
Commited13c3abfb
added flags for Docker Content Trust. Depending on the `verify` boolean, the message is "Skip image verification", or "Skip image signing". "Signing" is intended for `docker push` / `docker plugin push`. During the migration to Cobra, this boolean got flipped for `docker push` (9640e3a451
), causing `docker push` to show the incorrect flag description. This patch changes the flags to use the correct description for `docker push`, and `docker plugin push`. To prevent this confusion in future, the boolean argument is removed, and a `AddTrustSigningFlags()` function is added. Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2.2 KiB
title | description | keywords |
---|---|---|
push | The push command description and usage | share, push, image |
push
Usage: docker push [OPTIONS] NAME[:TAG]
Push an image or a repository to a registry
Options:
--disable-content-trust Skip image signing (default true)
--help Print usage
Use docker push
to share your images to the Docker Hub
registry or to a self-hosted one.
Refer to the docker tag
reference for more information about valid
image and tag names.
Killing the docker push
process, for example by pressing CTRL-c
while it is
running in a terminal, terminates the push operation.
Registry credentials are managed by docker login.
Concurrent uploads
By default the Docker daemon will push five layers of an image at a time.
If you are on a low bandwidth connection this may cause timeout issues and you may want to lower
this via the --max-concurrent-uploads
daemon option. See the
daemon documentation for more details.
Examples
Pushing a new image to a registry
First save the new image by finding the container ID (using docker ps
)
and then committing it to a new image name. Note that only a-z0-9-_.
are
allowed when naming images:
$ docker commit c16378f943fe rhel-httpd
Now, push the image to the registry using the image ID. In this example the
registry is on host named registry-host
and listening on port 5000
. To do
this, tag the image with the host name or IP address, and the port of the
registry:
$ docker tag rhel-httpd registry-host:5000/myadmin/rhel-httpd
$ docker push registry-host:5000/myadmin/rhel-httpd
Check that this worked by running:
$ docker images
You should see both rhel-httpd
and registry-host:5000/myadmin/rhel-httpd
listed.