allowedRegistriesForImport
Use the following procedure to configure image registries.
The image.config.openshift.io/cluster
resource holds cluster-wide information
about how to handle images. The canonical, and only valid name is cluster
.
Its spec
offers the following configuration parameters.
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
|
Every element of this list contains a location of the registry specified by the registry domain name. The domain name can include wildcards.
|
|
The namespace for this ConfigMap is |
|
|
|
Either |
When the |
The status
field of the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
resource holds
observed values from the cluster.
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
You can configure image registry settings by editing the
image.config.openshift.io/cluster
custom resource (CR). The
Machine Config Operator (MCO) watches the
image.config.openshift.io/cluster
for any changes to registries
and reboots the nodes when it detects changes.
Edit the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
custom resource:
$ oc edit image.config.openshift.io/cluster
The following is an example image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR:
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1
kind: Image (1)
metadata:
annotations:
release.openshift.io/create-only: "true"
creationTimestamp: "2019-05-17T13:44:26Z"
generation: 1
name: cluster
resourceVersion: "8302"
selfLink: /apis/config.openshift.io/v1/images/cluster
uid: e34555da-78a9-11e9-b92b-06d6c7da38dc
spec:
allowedRegistriesForImport: (2)
- domainName: quay.io
insecure: false
additionalTrustedCA: (3)
name: myconfigmap
registrySources:(4)
allowedRegistries:
- example.com
- quay.io
- registry.redhat.io
insecureRegistries:
- insecure.com
status:
internalRegistryHostname: image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000
1 | Image : Holds cluster-wide information about how to handle images. The
canonical, and only valid name is cluster . |
2 | allowedRegistriesForImport : Limits the container image registries from which
normal users may import images. Set this list to the registries that you trust
to contain valid images, and that you want applications to be able to
import from. Users with permission to create images or ImageStreamMappings
from the API are not affected by this policy. Typically only cluster
administrators will have the appropriate permissions. |
3 | additionalTrustedCA : A reference to a ConfigMap containing additional CAs that
should be trusted during ImageStream import , pod image pull ,
openshift-image-registry pullthrough , and builds. The namespace for this ConfigMap is
openshift-config . The format of the ConfigMap is to use the registry hostname
as the key, and the PEM certificate as the value, for each additional registry CA to
trust. |
4 | registrySources : Contains configuration that determines how the container
runtime should treat individual registries when accessing images for builds and
pods. For instance, whether or not to allow insecure access. It does not contain
configuration for the internal cluster registry. This example lists allowedRegistries ,
which defines the registries that are allowed to be used. One of the registries listed
is insecure. |
To check that the changes are applied, list your nodes:
$ oc get nodes
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
ci-ln-j5cd0qt-f76d1-vfj5x-master-0 Ready master 98m v1.19.0+7070803
ci-ln-j5cd0qt-f76d1-vfj5x-master-1 Ready,SchedulingDisabled master 99m v1.19.0+7070803
ci-ln-j5cd0qt-f76d1-vfj5x-master-2 Ready master 98m v1.19.0+7070803
ci-ln-j5cd0qt-f76d1-vfj5x-worker-b-nsnd4 Ready worker 90m v1.19.0+7070803
ci-ln-j5cd0qt-f76d1-vfj5x-worker-c-5z2gz NotReady,SchedulingDisabled worker 90m v1.19.0+7070803
ci-ln-j5cd0qt-f76d1-vfj5x-worker-d-stsjv Ready worker 90m v1.19.0+7070803
You can add a list of registries that are permitted for image pull and push actions by editing the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
custom resource (CR). OpenShift Container Platform applies the changes to this CR to all nodes in the cluster.
When pulling or pushing images, the container runtime searches the registries listed under the registrySources
parameter in the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR. If you created a list of registries under the allowedRegistries
parameter, the container runtime searches only those registries. Registries not in the list are blocked.
When the |
Edit the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR:
$ oc edit image.config.openshift.io/cluster
The following is an example image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR with an allowed list:
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1
kind: Image
metadata:
annotations:
release.openshift.io/create-only: "true"
creationTimestamp: "2019-05-17T13:44:26Z"
generation: 1
name: cluster
resourceVersion: "8302"
selfLink: /apis/config.openshift.io/v1/images/cluster
uid: e34555da-78a9-11e9-b92b-06d6c7da38dc
spec:
registrySources: (1)
allowedRegistries: (2)
- example.com
- quay.io
- registry.redhat.io
status:
internalRegistryHostname: image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000
1 | registrySources : Contains configurations that determine how the container runtime should treat individual registries when accessing images for builds and pods. It does not contain configuration for the internal cluster registry. |
2 | allowedRegistries : Registries to use for image pull and push actions. All other registries are blocked. |
Either the |
The Machine Config Operator (MCO) watches the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR for any changes to registries and reboots the nodes when it detects changes. Changes to the allowed registries creates or updates the image signature policy in the /host/etc/containers/policy.json
file on each node.
To check that the registries have been added to the policy file, use the following command on a node:
$ cat /host/etc/containers/policy.json
The following policy indicates that only images from the example.com, quay.io, and registry.redhat.io registries are permitted for image pulls and pushes:
{
"default": [{
"type": "reject"
}],
"transports": {
"atomic": {
"example.com": [{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}],
"quay.io": [{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}],
"registry.redhat.io": [{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}]
},
"docker": {
"example.com": [{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}],
"quay.io": [{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}],
"registry.redhat.io": [{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}]
},
"docker-daemon": {
"": [{
"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"
}]
}
}
}
If your cluster uses the For example:
|
You can block any registry by editing the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
custom resource (CR). OpenShift Container Platform applies the changes to this CR to all nodes in the cluster.
When pulling or pushing images, the container runtime searches the registries listed under the registrySources
parameter in the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR. If you created a list of registries under the blockedRegistries
parameter, the container runtime does not search those registries. All other registries are allowed.
Edit the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR:
$ oc edit image.config.openshift.io/cluster
The following is an example image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR with a blocked list:
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1
kind: Image
metadata:
annotations:
release.openshift.io/create-only: "true"
creationTimestamp: "2019-05-17T13:44:26Z"
generation: 1
name: cluster
resourceVersion: "8302"
selfLink: /apis/config.openshift.io/v1/images/cluster
uid: e34555da-78a9-11e9-b92b-06d6c7da38dc
spec:
registrySources: (1)
blockedRegistries: (2)
- untrusted.com
status:
internalRegistryHostname: image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000
1 | registrySources : Contains configurations that determine how the container runtime should treat individual registries when accessing images for builds and pods. It does not contain configuration for the internal cluster registry. |
2 | Specify registries that should not be used for image pull and push actions. All other registries are allowed. |
Either the |
The Machine Config Operator (MCO) watches the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR for any changes to registries and reboots the nodes when it detects changes. Changes to the blocked registries appear in the /etc/containers/registries.conf
file on each node.
To check that the registries have been added to the policy file, use the following command on a node:
$ cat /host/etc/containers/registries.conf
The following example indicates that images from the untrusted.com
registry are prevented for image pulls and pushes:
unqualified-search-registries = ["registry.access.redhat.com", "docker.io"]
[[registry]]
prefix = ""
location = "untrusted.com"
blocked = true
You can add insecure registries by editing the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
custom resource (CR).
OpenShift Container Platform applies the changes to this CR to all nodes in the cluster.
Registries that do not use valid SSL certificates or do not require HTTPS connections are considered insecure.
Insecure external registries should be avoided to reduce possible security risks. |
Edit the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR:
$ oc edit image.config.openshift.io/cluster
The following is an example image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR with an insecure registries list:
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1
kind: Image
metadata:
annotations:
release.openshift.io/create-only: "true"
creationTimestamp: "2019-05-17T13:44:26Z"
generation: 1
name: cluster
resourceVersion: "8302"
selfLink: /apis/config.openshift.io/v1/images/cluster
uid: e34555da-78a9-11e9-b92b-06d6c7da38dc
spec:
registrySources: (1)
insecureRegistries: (2)
- insecure.com
allowedRegistries:
- example.com
- quay.io
- registry.redhat.io
- insecure.com (3)
status:
internalRegistryHostname: image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000
1 | registrySources : Contains configurations that determine how the container runtime should treat individual registries when accessing images for builds and pods. It does not contain configuration for the internal cluster registry. |
2 | Specify an insecure registry. |
3 | Ensure that any insecure registries are included in the allowedRegistries list. |
When the |
The Machine Config Operator (MCO) watches the image.config.openshift.io/cluster
CR for any changes to registries and reboots the nodes when it detects changes. Changes to the insecure and blocked registries appear in the /etc/containers/registries.conf
file on each node.
To check that the registries have been added to the policy file, use the following command on a node:
$ cat /host/etc/containers/registries.conf
The following example indicates that images from the insecure.com
registry is insecure and is allowed for image pulls and pushes.
unqualified-search-registries = ["registry.access.redhat.com", "docker.io"]
[[registry]]
prefix = ""
location = "insecure.com"
insecure = true
The image.config.openshift.io/cluster
custom resource can contain a reference
to a ConfigMap that contains additional certificate authorities to be trusted
during image registry access.
The CAs must be PEM-encoded.
You can create a ConfigMap in the openshift-config
namespace and use its name
in AdditionalTrustedCA
in the image.config.openshift.io
custom resource to provide
additional CAs that should be trusted when contacting external registries.
The ConfigMap key is the host name of a registry with the port for which this CA is to be trusted, and the base64-encoded certificate is the value, for each additional registry CA to trust.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: my-registry-ca
data:
registry.example.com: |
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
registry-with-port.example.com..5000: | (1)
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
1 | If the registry has the port, such as registry-with-port.example.com:5000 ,
: should be replaced with .. . |
You can configure additional CAs with the following procedure.
To configure an additional CA:
$ oc create configmap registry-config --from-file=<external_registry_address>=ca.crt -n openshift-config $ oc edit image.config.openshift.io cluster spec: additionalTrustedCA: name: registry-config
Setting up container registry repository mirroring enables you to:
configure your OpenShift Container Platform cluster to redirect requests to pull images from a repository on a source image registry and have it resolved by a repository on a mirrored image registry
identify multiple mirrored repositories for each target repository, to make sure that if one mirror is down, another can be used
The attributes of repository mirroring in OpenShift Container Platform include:
Image pulls are resilient to registry downtimes.
Clusters in restricted networks can pull images from critical locations (such as quay.io) and have registries behind a company firewall provide the requested images.
A particular order of registries is tried when an image pull request is made, with the permanent registry typically being the last one tried.
The mirror information you enter is added to the /etc/containers/registries.conf
file on every node in the OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
When a node makes a request for an image from the source repository, it tries each mirrored repository in turn until it finds the requested content. If all mirrors fail, the cluster tries the source repository. Upon success, the image is pulled to the node.
Setting up repository mirroring can be done in the following ways:
At OpenShift Container Platform installation: By pulling container images needed by OpenShift Container Platform and then bringing those images behind your company’s firewall, you can install OpenShift Container Platform into a datacenter that is in a restricted network. See Mirroring the OpenShift Container Platform image repository for details.
After OpenShift Container Platform installation: Even if you don’t configure mirroring during OpenShift Container Platform
installation, you can do so later using the ImageContentSourcePolicy
object.
The following procedure provides a post-installation mirror configuration, where you create an ImageContentSourcePolicy
object that identifies:
the source of the container image repository you want to mirror
a separate entry for each mirror repository you want to offer the content requested from the source repository.
Access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin
role.
Configure mirrored repositories, by either:
Setting up a mirrored repository with Red Hat Quay, as described in Red Hat Quay Repository Mirroring. Using Red Hat Quay allows you to copy images from one repository to another and also automatically sync those repositories repeatedly over time.
Using a tool such as skopeo
to copy images manually
from the source directory to the mirrored repository.
For example, after installing the skopeo RPM package
on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux
(RHEL 7 or RHEL 8) system, use the skopeo
command as shown in this example:
$ skopeo copy \
docker://registry.access.redhat.com/ubi8/ubi-minimal@sha256:5cfbaf45ca96806917830c183e9f37df2e913b187adb32e89fd83fa455ebaa6 \
docker://example.io/example/ubi-minimal
In this example, you have a container image registry that is named
example.io
with an image repository named example
to which
you want to copy the ubi8/ubi-minimal
image from
registry.access.redhat.com
.
After you create the registry, you can configure your OpenShift Container Platform
cluster to redirect requests made of the source repository to the
mirrored repository.
Log in to your OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
Create an ImageContentSourcePolicy
file (for example,
registryrepomirror.yaml
), replacing the source and
mirrors with your own registry and repository pairs and images:
apiVersion: operator.openshift.io/v1alpha1
kind: ImageContentSourcePolicy
metadata:
name: ubi8repo
spec:
repositoryDigestMirrors:
- mirrors:
- example.io/example/ubi-minimal (1)
source: registry.access.redhat.com/ubi8/ubi-minimal (2)
- mirrors:
- example.com/example/ubi-minimal
source: registry.access.redhat.com/ubi8/ubi-minimal
1 | Indicates the name of the image registry and repository |
2 | Indicates the registry and repository containing the content that is mirrored |
Create the new ImageContentSourcePolicy
object:
$ oc create -f registryrepomirror.yaml
After the ImageContentSourcePolicy
object is created,
the new settings are deployed to each node and
the cluster starts using the mirrored repository
for requests to the source repository.
To check that the mirrored configuration settings, are applied, do the following on one of the nodes.
List your nodes:
$ oc get node
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
ip-10-0-137-44.ec2.internal Ready worker 7m v1.17.1
ip-10-0-138-148.ec2.internal Ready master 11m v1.17.1
ip-10-0-139-122.ec2.internal Ready master 11m v1.17.1
ip-10-0-147-35.ec2.internal Ready,SchedulingDisabled worker 7m v1.17.1
ip-10-0-153-12.ec2.internal Ready worker 7m v1.17.1
ip-10-0-154-10.ec2.internal Ready master 11m v1.17.1
You can see that scheduling on each worker node is disabled as the change is being applied.
Start the debugging process to access the node:
$ oc debug node/ip-10-0-147-35.ec2.internal
Starting pod/ip-10-0-147-35ec2internal-debug ...
To use host binaries, run `chroot /host`
Access the node’s files:
sh-4.2# chroot /host
Check the /etc/containers/registries.conf
file to make sure
the changes were made:
sh-4.2# cat /etc/containers/registries.conf
unqualified-search-registries = ["registry.access.redhat.com", "docker.io"]
[[registry]]
location = "registry.access.redhat.com/ubi8/"
insecure = false
blocked = false
mirror-by-digest-only = true
prefix = ""
[[registry.mirror]]
location = "example.io/example/ubi8-minimal"
insecure = false
[[registry.mirror]]
location = "example.com/example/ubi8-minimal"
insecure = false
Pull an image digest to the node from the source and check if it is
resolved by the mirror. ImageContentSourcePolicy
objects support image digests only, not image tags.
sh-4.2# podman pull --log-level=debug registry.access.redhat.com/ubi8/ubi-minimal@sha256:5cfbaf45ca96806917830c183e9f37df2e913b187adb32e89fd83fa455ebaa6
If the repository mirroring procedure does not work as described, use the following information about how repository mirroring works to help troubleshoot the problem.
The first working mirror is used to supply the pulled image.
The main registry will only be used if no other mirror works.
From the system context, the Insecure
flags are used as fallback.
The format of the /etc/containers/registries
file has
changed recently. It is now version 2 and in TOML format.