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726 points psviderski | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.219s | source

I got tired of the push-to-registry/pull-from-registry dance every time I needed to deploy a Docker image.

In certain cases, using a full-fledged external (or even local) registry is annoying overhead. And if you think about it, there's already a form of registry present on any of your Docker-enabled hosts — the Docker's own image storage.

So I built Unregistry [1] that exposes Docker's (containerd) image storage through a standard registry API. It adds a `docker pussh` command that pushes images directly to remote Docker daemons over SSH. It transfers only the missing layers, making it fast and efficient.

  docker pussh myapp:latest user@server
Under the hood, it starts a temporary unregistry container on the remote host, pushes to it through an SSH tunnel, and cleans up when done.

I've built it as a byproduct while working on Uncloud [2], a tool for deploying containers across a network of Docker hosts, and figured it'd be useful as a standalone project.

Would love to hear your thoughts and use cases!

[1]: https://github.com/psviderski/unregistry

[2]: https://github.com/psviderski/uncloud

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alisonatwork ◴[] No.44314910[source]
This is a cool idea that seems like it would integrate well with systems already using push deploy tooling like Ansible. It also seems like it would work as a good hotfix deployment mechanism at companies where the Docker registry doesn't have 24/7 support.

Does it integrate cleanly with OCI tooling like buildah etc, or if you need to have a full-blown Docker install on both ends? I haven't dug deeply into this yet because it's related to some upcoming work, but it seems like bootstrapping a mini registry on the remote server is the missing piece for skopeo to be able to work for this kind of setup.

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1. dirkc ◴[] No.44318954[source]
I agree! For a bunch of services I manage I build the image locally, save it and then use ansible to upload the archive and restore the image. This usually takes a lot longer than I want it to!