Search

Chapter 4. Using SSL to protect connections to Red Hat Quay

download PDF

4.1. Using SSL/TLS

To configure Red Hat Quay with a self-signed certificate, you must create a Certificate Authority (CA) and a primary key file named ssl.cert and ssl.key.

Note

The following examples assume that you have configured the server hostname quay-server.example.com using DNS or another naming mechanism, such as adding an entry in your /etc/hosts file. For more information, see "Configuring port mapping for Red Hat Quay".

4.2. Creating a Certificate Authority

Use the following procedure to create a Certificate Authority (CA).

Procedure

  1. Generate the root CA key by entering the following command:

    $ openssl genrsa -out rootCA.key 2048
  2. Generate the root CA certificate by entering the following command:

    $ openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key rootCA.key -sha256 -days 1024 -out rootCA.pem
  3. Enter the information that will be incorporated into your certificate request, including the server hostname, for example:

    Country Name (2 letter code) [XX]:IE
    State or Province Name (full name) []:GALWAY
    Locality Name (eg, city) [Default City]:GALWAY
    Organization Name (eg, company) [Default Company Ltd]:QUAY
    Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:DOCS
    Common Name (eg, your name or your server's hostname) []:quay-server.example.com

4.2.1. Signing the certificate

Use the following procedure to sign the certificate.

Procedure

  1. Generate the server key by entering the following command:

    $ openssl genrsa -out ssl.key 2048
  2. Generate a signing request by entering the following command:

    $ openssl req -new -key ssl.key -out ssl.csr
  3. Enter the information that will be incorporated into your certificate request, including the server hostname, for example:

    Country Name (2 letter code) [XX]:IE
    State or Province Name (full name) []:GALWAY
    Locality Name (eg, city) [Default City]:GALWAY
    Organization Name (eg, company) [Default Company Ltd]:QUAY
    Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:DOCS
    Common Name (eg, your name or your server's hostname) []:quay-server.example.com
  4. Create a configuration file openssl.cnf, specifying the server hostname, for example:

    openssl.cnf

    [req]
    req_extensions = v3_req
    distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
    [req_distinguished_name]
    [ v3_req ]
    basicConstraints = CA:FALSE
    keyUsage = nonRepudiation, digitalSignature, keyEncipherment
    subjectAltName = @alt_names
    [alt_names]
    DNS.1 = quay-server.example.com
    IP.1 = 192.168.1.112

  5. Use the configuration file to generate the certificate ssl.cert:

    $ openssl x509 -req -in ssl.csr -CA rootCA.pem -CAkey rootCA.key -CAcreateserial -out ssl.cert -days 356 -extensions v3_req -extfile openssl.cnf

4.3. Configuring SSL/TLS using the command line interface

Use the following procedure to configure SSL/TLS using the CLI.

Prerequisites

  • You have created a certificate authority and signed the certificate.

Procedure

  1. Copy the certificate file and primary key file to your configuration directory, ensuring they are named ssl.cert and ssl.key respectively:

    cp ~/ssl.cert ~/ssl.key $QUAY/config
  2. Change into the $QUAY/config directory by entering the following command:

    $ cd $QUAY/config
  3. Edit the config.yaml file and specify that you want Red Hat Quay to handle TLS/SSL:

    config.yaml

    ...
    SERVER_HOSTNAME: quay-server.example.com
    ...
    PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME: https
    ...

  4. Optional: Append the contents of the rootCA.pem file to the end of the ssl.cert file by entering the following command:

    $ cat rootCA.pem >> ssl.cert
  5. Stop the Quay container by entering the following command:

    $ sudo podman stop quay
  6. Restart the registry by entering the following command:

    $ sudo podman run -d --rm -p 80:8080 -p 443:8443 \
      --name=quay \
      -v $QUAY/config:/conf/stack:Z \
      -v $QUAY/storage:/datastorage:Z \
      registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v3.11.3

4.4. Configuring SSL/TLS using the Red Hat Quay UI

Use the following procedure to configure SSL/TLS using the Red Hat Quay UI.

To configure SSL/TLS using the command line interface, see "Configuring SSL/TLS using the command line interface".

Prerequisites

  • You have created a certificate authority and signed a certificate.

Procedure

  1. Start the Quay container in configuration mode:

    $ sudo podman run --rm -it --name quay_config -p 80:8080 -p 443:8443 registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v3.11.3 config secret
  2. In the Server Configuration section, select Red Hat Quay handles TLS for SSL/TLS. Upload the certificate file and private key file created earlier, ensuring that the Server Hostname matches the value used when the certificates were created.
  3. Validate and download the updated configuration.
  4. Stop the Quay container and then restart the registry by entering the following command:

    $ sudo podman rm -f quay
    $ sudo podman run -d --rm -p 80:8080 -p 443:8443 \
    --name=quay \
    -v $QUAY/config:/conf/stack:Z \
    -v $QUAY/storage:/datastorage:Z \
    registry.redhat.io/quay/quay-rhel8:v3.11.3

4.5. Testing the SSL/TLS configuration using the CLI

Use the following procedure to test your SSL/TLS configuration using the CLI.

Procedure

  • Enter the following command to attempt to log in to the Red Hat Quay registry with SSL/TLS enabled:

    $ sudo podman login quay-server.example.com

    Example output

    Error: error authenticating creds for "quay-server.example.com": error pinging docker registry quay-server.example.com: Get "https://quay-server.example.com/v2/": x509: certificate signed by unknown authority
    1. Because Podman does not trust self-signed certificates, you must use the --tls-verify=false option:

      $ sudo podman login --tls-verify=false quay-server.example.com

      Example output

      Login Succeeded!

      In a subsequent section, you will configure Podman to trust the root Certificate Authority.

4.6. Testing the SSL/TLS configuration using a browser

Use the following procedure to test your SSL/TLS configuration using a browser.

Procedure

  1. Navigate to your Red Hat Quay registry endpoint, for example, https://quay-server.example.com. If configured correctly, the browser warns of the potential risk:

    Potential risk

  2. Proceed to the log in screen. The browser notifies you that the connection is not secure. For example:

    Connection not secure

    In the following section, you will configure Podman to trust the root Certificate Authority.

4.7. Configuring Podman to trust the Certificate Authority

Podman uses two paths to locate the Certificate Authority (CA) file: /etc/containers/certs.d/ and /etc/docker/certs.d/. Use the following procedure to configure Podman to trust the CA.

Procedure

  1. Copy the root CA file to one of /etc/containers/certs.d/ or /etc/docker/certs.d/. Use the exact path determined by the server hostname, and name the file ca.crt:

    $ sudo cp rootCA.pem /etc/containers/certs.d/quay-server.example.com/ca.crt
  2. Verify that you no longer need to use the --tls-verify=false option when logging in to your Red Hat Quay registry:

    $ sudo podman login quay-server.example.com

    Example output

    Login Succeeded!

4.8. Configuring the system to trust the certificate authority

Use the following procedure to configure your system to trust the certificate authority.

Procedure

  1. Enter the following command to copy the rootCA.pem file to the consolidated system-wide trust store:

    $ sudo cp rootCA.pem /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
  2. Enter the following command to update the system-wide trust store configuration:

    $ sudo update-ca-trust extract
  3. Optional. You can use the trust list command to ensure that the Quay server has been configured:

    $ trust list | grep quay
        label: quay-server.example.com

    Now, when you browse to the registry at https://quay-server.example.com, the lock icon shows that the connection is secure:

    Connection not secure

  4. To remove the rootCA.pem file from system-wide trust, delete the file and update the configuration:

    $ sudo rm /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/rootCA.pem
    $ sudo update-ca-trust extract
    $ trust list | grep quay

More information can be found in the RHEL 9 documentation in the chapter Using shared system certificates.

Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.