This document is a work-in-progress and represents a very early state of the Pods design. Significant aspects are not documented, though we expect to add them in the future. This is one possible architecture for Pods, and we intend to contrast this with alternatives before deciding which approach to implement. This documentation will be kept even if we decide not to implement this so that we can document the reasons for not choosing this approach.
Pods: Container Registry
GitLab Container Registry is a feature allowing to store Docker Container Images in GitLab. You can read about GitLab integration here.
1. Definition
GitLab Container Registry is a complex service requiring usage of PostgreSQL, Redis and Object Storage dependencies. Right now there’s undergoing work to introduce Container Registry Metadata to optimize data storage and image retention policies of Container Registry.
GitLab Container Registry is serving as a container for stored data,
but on it’s own does not authenticate docker login
. The docker login
is executed with user credentials (can be personal access token
)
or CI build credentials (ephemeral ci_builds.token
).
Container Registry uses data deduplication. It means that the same blob
(image layer) that is shared between many projects is stored only once.
Each layer is hashed by sha256
.
The docker login
does request JWT time-limited authentication token that
is signed by GitLab, but validated by Container Registry service. The JWT
token does store all authorized scopes (container repository images
)
and operation types (push
or pull
). A single JWT authentication token
can be have many authorized scopes. This allows container registry and client
to mount existing blobs from another scopes. GitLab responds only with
authorized scopes. Then it is up to GitLab Container Registry to validate
if the given operation can be performed.
The GitLab.com pages are always scoped to project. Each project can have many container registry images attached.
Currently in case of GitLab.com the actual registry service is served
via https://registry.gitlab.com
.
The main identifiable problems are:
- the authentication request (
https://gitlab.com/jwt/auth
) that is processed by GitLab.com - the
https://registry.gitlab.com
that is run by external service and uses it’s own data store - the data deduplication, the Pods architecture with registry run in a Pod would reduce efficiency of data storage
2. Data flow
2.1. Authorization request that is send by docker login
curl \
--user "username:password" \
"https://gitlab/jwt/auth?client_id=docker&offline_token=true&service=container_registry&scope=repository:gitlab-org/gitlab-build-images:push,pull"
Result is encoded and signed JWT token. Second base64 encoded string (split by .
) contains JSON with authorized scopes.
{"auth_type":"none","access":[{"type":"repository","name":"gitlab-org/gitlab-build-images","actions":["pull"]}],"jti":"61ca2459-091c-4496-a3cf-01bac51d4dc8","aud":"container_registry","iss":"omnibus-gitlab-issuer","iat":1669309469,"nbf":166}
2.2. Docker client fetching tags
curl \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer token" \
https://registry.gitlab.com/v2/gitlab-org/gitlab-build-images/tags/list
curl \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer token" \
https://registry.gitlab.com/v2/gitlab-org/gitlab-build-images/manifests/danger-ruby-2.6.6
2.3. Docker client fetching blobs and manifests
curl \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer token" \
https://registry.gitlab.com/v2/gitlab-org/gitlab-build-images/blobs/sha256:a3f2e1afa377d20897e08a85cae089393daa0ec019feab3851d592248674b416
3. Proposal
3.1. Shard Container Registry separately to Pods architecture
Due to it’s architecture it extensive architecture and in general highly scalable horizontal architecture it should be evaluated if the GitLab Container Registry should be run not in Pod, but in a Cluster and be scaled independently.
This might be easier, but would definitely not offer the same amount of data isolation.
3.2. Run Container Registry within a Pod
It appears that except /jwt/auth
which would likely have to be processed by Router
(to decode scope
) the container registry could be run as a local service of a Pod.
The actual data at least in case of GitLab.com is not forwarded via registry, but rather served directly from Object Storage / CDN.
Its design encodes container repository image in a URL that is easily routable. It appears that we could re-use the same stateless Router service in front of Container Registry to serve manifests and blobs redirect.
The only downside is increased complexity of managing standalone registry for each Pod, but this might be desired approach.
4. Evaluation
There do not seem any theoretical problems with running GitLab Container Registry in a Pod. Service seems that can be easily made routable to work well.
The practical complexities are around managing complex service from infrastructure side.