The interface and the docker registry will be accessible with http://localhost.
This example highlight the usage of custom headers when the UI is used as a proxy. When you wants to use a header name with hyphens, replace them by underscores in the variable. You can put headers in environment variable or in config file /etc/nginx/.env
. They have the same writing style.
Headers can be useful in some cases such as avoid sending credentials when you are on the UI. Or give to the registry server other properties such as X-Forward-For header.
I will set these two headers in this example. X-Forward-For by environment variable and Authorization by file.
In order to set your credentials in the header, you need to know how Authorization header works. Here we use the Basic
authentication scheme, the credentials are constructed like this:
- The username and the password are combined with a colon (
registry:ui
). - The resulting string is base64 encoded (
cmVnaXN0cnk6dWk=
). You can simply runecho -n "registry:ui" | base64
. - In your header, put this value
Basic cmVnaXN0cnk6dWk=
- In your
/etc/nginx/.env
, the file will containsNGINX_PROXY_HEADER_Authorization=Basic cmVnaXN0cnk6dWk=
For X-Forward-For, replace all hyphens by underscores, and the value will be a nginx variable which is $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for
. In your docker compose you will need to duplicate the $
character. In your docker-compose, your environment will look like NGINX_PROXY_HEADER_X_Forwarded_For=$$proxy_add_x_forwarded_for
As usual, run the project with docker-compose up -d
(for background mode)