- update vendored components - Related: #2176063 Signed-off-by: Jindrich Novy <jnovy@redhat.com>
3.7 KiB
% containers-auth.json 5
NAME
containers-auth.json - syntax for the registry authentication file
DESCRIPTION
A file in JSON format controlling authentication against container image registries.
The primary (read/write) file is stored at ${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}/containers/auth.json
on Linux;
on Windows and macOS, at $HOME/.config/containers/auth.json
.
When searching for the credential for a registry, the following files will be read in sequence until the valid credential is found:
first reading the primary (read/write) file, or the explicit override using an option of the calling application.
If credentials are not present there,
the search continues in ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/containers/auth.json
(usually ~/.config/containers/auth.json
), $HOME/.docker/config.json
, $HOME/.dockercfg
.
Except for the primary (read/write) file, other files are read-only unless the user, using an option of the calling application, explicitly points at it as an override.
FORMAT
The auth.json file stores, or references, credentials that allow the user to authenticate
to container image registries.
It is primarily managed by a login
command from a container tool such as podman login
,
buildah login
, or skopeo login
.
Each entry contains a single hostname (e.g., docker.io
) or a namespace (e.g., quay.io/user/image
) as a key,
and credentials in the form of a base64-encoded string as value of auth
. The
base64-encoded string contains a concatenation of the username, a colon, and the
password.
When checking for available credentials, the relevant repository is matched
against available keys in its hierarchical order, going from most-specific to least-specific.
For example, an image pull for my-registry.local/namespace/user/image:latest
will
result in a lookup in auth.json
in the following order:
my-registry.local/namespace/user/image
my-registry.local/namespace/user
my-registry.local/namespace
my-registry.local
This way it is possible to setup multiple credentials for a single registry which can be distinguished by their path.
The following example shows the values found in auth.json after the user logged in to their accounts on quay.io and docker.io:
{
"auths": {
"docker.io": {
"auth": "erfi7sYi89234xJUqaqxgmzcnQ2rRFWM5aJX0EC="
},
"quay.io": {
"auth": "juQAqGmz5eR1ipzx8Evn6KGdw8fEa1w5MWczmgY="
}
}
}
This example demonstrates how to use multiple paths for a single registry, while
preserving a fallback for my-registry.local
:
{
"auths": {
"my-registry.local/foo/bar/image": {
"auth": "…"
},
"my-registry.local/foo": {
"auth": "…"
},
"my-registry.local": {
"auth": "…"
},
}
}
An entry can be removed by using a logout
command from a container
tool such as podman logout
or buildah logout
.
In addition, credential helpers can be configured for specific registries, and the credentials-helper
software can be used to manage the credentials more securely than storing only base64-encoded credentials in auth.json
.
When the credential helper is in use on a Linux platform, the auth.json file would contain keys that specify the registry domain, and values that specify the suffix of the program to use (i.e. everything after docker-credential-). For example:
{
"auths": {
"localhost:5001": {}
},
"credHelpers": {
"registry.example.com": "secretservice"
}
}
For more information on credential helpers, please reference the GitHub docker-credential-helpers project.
SEE ALSO
buildah-login(1), buildah-logout(1), podman-login(1), podman-logout(1), skopeo-login(1), skopeo-logout(1)
HISTORY
Feb 2020, Originally compiled by Tom Sweeney tsweeney@redhat.com