What is Crane?

Crane is a small read-only web application that provides enough of the docker registry API to support “docker pull”. Crane does not serve the actual image files, but instead serves 302 redirects to some other location where files are being served. A base file location URL can be specified per-repository.

Crane loads its data from json files stored on disk. It does not have a database or use any other services. The json files can be generated with Pulp by publishing a docker repository.

Crane is a flask app written in Python. It is very easy to deploy and has a small footprint, so it is a great way to provide a read-only “docker pull” API that redirects to a static file service.

Advanced users can configure a search appliance to support “docker search” and can setup repository protection using SSL certificates.

Configuration

A config file will be loaded from the path found in environment variable CRANE_CONFIG_PATH. If not specified, the default location of /etc/crane.conf will be used.

The following options should go under a section named [general]

debug
true or false, which sets Flask’s DEBUG config option. Defaults to false. If the environment variable CRANE_DEBUG has the value true, that will also put crane in debug mode regardless of the setting in the config file.
data_dir
full path to the directory from which metadata files should be loaded. The app files may optionally be in the root data_dir, or in subdirectories as desired. defaults to /var/lib/crane/metadata/
data_dir_polling_interval
The number of seconds between checks for updates to metadata files in the data_dir. This defaults to checking once every 60 seconds.
endpoint
hostname and optional port, in the form hostname:port, where crane is deployed. This is the value that will be returned for the X-Docker-Endpoint header. defaults to the host and port used by the requesting client

Example:

[general]
debug: true
data_dir: /mnt/nfs/
endpoint: localhost:5000

Note

Ensure that Apache is listening on the specified port.

Note

The path specified in data_dir should be a shared mount point between Crane and Pulp. This mount point should be readable and writable by Pulp. Crane only needs read access to this mount.

Deployment

Sample apache configuration files are available in /usr/share/crane/ when installed via RPM, or in the deployment/ directory if looking at the source. You can copy one of them into your apache conf.d directory and optionally modify it to fit your needs.

Repository Data

To change what data crane is using, add or remove files in the configured data_dir as necessary. The changes will be loaded automatically the next time the data_dir is polled for changes. This poll runs at the interval set by data_dir_polling_interval. Auto loading of changes monitors file creation and deletion. If a file is modified in place you may have to restart the web server in order for the change to be loaded.

Data Format

Crane expects to find files in the configured data_dir whose names end in .json. Nothing else about the file names is important to crane. Each file contains metadata about a docker repository.

These files are produced by a publish action in Pulp.

Crane Admin

A list of repositories served by Crane can be obtained by opening /crane/repositories or /crane/repositories/v1 for repositories with v1 content and /crane/repositories/v2 for repositories with v2 content in a web browser or with curl. The default Apache configuration distributed with Crane restricts access to this URL from localhost only; when accessed from a web browser, repositories and some basuc info is listed on a web page. This URL accepts an optional “Accept” header. When “application/json” is specified, the application responds with JSON. Here is an example of repository with v1 content:

{
    "pulpdemo-busybox": {
        "image_ids": [
            "2982ec56c8d910121e7594ca7890b062f6d37fadf7575f6a6f3adbabbafac9f5",
            "2aed48a4e41d3931167146e9b7492aa5639e7f6478be9eac584726ecec6824ed",
            "492dad4279bae5bb73648efe9bf467b2cfa8bab1d593595226e3e7a95d9f6c35",
            "4986bf8c15363d1c5d15512d5266f8777bfba4974ac56e3270e7760f6f0a8125",
            "511136ea3c5a64f264b78b5433614aec563103b4d4702f3ba7d4d2698e22c158",
            "618b1fc306b06d11e192812ede4c685dcbf886d2a0189e9a552c550fd7663df0",
            "df7546f9f060a2268024c8a230d8639878585defcc1bc6f79d2728a13957871b",
            "e8a999563c473139dc74d02eefb7b13ffea63799bc05b8936b9ad7119b37742f",
            "ea13149945cb6b1e746bf28032f02e9b5a793523481a0a18645fc77ad53c4ea2",
            "f6169d24347d30de48e4493836bec15c78a34f08cc7f17d6a45a19d68dc283ac"
        ],
        "protected": false,
        "tags": {
            "buildroot-2013.08.1": "2982ec56c8d910121e7594ca7890b062f6d37fadf7575f6a6f3adbabbafac9f5",
            "buildroot-2014.02": "2aed48a4e41d3931167146e9b7492aa5639e7f6478be9eac584726ecec6824ed",
            "latest": "4986bf8c15363d1c5d15512d5266f8777bfba4974ac56e3270e7760f6f0a8125",
            "ubuntu-12.04": "492dad4279bae5bb73648efe9bf467b2cfa8bab1d593595226e3e7a95d9f6c35",
            "ubuntu-14.04": "f6169d24347d30de48e4493836bec15c78a34f08cc7f17d6a45a19d68dc283ac"
        }
    },
    "pulpdemo-busybox2": {
        "image_ids": [
            "2982ec56c8d910121e7594ca7890b062f6d37fadf7575f6a6f3adbabbafac9f5",
            "2aed48a4e41d3931167146e9b7492aa5639e7f6478be9eac584726ecec6824ed",
            "492dad4279bae5bb73648efe9bf467b2cfa8bab1d593595226e3e7a95d9f6c35",
            "4986bf8c15363d1c5d15512d5266f8777bfba4974ac56e3270e7760f6f0a8125",
            "511136ea3c5a64f264b78b5433614aec563103b4d4702f3ba7d4d2698e22c158",
            "618b1fc306b06d11e192812ede4c685dcbf886d2a0189e9a552c550fd7663df0",
            "df7546f9f060a2268024c8a230d8639878585defcc1bc6f79d2728a13957871b",
            "e8a999563c473139dc74d02eefb7b13ffea63799bc05b8936b9ad7119b37742f",
            "ea13149945cb6b1e746bf28032f02e9b5a793523481a0a18645fc77ad53c4ea2",
            "f6169d24347d30de48e4493836bec15c78a34f08cc7f17d6a45a19d68dc283ac"
        ],
        "protected": false,
        "tags": {
            "buildroot-2013.08.1": "2a4d48a4e51d39a1167146e9b7492aa5639e7f6478be9eac584726ecec6824ed",
            "latest": "4986bf8c15363d1c5d15512d5266f8777bfba4974ac56e3270e7760f6f0a8125",
            "ubuntu-12.04": "492dad4279bae5bb73648efe9bf467b2cfa8bab1d593595226e3e7a95d9f6c35",
            "ubuntu-14.04": "f6169d24347d30de48e4493836bec15c78a34f08cc7f17d6a45a19d68dc283ac"
        }
    }
}

User Authentication

Basic username/passphrase authentication may be configured using standard Apache configuration. End-users access images by client command docker login <crane-registry-uri>. End-users who docker pull <image> before logging in will be prompted for username/passphrase.

Crane does not manage users. They must be managed with an .htpasswd file. The htpasswd tool is available to manage the .htpasswd file. See Apache htpasswd documentation.

Configuration may be enabled through an Apache config or .htaccess file. See Apache htaccess documentation.

Example .htaccess file:

AuthType Basic
AuthName "Authentication Required"
AuthUserFile /path/to/.htpasswd
Require valid-user

Example apache.conf file:

<VirtualHost *>
    WSGIScriptAlias / /usr/share/crane/crane.wsgi
    <Location /crane>
        Require host localhost
        AuthType Basic
        AuthName "Docker Registry Repository"
        AuthUserFile /path/to/.htpasswd
        Require valid-user
    </Location>
</VirtualHost>

Release Notes

3.0.0

The 3.0.0 release of Crane adds support for the Docker v2 API manifest lists schema version 2. Crane now supports version 4 of the json data file produced by Pulp. The new version enables Crane to serve manifest lists. In order to decide to which manifest type to redirect the request, Crane looks for an optional accept header specified in the request and based on this information redirects whether to the manifest list or image manifest.

2.2.0

The 2.2.0 release of Crane adds support for the Docker v2 API manifests schema version 2. Crane now supports version 3 of the json data file produced by Pulp. The new version enables Crane to serve schema version 2 manifests. In order to decide to wich schema version to redirect the request, Crane looks for an optional accept header specified in the request and based on this information redirects whether to schema version 1 or 2.

2.0.0

The 2.0.0 release of Crane adds support for the Docker v2 API, and is capable of working with pulp_docker’s new v2 app file format in addition to the v1 format that it did before. In order to facilitate supporting both v1 and v2, it was modified to support a folder heirarchy in its data folder watching feature. It is now possible to create subfolders in crane’s data folder to separate v1 and v2 app files and Crane will autodiscover them and serve them as appropriate.

Attribution

The image of the crane displayed in the corner of the web interface is used with permission from user Laitche under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported licence. The original file can be found here.