fixed broken link due to topic re-org in PR#23492

Signed-off-by: Victoria Bialas <victoria.bialas@docker.com>
This commit is contained in:
Victoria Bialas 2016-06-14 13:56:17 -07:00
parent f4296d55fc
commit c0987a9e1b

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@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ To stop your registry, you would:
## Storage
By default, your registry data is persisted as a [docker volume](/engine/userguide/containers/dockervolumes.md) on the host filesystem. Properly understanding volumes is essential if you want to stick with a local filesystem storage.
By default, your registry data is persisted as a [docker volume](/engine/tutorials/dockervolumes.md) on the host filesystem. Properly understanding volumes is essential if you want to stick with a local filesystem storage.
Specifically, you might want to point your volume location to a specific place in order to more easily access your registry data. To do so you can:
@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ Specifically, you might want to point your volume location to a specific place i
You should usually consider using [another storage backend](./storage-drivers/index.md) instead of the local filesystem. Use the [storage configuration options](./configuration.md#storage) to configure an alternate storage backend.
Using one of these will allow you to more easily scale your registry, and leverage your storage redundancy and availability features.
Using one of these will allow you to more easily scale your registry, and leverage your storage redundancy and availability features.
## Running a domain registry
@ -84,13 +84,13 @@ You should now be able to access your registry from another docker host:
#### Gotcha
A certificate issuer may supply you with an *intermediate* certificate. In this case, you must combine your certificate with the intermediate's to form a *certificate bundle*. You can do this using the `cat` command:
A certificate issuer may supply you with an *intermediate* certificate. In this case, you must combine your certificate with the intermediate's to form a *certificate bundle*. You can do this using the `cat` command:
cat domain.crt intermediate-certificates.pem > certs/domain.crt
### Let's Encrypt
The registry supports using Let's Encrypt to automatically obtain a browser-trusted certificate. For more
The registry supports using Let's Encrypt to automatically obtain a browser-trusted certificate. For more
information on Let's Encrypt, see [https://letsencrypt.org/how-it-works/](https://letsencrypt.org/how-it-works/) and the relevant section of the [registry configuration](configuration.md#letsencrypt).
### Alternatives
@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ Beware that you will have to implement your own authentication service for this
As your registry configuration grows more complex, dealing with it can quickly become tedious.
It's highly recommended to use [Docker Compose](/compose/index.md) to facilitate operating your registry.
It's highly recommended to use [Docker Compose](/compose/index.md) to facilitate operating your registry.
Here is a simple `docker-compose.yml` example that condenses everything explained so far: