docker/dtr reconfigure
Estimated reading time: 6 minutesChange DTR configurations
Usage
docker run -it --rm docker/dtr \
reconfigure [command options]
Description
This command changes DTR configuration settings.
DTR is restarted for the new configurations to take effect. To have no down time, configure your DTR for high availability.
Options
Option | Environment Variable | Description |
---|---|---|
--debug |
$DEBUG | Enable debug mode for additional logs. |
--dtr-ca |
$DTR_CA | Use a PEM-encoded TLS CA certificate for DTR. By default DTR generates a self-signed TLS certificate during deployment. You can use your own root CA public certificate with --dtr-ca "$(cat ca.pem)" . |
--dtr-cert |
$DTR_CERT | Use a PEM-encoded TLS certificate for DTR. By default DTR generates a self-signed TLS certificate during deployment. You can use your own public key certificate with --dtr-cert "$(cat cert.pem)" . If the certificate has been signed by an intermediate certificate authority, append its public key certificate at the end of the file to establish a chain of trust. |
--dtr-external-url |
$DTR_EXTERNAL_URL | URL of the host or load balancer clients use to reach DTR. When you use this flag, users are redirected to UCP for logging in. Once authenticated they are redirected to the url you specify in this flag. If you don’t use this flag, DTR is deployed without single sign-on with UCP. Users and teams are shared but users login separately into the two applications. You can enable and disable single sign-on in the DTR settings. Format https://host[:port] , where port is the value you used with --replica-https-port . |
--dtr-key |
$DTR_KEY | Use a PEM-encoded TLS private key for DTR. By default DTR generates a self-signed TLS certificate during deployment. You can use your own TLS private key with --dtr-key "$(cat ca.pem)" . |
--dtr-key |
$DTR_KEY | Use a PEM-encoded TLS private key for DTR. By default DTR generates a self-signed TLS certificate during deployment. You can use your own TLS private key with --dtr-key "$(cat key.pem)" . |
--dtr-storage-volume |
$DTR_STORAGE_VOLUME | Customize the volume to store Docker images. By default DTR creates a volume to store the Docker images in the local filesystem of the node where DTR is running, without high-availability. Use this flag to specify a full path or volume name for DTR to store images. For high-availability, make sure all DTR replicas can read and write data on this volume. If you’re using NFS, use --nfs-storage-url instead. |
--enable-pprof |
$DTR_PPROF | Enables pprof profiling of the server. Use --enable-pprof=false to disable it. Once DTR is deployed with this flag, you can access the pprof endpoint for the api server at /debug/pprof , and the registry endpoint at /registry_debug_pprof/debug/pprof . |
--existing-replica-id |
$DTR_REPLICA_ID | The ID of an existing DTR replica. To add, remove or modify DTR, you must connect to an existing healthy replica’s database. |
--help-extended |
$DTR_EXTENDED_HELP | Display extended help text for a given command. |
--http-proxy |
$DTR_HTTP_PROXY | The HTTP proxy used for outgoing requests. |
--https-proxy |
$DTR_HTTPS_PROXY | The HTTPS proxy used for outgoing requests. |
--log-host |
$LOG_HOST | The syslog system to send logs to. The endpoint to send logs to. Use this flag if you set --log-protocol to tcp or udp . |
--log-level |
$LOG_LEVEL | Log level for all container logs when logging to syslog. Default: INFO. The supported log levels are debug , info , warn , error , or fatal . |
--log-protocol |
$LOG_PROTOCOL | The protocol for sending logs. Default is internal. By default, DTR internal components log information using the logger specified in the Docker daemon in the node where the DTR replica is deployed. Use this option to send DTR logs to an external syslog system. The supported values are tcp , udp , and internal . Internal is the default option, stopping DTR from sending logs to an external system. Use this flag with --log-host . |
--nfs-storage-url |
$NFS_STORAGE_URL | NFS to store Docker images. Format nfs://<ip|hostname>/<mountpoint> . By default DTR creates a volume to store the Docker images in the local filesystem of the node where DTR is running, without high-availability. Use this flag to specify an NFS mount for DTR to store images, using the format nfs://<ip|hostname>/<mountpoint> . To use this flag, you need to install an NFS client library like nfs-common in the node where you’re deploying DTR. You can test this by running showmount -e <nfs-server> . When you join new replicas, they will start using NFS so you don’t need to use this flag. To reconfigure DTR to stop using NFS, leave this option empty: --nfs-storage-url "" |
--no-proxy |
$DTR_NO_PROXY | List of domains the proxy should not be used for. When using --http-proxy you can use this flag to specify a list of domains that you don’t want to route through the proxy. Format acme.com[, acme.org] . |
--replica-http-port |
$REPLICA_HTTP_PORT | The public HTTP port for the DTR replica. Default is 80 . This allows you to customize the HTTP port where users can reach DTR. Once users access the HTTP port, they are redirected to use an HTTPS connection, using the port specified with --replica-https-port. This port can also be used for unencrypted health checks. |
--replica-https-port |
$REPLICA_HTTPS_PORT | The public HTTPS port for the DTR replica. Default is 443 . This allows you to customize the HTTPS port where users can reach DTR. Each replica can use a different port. |
--replica-rethinkdb-cache-mb |
$RETHINKDB_CACHE_MB | The maximum amount of space in MB for RethinkDB in-memory cache used by the given replica. Default is auto. Auto is (available_memory - 1024) / 2 . This config allows changing the RethinkDB cache usage per replica. You need to run it once per replica to change each one. |
--ucp-ca |
$UCP_CA | Use a PEM-encoded TLS CA certificate for UCP. Download the UCP TLS CA certificate from https://<ucp-url>/ca , and use --ucp-ca "$(cat ca.pem)" . |
--ucp-insecure-tls |
$UCP_INSECURE_TLS | Disable TLS verification for UCP. The installation uses TLS but always trusts the TLS certificate used by UCP, which can lead to MITM (man-in-the-middle) attacks. For production deployments, use --ucp-ca "$(cat ca.pem)" instead. |
--ucp-password |
$UCP_PASSWORD | The UCP administrator password. |
--ucp-url |
$UCP_URL | The UCP URL including domain and port. |
--ucp-username |
$UCP_USERNAME | The UCP administrator username. |