to be to always manually specify the repository as well. Also, I copy-pasted my docker registry link, because it is quite long, and adding https:// at the beginning causes problems, but it works without it.But at least I have a working way of handling this now, thank you! That is very helpful as I don't always have fast internet.
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