6.3 KiB
Watchtower supports private Docker image registries. In many cases, accessing a private registry requires a valid username and password (i.e., credentials). In order to operate in such an environment, watchtower needs to know the credentials to access the registry.
The credentials can be provided to watchtower in a configuration file called config.json
.
There are two ways to generate this configuration file:
- The configuration file can be created manually.
- Call
docker login <REGISTRY_NAME>
and share the resulting configuration file.
Create the configuration file manually
Create a new configuration file with the following syntax and a base64 encoded username and
password auth
string:
{
"auths": {
"<REGISTRY_NAME>": {
"auth": "XXXXXXX"
}
}
}
<REGISTRY_NAME>
needs to be replaced by the name of your private registry
(e.g., my-private-registry.example.org
)
The required auth
string can be generated as follows:
echo -n 'username:password' | base64
ℹ️ Username and Password for GCloud
For gcloud, we'll use
_json_key
as our username and the content ofgcloudauth.json
as the password.echo -n "_json_key:$(cat gcloudauth.json)" | base64 -w0
When the watchtower Docker container is started, the created configuration file
(<PATH>/config.json
in this example) needs to be passed to the container:
docker run [...] -v <PATH>/config.json:/config.json containrrr/watchtower
Share the Docker configuration file
To pull an image from a private registry, docker login
needs to be called first, to get access
to the registry. The provided credentials are stored in a configuration file called <PATH_TO_HOME_DIR>/.docker/config.json
.
This configuration file can be directly used by watchtower. In this case, the creation of an
additional configuration file is not necessary.
When the Docker container is started, pass the configuration file to watchtower:
docker run [...] -v <PATH_TO_HOME_DIR>/.docker/config.json:/config.json containrrr/watchtower
When creating the watchtower container via docker-compose, use the following lines:
version: "3.4"
services:
watchtower:
image: index.docker.io/containrrr/watchtower:latest
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
- <PATH_TO_HOME_DIR>/.docker/config.json:/config.json
...
Docker Config path
By default, watchtower will look for the config.json
file in /
, but this can be changed by setting the DOCKER_CONFIG
environment variable to the directory path where your config is located. This is useful for setups where the config.json file is changed while the watchtower instance is running, as the changes will not be picked up for a mounted file if the inode changes.
Example usage:
version: "3.4"
services:
watchtower:
image: containrrr/watchtower
environment:
DOCKER_CONFIG: /config
volumes:
- /etc/watchtower/config/:/config/
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
Credential helpers
Some private Docker registries (the most prominent probably being AWS ECR) use non-standard ways of authentication. To be able to use this together with watchtower, we need to use a credential helper.
To keep the image size small we've decided to not include any helpers in the watchtower image, instead we'll put the helper in a separate container and mount it using volumes.
Example
Example implementation for use with amazon-ecr-credential-helper:
Use the dockerfile below to build the amazon-ecr-credential-helper, in a volume that may be mounted onto your watchtower container.
- Create the Dockerfile (contents below):
FROM golang:latest
ENV CGO_ENABLED 0
ENV REPO github.com/awslabs/amazon-ecr-credential-helper/ecr-login/cli/docker-credential-ecr-login
RUN go get -u $REPO
RUN rm /go/bin/docker-credential-ecr-login
RUN go build \
-o /go/bin/docker-credential-ecr-login \
/go/src/$REPO
WORKDIR /go/bin/
- Use the following commands to build the aws-ecr-dock-cred-helper and store it's output in a volume:
# Create a volume to store the command (once built)
docker volume create helper
# Build the container
docker build -t aws-ecr-dock-cred-helper .
# Build the command and store it in the new volume in the /go/bin directory.
docker run -d --rm --name aws-cred-helper --volume helper:/go/bin aws-ecr-dock-cred-helper
- Create a configuration file for docker, and store it in $HOME/.docker/config.json (replace the <AWS_ACCOUNT_ID> placeholders with your AWS Account ID):
{
"credsStore" : "ecr-login",
"HttpHeaders" : {
"User-Agent" : "Docker-Client/19.03.1 (XXXXXX)"
},
"auths" : {
"<AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-west-1.amazonaws.com" : {}
},
"credHelpers": {
"<AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-west-1.amazonaws.com" : "ecr-login"
}
}
- Create a docker-compose file (as an example) to help launch the container:
and the docker-compose definition:
version: "3.4"
services:
# Check for new images and restart things if a new image exists
# for any of our containers.
watchtower:
image: containrrr/watchtower:latest
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
- .docker/config.json:/config.json
- helper:/go/bin
environment:
- HOME=/
- PATH=$PATH:/go/bin
- AWS_REGION=us-west-1
volumes:
helper:
external: true
A few additional notes:
- With docker-compose the volume (helper, in this case) MUST be set to
external: true
, otherwise docker-compose will preface it with the directory name. - Note that "credsStore" : "ecr-login" is needed - and in theory if you have that you can remove the credHelpers section
- I have this running on an EC2 instance that has credentials assigned to it - so no keys are needed; however,
you may need to include the
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
andAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
environment variables as well. - An alternative to adding the various variables is to create a ~/.aws/config and ~/.aws/credentials files and place the settings there, then mount the ~/.aws directory to / in the container.