Skip to content

jenkins-x-plugins/jx-registry

Repository files navigation

jx registry

Documentation Go Report Card Releases LICENSE Slack Status

jx-registry is a simple command line tool for working with container registries.

The main use case is initially to support lazy creation of AWS ECR registries on demand. Most other registries allow a registry to be created and used for different images.

Getting Started

Download the jx-registry binary for your operating system and add it to your $PATH.

Enabling Cache images

If you wish to also create a cache image in addition to the ECR image for your repository enable the CACHE_SUFFIX environment variable.

e.g. in your local .lighthouse/jenkins-x/release.yaml file you could do something like:

apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: PipelineRun
metadata:
  creationTimestamp: null
  name: release
spec:
  pipelineSpec:
    tasks:
    - name: from-build-pack
      resources: {}
      taskSpec:
        metadata: {}
        stepTemplate:
          image: uses:jenkins-x/jx3-pipeline-catalog/tasks/javascript/release.yaml@versionStream
        steps:
        - image: uses:jenkins-x/jx3-pipeline-catalog/tasks/git-clone/git-clone.yaml@versionStream
          name: ""
          resources: {}
        - name: next-version
          resources: {}
        - name: jx-variables
          resources: {}
        - name: build-npm-install
          resources: {}
        - name: build-npm-test
          resources: {}
        - name: check-registry
          env:
          - name: CACHE_SUFFIX
            value: "/cache"
          resources: {}
        - name: build-container-build
          resources: {}
        - name: promote-changelog
          resources: {}
        - name: promote-helm-release
          resources: {}
        - name: promote-jx-promote
          resources: {}

Providing an ECR Lifecycle Policy

By default a policy to make images with a tag prefix of 0.0.0- expire after 14 days will be put in place. This prefix is the default for pull request builds. If a policy exist and the default policy isn't overridden no policy will be put. To choose another policy change the check-registry step to add the ECR_LIFECYCLE_POLICY environment variable. See the AWS documentation for how to write policy.

Below is an example actually showing how to put the default policy in place:

        - name: check-registry
          env:
          - name: ECR_LIFECYCLE_POLICY
            value: |-
              {
                "rules": [
                  {
                    "rulePriority": 1,
                    "description": "Expire images older than 14 days",
                    "selection": {
                      "tagStatus": "tagged",
                      "countType": "sinceImagePushed",
                      "tagPrefixList": ["0.0.0-"],
                      "countUnit": "days",
                      "countNumber": 14
                    },
                    "action": {
                      "type": "expire"
                    }
                  }
                ]
              }
          resources: {}

If you don't want any policy to be put on the repository you rewrite the step to:

        - name: check-registry
          env:
          - name: CREATE_ECR_LIFECYCLE_POLICY
            value: "false"
          resources: {}

Providing an ECR Repository Policy (for multiaccount cluster)

{
  "Version": "2008-10-17",
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Sid": "CrossAccountPull",
      "Effect": "Allow",
      "Principal": {
        "AWS": [
          "arn:aws:iam::XXXXXXXXXXXX:role/ec2_eks_worknode",
        ]
      },
      "Action": [
        "ecr:BatchCheckLayerAvailability",
        "ecr:BatchGetImage",
        "ecr:GetDownloadUrlForLayer"
      ]
    }
  ]
}

If you want any policy to be put on the repository you rewrite the step to:

        - name: check-registry
          env:
          - name: CREATE_ECR_REPOSITORY_POLICY
            value: "true"
          resources: {}

Commands

See the jx-registry command reference