What is a registry?

Explanation

Now that you know what a container image is and how it works, you might wonder - where do you store these images?

Well, you can store your container images on your computer system, but what if you want to share them with your friends or use them on another machine? That's where the image registry comes in.

An image registry is a centralized location for storing and sharing your container images. It can be either public or private. Docker Hub is a public registry that anyone can use and is the default registry.

While Docker Hub is a popular option, there are many other available container registries available today, including Amazon Elastic Container Registry(ECR), Azure Container Registry (ACR), and Google Container Registry (GCR). You can even run your private registry on your local system or inside your organization. For example, Harbor, JFrog Artifactory, GitLab Container registry etc.

Registry vs. repository

While you're working with registries, you might hear the terms registry and repository as if they're interchangeable. Even though they're related, they're not quite the same thing.

A registry is a centralized location that stores and manages container images, whereas a repository is a collection of related container images within a registry. Think of it as a folder where you organize your images based on projects. Each repository contains one or more container images.

Note

You can create one private repository and unlimited public repositories using the free version of Docker Hub. For more information, visit the Docker Hub subscription page.

Try it now

In this hands-on, you will learn how to build and push a Docker image to the Docker Hub repository.

Sign up for a free Docker account

  1. If you haven't created one yet, head over to the Docker Hub page to sign up for a new Docker account.

    Screenshot of the official Docker Hub page showing the Sign up page

    You can use your Google or GitHub account to authenticate.

Create your first repository

  1. Sign in to Docker Hub.

  2. Select the Create repository button in the top-right corner.

  3. Select your namespace (most likely your username) and enter docker-quickstart as the repository name.

    Screenshot of the Docker Hub page that shows how to create a public repository
  4. Set the visibility to Public.

  5. Select the Create button to create the repository.

That's it. You've successfully created your first repository. 🎉

This repository is empty right now. You'll now fix this by pushing an image to it.

Sign in with Docker Desktop

  1. Download and install Docker Desktop, if not already installed.
  2. In the Docker Desktop GUI, select the Sign in button in the top-right corner

Clone sample Node.js code

In order to create an image, you first need a project. To get you started quickly, you'll use a sample Node.js project found at github.com/dockersamples/helloworld-demo-node. This repository contains a pre-built Dockerfile necessary for building a Docker image.

Don't worry about the specifics of the Dockerfile, as you'll learn about that in later sections.

  1. Clone the GitHub repository using the following command:

    git clone https://github.com/dockersamples/helloworld-demo-node
    
  2. Navigate into the newly created directory.

    cd helloworld-demo-node
    
  3. Run the following command to build a Docker image, swapping out YOUR_DOCKER_USERNAME with your username.

    docker build -t <YOUR_DOCKER_USERNAME>/docker-quickstart .
    

    Note

    Make sure you include the dot (.) at the end of the docker build command. This tells Docker where to find the Dockerfile.

  4. Run the following command to list the newly created Docker image:

    docker images
    

    You will see output like the following:

    REPOSITORY                                 TAG       IMAGE ID       CREATED         SIZE
    <YOUR_DOCKER_USERNAME>/docker-quickstart   latest    476de364f70e   2 minutes ago   170MB
    
  5. Start a container to test the image by running the following command (swap out the username with your own username):

    docker run -d -p 8080:8080 <YOUR_DOCKER_USERNAME>/docker-quickstart 
    

    You can verify if the container is working by visiting http://localhost:8080 with your browser.

  6. Use the docker tag command to tag the Docker image. Docker tags allow you to label and version your images.

    docker tag <YOUR_DOCKER_USERNAME>/docker-quickstart <YOUR_DOCKER_USERNAME>/docker-quickstart:1.0 
    
  7. Finally, it's time to push the newly built image to your Docker Hub repository by using the docker push command:

    docker push -u <YOUR_DOCKER_USERNAME>/docker-quickstart:1.0
    
  8. Open Docker Hub and navigate to your repository. Navigate to the Tags section and see your newly pushed image.

    Screenshot of the Docker Hub page that displays the newly added image tag

In this walkthrough, you signed up for a Docker account, created your first Docker Hub repository, and built, tagged, and pushed a container image to your Docker Hub repository.

Additional resources

Next steps

Now that you understand the basics of containers and images, you're ready to learn about Docker Compose.