I run a private docker registry, and I want to delete all images but the latest
from a repository. I don't want to delete the entire repository, just some of the images inside it. The API docs don't mention a way to do this, but surely it's possible?
13 Answers
Currently you cannot use the Registry API for that task. It only allows you to delete a repository or a specific tag.
In general, deleting a repository means, that all the tags associated to this repo are deleted.
Deleting a tag means, that the association between an image and a tag is deleted.
None of the above will delete a single image. They are left on your disk.
Workaround
For this workaround you need to have your docker images stored locally.
A workaround for your solution would be to delete all but the latest tags and thereby potentially removing the reference to the associated images. Then you can run this script to remove all images, that are not referenced by any tag or the ancestry of any used image.
Terminology (images and tags)
Consider an image graph like this where the capital letters (A
, B
, ...) represent short image IDs and <-
means that an image is based on another image:
A <- B <- C <- D
Now we add tags to the picture:
A <- B <- C <- D
| |
| <version2>
<version1>
Here, the tag <version1>
references the image C
and the tag <version2>
references the image D
.
Refining your question
In your question you said that you wanted to remove
all images but the
latest
. Now, this terminology is not quite correct. You've mixed images and tags. Looking at the graph I think you would agree that the tag <version2>
represents the latest version. In fact, according to this question you can have a tag that represents the latest version:
A <- B <- C <- D
| |
| <version2>
| <latest>
<version1>
Since the <latest>
tag references image D
I ask you: do you really want to delete all but image D
? Probably not!
What happens if you delete a tag?
If you delete the tag <version1>
using the Docker REST API you will get this:
A <- B <- C <- D
|
<version2>
<latest>
Remember: Docker will never delete an image! Even if it did, in this case it cannot delete an image, since the image C
is part of the ancestry for the image D
which is tagged.
Even if you use this script, no image will be deleted.
When an image can be deleted
Under the condition that you can control when somebody can pull or push to your registry (e.g. by disabling the REST interface). You can delete an image from an image graph if no other image is based on it and no tag refers to it.
Notice that in the following graph, the image D
is not based on C
but on B
. Therefore, D
doesn't depend on C
. If you delete tag <version1>
in this graph, the image C
will not be used by any image and this script can remove it.
A <- B <--------- D
\ |
\ <version2>
\ <latest>
\ <- C
|
<version1>
After the cleanup your image graph looks like this:
A <- B <- D
|
<version2>
<latest>
Is this what you want?
I've faced same problem with my registry then i tried the solution listed below from a blog page. It works.
Step 1: Listing catalogs
You can list your catalogs by calling this url:
http://YourPrivateRegistyIP:5000/v2/_catalog
Response will be in the following format:
{
"repositories": [
<name>,
...
]
}
Step 2: Listing tags for related catalog
You can list tags of your catalog by calling this url:
http://YourPrivateRegistyIP:5000/v2/<name>/tags/list
Response will be in the following format:
{
"name": <name>,
"tags": [
<tag>,
...
]
}
Step 3: List manifest value for related tag
You can run this command in docker registry container:
curl -v --silent -H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" -X GET http://localhost:5000/v2/<name>/manifests/<tag> 2>&1 | grep Docker-Content-Digest | awk '{print ($3)}'
Response will be in the following format:
sha256:6de813fb93debd551ea6781e90b02f1f93efab9d882a6cd06bbd96a07188b073
Run the command given below with manifest value:
curl -v --silent -H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" -X DELETE http://127.0.0.1:5000/v2/<name>/manifests/sha256:6de813fb93debd551ea6781e90b02f1f93efab9d882a6cd06bbd96a07188b073
Step 4: Delete marked manifests
Run this command in your docker registy container:
bin/registry garbage-collect /etc/docker/registry/config.yml
Here is my config.yml
root@c695814325f4:/etc# cat /etc/docker/registry/config.yml
version: 0.1
log:
fields:
service: registry
storage:
cache:
blobdescriptor: inmemory
filesystem:
rootdirectory: /var/lib/registry
delete:
enabled: true
http:
addr: :5000
headers:
X-Content-Type-Options: [nosniff]
health:
storagedriver:
enabled: true
interval: 10s
threshold: 3
The current v2
registry now supports deleting via DELETE /v2/<name>/manifests/<reference>
See: https://github.com/docker/distribution/blob/master/docs/spec/api.md#deleting-an-image
Working usage: https://github.com/byrnedo/docker-reg-tool
Edit:
The manifest <reference>
above can be retrieved from requesting to
GET /v2/<name>/manifests/<tag>
and checking the Docker-Content-Digest
header in the response.
Edit 2: You may have to run your registry with the following env set:
REGISTRY_STORAGE_DELETE_ENABLED="true"
Edit3: You may have to run garbage collection to free this disk space: https://docs.docker.com/registry/garbage-collection/
Problem 1
You mentioned it was your private docker registry, so you probably need to check Registry API instead of Hub registry API doc, which is the link you provided.
Problem 2
docker registry API is a client/server protocol, it is up to the server's implementation on whether to remove the images in the back-end. (I guess)
DELETE /v1/repositories/(namespace)/(repository)/tags/(tag*)
Detailed explanation
Below I demo how it works now from your description as my understanding for your questions.
I run a private docker registry.
I use the default one, and listen on port 5000
.
docker run -d -p 5000:5000 registry
Then I tag the local image and push into it.
$ docker tag ubuntu localhost:5000/ubuntu
$ docker push localhost:5000/ubuntu
The push refers to a repository [localhost:5000/ubuntu] (len: 1)
Sending image list
Pushing repository localhost:5000/ubuntu (1 tags)
511136ea3c5a: Image successfully pushed
d7ac5e4f1812: Image successfully pushed
2f4b4d6a4a06: Image successfully pushed
83ff768040a0: Image successfully pushed
6c37f792ddac: Image successfully pushed
e54ca5efa2e9: Image successfully pushed
Pushing tag for rev [e54ca5efa2e9] on {http://localhost:5000/v1/repositories/ubuntu/tags/latest}
After that I can use Registry API to check it exists in your private docker registry
$ curl -X GET localhost:5000/v1/repositories/ubuntu/tags
{"latest": "e54ca5efa2e962582a223ca9810f7f1b62ea9b5c3975d14a5da79d3bf6020f37"}
Now I can delete the tag using that API !!
$ curl -X DELETE localhost:5000/v1/repositories/ubuntu/tags/latest
true
Check again, the tag doesn't exist in my private registry server
$ curl -X GET localhost:5000/v1/repositories/ubuntu/tags/latest
{"error": "Tag not found"}
This is really ugly but it works, text is tested on registry:2.5.1. I did not manage to get delete working smoothly even after updating configuration to enable delete. The ID was really difficult to retrieve, had to login to get it, maybe some misunderstanding. Anyway, the following works:
Login to the container
docker exec -it registry sh
Define variables matching your container and container version:
export NAME="google/cadvisor" export VERSION="v0.24.1"
Move to the the registry directory:
cd /var/lib/registry/docker/registry/v2
Delete files related to your hash:
find . | grep `ls ./repositories/$NAME/_manifests/tags/$VERSION/index/sha256`| xargs rm -rf $1
Delete manifests:
rm -rf ./repositories/$NAME/_manifests/tags/$VERSION
Logout
exit
Run the GC:
docker exec -it registry bin/registry garbage-collect /etc/docker/registry/config.yml
If all was done properly some information about deleted blobs is shown.
There are some clients (in Python, Ruby, etc) which do exactly that. For my taste, it isn't sustainable to install a runtime (e.g. Python) on my registry server, just to housekeep my registry!
So deckschrubber
is my solution:
go get github.com/fraunhoferfokus/deckschrubber
$GOPATH/bin/deckschrubber
images older than a given age are automatically deleted. Age can be specified using -year
, -month
, -day
, or a combination of them:
$GOPATH/bin/deckschrubber -month 2 -day 13 -registry http://registry:5000
UPDATE: here's a short introduction on deckschrubber.
Briefly;
1) You must typed following command for RepoDigests of a docker repo;
## docker inspect <registry-host>:<registry-port>/<image-name>:<tag>
> docker inspect 174.24.100.50:8448/example-image:latest
[
{
"Id": "sha256:16c5af74ed970b1671fe095e063e255e0160900a0e12e1f8a93d75afe2fb860c",
"RepoTags": [
"174.24.100.50:8448/example-image:latest",
"example-image:latest"
],
"RepoDigests": [
"174.24.100.50:8448/example-image@sha256:5580b2110c65a1f2567eeacae18a3aec0a31d88d2504aa257a2fecf4f47695e6"
],
...
...
${digest} = sha256:5580b2110c65a1f2567eeacae18a3aec0a31d88d2504aa257a2fecf4f47695e6
2) Use registry REST API
##curl -u username:password -vk -X DELETE registry-host>:<registry-port>/v2/<image-name>/manifests/${digest}
>curl -u example-user:example-password -vk -X DELETE http://174.24.100.50:8448/v2/example-image/manifests/sha256:5580b2110c65a1f2567eeacae18a3aec0a31d88d2504aa257a2fecf4f47695e6
You should get a 202 Accepted for a successful invocation.
3-) Run Garbage Collector
docker exec registry bin/registry garbage-collect --dry-run /etc/docker/registry/config.yml
registry — registry container name.
For more detail explanation enter link description here
Another tool you can use is registry-cli. For example, this command:
registry.py -l "login:password" -r https://your-registry.example.com --delete
will delete all but the last 10 images.
There is also a way you can remove some old images from repository just based on the date when it was created.
To do that enter your docker registry container and get the list of manifest's revisions for some specific repository:
ls -latr /var/lib/registry/docker/registry/v2/repositories/YOUR_REPO/_manifests/revisions/sha256/
The output then may be used within the request (with sha256 prefix):
curl -v --silent -H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" -X DELETE http://DOCKER_REGISTRY_HOST:5000/v2/YOUR_REPO/manifests/sha256:OUTPUT_LINE
And of course do not forget to execute 'garbage-collect' command after that:
bin/registry garbage-collect /etc/docker/registry/config.yml
This docker image includes a bash script that can be used to remove images from a remote v2 registry : https://hub.docker.com/r/vidarl/remove_image_from_registry/
Below Bash Script Deletes all the tags located in registry except the latest.
for D in /registry-data/docker/registry/v2/repositories/*; do
if [ -d "${D}" ]; then
if [ -z "$(ls -A ${D}/_manifests/tags/)" ]; then
echo ''
else
for R in $(ls -t ${D}/_manifests/tags/ | tail -n +2); do
digest=$(curl -k -I -s -H -X GET http://xx.xx.xx.xx:5000/v2/$(basename ${D})/manifests/${R} -H 'accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json' | grep Docker-Content-Digest | awk '{print $2}' )
url="http://xx.xx.xx.xx:5000/v2/$(basename ${D})/manifests/$digest"
url=${url%$'\r'}
curl -X DELETE -k -I -s $url -H 'accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json'
done
fi
fi
done
After this Run
docker exec $(docker ps | grep registry | awk '{print $1}') /bin/registry garbage-collect /etc/docker/registry/config.yml
Simple ruby script based on this answer: registry_cleaner.
You can run it on local machine:
./registry_cleaner.rb --host=https://registry.exmpl.com --repository=name --tags_count=4
And then on the registry machine remove blobs with /bin/registry garbage-collect /etc/docker/registry/config.yml
.
Here is a script based on Yavuz Sert's answer. It deletes all tags that are not the latest version, and their tag is greater than 950.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
CheckTag(){
Name=$1
Tag=$2
Skip=0
if [[ "${Tag}" == "latest" ]]; then
Skip=1
fi
if [[ "${Tag}" -ge "950" ]]; then
Skip=1
fi
if [[ "${Skip}" == "1" ]]; then
echo "skip ${Name} ${Tag}"
else
echo "delete ${Name} ${Tag}"
Sha=$(curl -v -s -H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" -X GET http://127.0.0.1:5000/v2/${Name}/manifests/${Tag} 2>&1 | grep Docker-Content-Digest | awk '{print ($3)}')
Sha="${Sha/$'\r'/}"
curl -H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" -X DELETE "http://127.0.0.1:5000/v2/${Name}/manifests/${Sha}"
fi
}
ScanRepository(){
Name=$1
echo "Repository ${Name}"
curl -s http://127.0.0.1:5000/v2/${Name}/tags/list | jq '.tags[]' |
while IFS=$"\n" read -r line; do
line="${line%\"}"
line="${line#\"}"
CheckTag $Name $line
done
}
JqPath=$(which jq)
if [[ "x${JqPath}" == "x" ]]; then
echo "Couldn't find jq executable."
exit 2
fi
curl -s http://127.0.0.1:5000/v2/_catalog | jq '.repositories[]' |
while IFS=$"\n" read -r line; do
line="${line%\"}"
line="${line#\"}"
ScanRepository $line
done