Add guide on load balancing a registry

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
This commit is contained in:
Stephen J Day 2015-08-17 12:39:48 -07:00
parent 74080b7225
commit ad995ab8fa

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@ -84,6 +84,49 @@ A certificate issuer may supply you with an *intermediate* certificate. In this
cat server.crt intermediate-certificates.pem > certs/domain.crt
#### Load Balancing Considerations
One may want to use a load balancer to distribute load, terminate TLS or
provide high availability. While a full laod balancing setup is outside the
scope this document, there are a few considerations that can make the process
smoother.
The most important aspect is that a load balanced cluster of registries must
share the same resources. For the current version of the registry, this means
the following must be the same:
- Storage Driver
- HTTP Secret
- Redis Cache (if configured)
If any of these are different, the registry may have trouble serving requests.
As an example, if you're using the filesystem driver, all registry instances
must have access to the same filesystem root, which means they should be in
the same machine. For other drivers, such as s3 or azure, they should be
accessing the same resource, and will likely share an identical configuration.
The _HTTP Secret_ coordinates uploads, so also must be the same across
instances. Configuring different redis instances will mostly work (at the time
of writing), but will not be optimal if the instances are not shared, causing
more reqeusts to be directed to the backend.
Getting the headers correct is very important. For all responses to any
request under the "/v2/" url space, the `Docker-Distribution-API-Version`
header should be set to the value "registry/2.0", even for a 4xx response.
This header allows the docker engine to quickly resolve authentication realms
and fallback to version 1 registries, if necessary. Confirming this is setup
correctly can help avoid problems with fallback.
A properly secured registry should return 401 when the "/v2/" endpoint is hit
without credentials. The response should include a `WWW-Authenticate`
challenge, providing guidance on how to authenticate, such as with basic auth
or a token service. If the load balancer has health checks, it is recommended
to configure it to consider a 401 response as healthy and any others as down.
This will secure your registry by ensuring that configuration problems with
authentication don't accidentally expose an unprotected registry. If you're
using a less sophisticated load balancer, such as Amazon's Elastic Load
Balancer, that doesn't allow one to change the healthy response code, health
checks can be directed at "/", which will always return a `200 OK` response.
### Alternatives
While rarely advisable, you may want to use self-signed certificates instead, or use your registry in an insecure fashion. You will find instructions [here](insecure.md).