garage/doc/book/connect/repositories.md

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+++ title = "Repositories (Docker, Nix, Git...)" weight = 15 +++

Whether you need to store and serve binary packages or source code, you may want to deploy a tool referred as a repository or registry. Garage can also help you serve this content.

Gitea

You can use Garage with Gitea to store your git LFS data, your users' avatar, and their attachements. You can configure a different target for each data type (check [lfs] and [attachment] sections of the Gitea documentation) and you can provide a default one through the [storage] section.

Let's start by creating a key and a bucket (your key id and secret will be needed later, keep them somewhere):

garage key new --name gitea-key
garage bucket create gitea
garage bucket allow gitea --read --write --key gitea-key

Then you can edit your configuration (by default /etc/gitea/conf/app.ini):

[storage]
STORAGE_TYPE=minio
MINIO_ENDPOINT=localhost:3900
MINIO_ACCESS_KEY_ID=GKxxx
MINIO_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxxx
MINIO_BUCKET=gitea
MINIO_LOCATION=garage
MINIO_USE_SSL=false

You can also pass this configuration through environment variables:

GITEA__storage__STORAGE_TYPE=minio
GITEA__storage__MINIO_ENDPOINT=localhost:3900
GITEA__storage__MINIO_ACCESS_KEY_ID=GKxxx
GITEA__storage__MINIO_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxxx
GITEA__storage__MINIO_BUCKET=gitea
GITEA__storage__MINIO_LOCATION=garage
GITEA__storage__MINIO_USE_SSL=false

Then restart your gitea instance and try to upload a custom avatar. If it worked, you should see some content in your gitea bucket (you must configure your aws command before):

$ aws s3 ls s3://gitea/avatars/
2021-11-10 12:35:47     190034 616ba79ae2b84f565c33d72c2ec50861

External link: Gitea Documentation > Configuration Cheat Sheet

Gitlab

External link: Gitlab Documentation > Object storage

Private NPM Registry (Verdacio)

External link: Verdaccio Github Repository > aws-storage plugin

Docker

Not yet compatible, follow #103.

External link: Docker Documentation > Registry storage drivers > S3 storage driver

Nix

Nix has no repository in its terminology: instead, it breaks down this concept in 2 parts: binary cache and channel.

A channel is a set of .nix definitions that generate definitions for all the software you want to serve.

Because we do not want all our clients to compile all these derivations by themselves, we can compile them once and then serve them as part of our binary cache.

It is possible to use a binary cache without a channel, you only need to serve your nix definitions through another support, like a git repository.

As a first step, we will need to create a bucket on Garage and enabling website access on it:

garage key new --name nix-key
garage bucket create nix.example.com
garage bucket allow nix.example.com --read --write --key nix-key
garage bucket website nix.example.com --allow

If you need more information about exposing buckets as websites on Garage, check Exposing buckets as websites and Configuring a reverse proxy.

Next, we want to check that our bucket works:

echo nix repo > /tmp/index.html
mc cp /tmp/index.html garage/nix/
rm /tmp/index.html

curl https://nix.example.com
# output: nix repo

Binary cache

To serve binaries as part of your cache, you need to sign them with a key specific to nix. You can generate the keypair as follow:

nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key <name> cache-priv-key.pem cache-pub-key.pem

You can then manually sign the packages of your store with the following command:

nix sign-paths --all -k cache-priv-key.pem

Setting a key in nix.conf will do the signature at build time automatically without additional commands. Edit the nix.conf of your builder:

secret-key-files = /etc/nix/cache-priv-key.pem

Now that your content is signed, you can copy a derivation to your cache. For example, if you want to copy a specific derivation of your store:

nix copy /nix/store/wadmyilr414n7bimxysbny876i2vlm5r-bash-5.1-p8 --to 's3://nix?endpoint=garage.example.com&region=garage'

Note that if you have not signed your packages, you can append to the end of your S3 URL &secret-key=/etc/nix/cache-priv-key.pem.

Sometimes you don't want to hardcode this store path in your script. Let suppose that you are working on a codebase that you build with nix-build, you can then run:

nix copy $(nix-build) --to 's3://nix?endpoint=garage.example.com&region=garage'

This command works because the only thing that nix-build outputs on stdout is the paths of the built derivations in your nix store.

You can include your derivation dependencies:

nix copy $(nix-store -qR $(nix-build)) --to 's3://nix?endpoint=garage.example.com&region=garage'

Now, your binary cache stores your derivation and all its dependencies. Just inform your users that they must update their nix.conf file with the following lines:

substituters = https://cache.nixos.org https://nix.example.com
trusted-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= nix.example.com:eTGL6kvaQn6cDR/F9lDYUIP9nCVR/kkshYfLDJf1yKs=

You must re-add cache.nixorg.org because redeclaring these keys override the previous configuration instead of extending it.

Now, when your clients will run nix-build or any command that generates a derivation for which a hash is already present on the binary cache, the client will download the result from the cache instead of compiling it, saving lot of time and CPU!

Channels

Channels additionnaly serve Nix definitions, ie. a .nix file referencing all the derivations you want to serve.