The return status for inactive users was being checked
too early in the process, so I moved it from just after
the handling of POST /v1/users/ to after getting the
response from GET /v1/users/
mostly because I've been failing at getting docker `0.6.2` working with
docker-registry `0.6.0` with regard to login and push. I suspect there
may be some mismatched expectations between `auth.ResolveAuthConfig` and
`registry.ResolveRepositoryName`, but I haven't done enough research or
experimentation to think it's anything more than user error. More tests
are good, no?
To improve the use of docker with a private registry the login
command is extended with a parameter for the server address.
While implementing i noticed that two problems hindered authentication to a
private registry:
1. the resolve of the authentication did not match during push
because the looked up key was for example localhost:8080 but
the stored one would have been https://localhost:8080
Besides The lookup needs to still work if the https->http fallback
is used
2. During pull of an image no authentication is sent, which
means all repositories are expected to be private.
These points are fixed now. The changes are implemented in
a way to be compatible to existing behavior both in the
API as also with the private registry.
Update:
- login does not require the full url any more, you can login
to the repository prefix:
example:
docker logon localhost:8080
Fixed corner corner cases:
- When login is done during pull and push the registry endpoint is used and
not the central index
- When Remote sends a 401 during pull, it is now correctly delegating to
CmdLogin
- After a Login is done pull and push are using the newly entered login data,
and not the previous ones. This one seems to be also broken in master, too.
- Auth config is now transfered in a parameter instead of the body when
/images/create is called.
SaveConfig sets the Username and Password to an empty string
on save. A copy of the authConfigs need to be made so that the
in memory data is not modified.