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Contents
# Registry # # The default registry is Docker Hub, but you can change it using registry/server: # # A reference to secret (in this case DOCKER_REGISTRY_TOKEN) will look up the secret # in the local environment. registry: server: registry.digitalocean.com username: - DOCKER_REGISTRY_TOKEN password: - DOCKER_REGISTRY_TOKEN # Using AWS ECR as the container registry # You will need to have the aws CLI installed locally for this to work. # AWS ECR’s access token is only valid for 12hrs. In order to not have to manually regenerate the token every time, you can use ERB in the deploy.yml file to shell out to the aws cli command, and obtain the token: registry: server: <your aws account id>.dkr.ecr.<your aws region id>.amazonaws.com username: AWS password: <%= %x(aws ecr get-login-password) %> # Using GCP Artifact Registry as the container registry # To sign into Artifact Registry, you would need to # [create a service account](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/service-accounts-create#creating) # and [set up roles and permissions](https://cloud.google.com/artifact-registry/docs/access-control#permissions). # Normally, assigning a roles/artifactregistry.writer role should be sufficient. # # Once the service account is ready, you need to generate and download a JSON key and base64 encode it: # # ```shell # base64 -i /path/to/key.json | tr -d "\\n") # ``` # You'll then need to set the KAMAL_REGISTRY_PASSWORD secret to that value. # # Use the env variable as password along with _json_key_base64 as username. # Here’s the final configuration: registry: server: <your registry region>-docker.pkg.dev username: _json_key_base64 password: - KAMAL_REGISTRY_PASSWORD # Validating the configuration # # You can validate the configuration by running: # ```shell # kamal registry login # ```
Version data entries
7 entries across 7 versions & 1 rubygems