a587d25261
Cargo registry-auth feature requires config.json to have a property auth-required set to true in order to send token to all registry requests. This is ok for git index because you can manually edit the config.json file to add the auth-required, but when using sparse (setting index url to "sparse+https://git.example.com/api/packages/{owner}/cargo/"), the config.json is dynamically rendered, and does not reflect changes to the config.json file in the repo. I see two approaches: - Serve the real config.json file when fetching the config.json on the cargo service. - Automatically detect if the registry requires authorization. (This is what I implemented in this PR). What the PR does: - When a cargo index repository is created, on the config.json, set auth-required to wether or not the repository is private. - When the cargo/config.json endpoint is called, set auth-required to wether or not the request was authorized using an API token. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
alpine | ||
cargo | ||
chef | ||
composer | ||
conan | ||
conda | ||
container | ||
cran | ||
debian | ||
generic | ||
goproxy | ||
helm | ||
helper | ||
maven | ||
npm | ||
nuget | ||
pub | ||
pypi | ||
rpm | ||
rubygems | ||
swift | ||
vagrant | ||
README.md | ||
api.go |
README.md
Gitea Package Registry
This document gives a brief overview how the package registry is organized in code.
Structure
The package registry code is divided into multiple modules to split the functionality and make code reuse possible.
Module | Description |
---|---|
models/packages |
Common methods and models used by all registry types |
models/packages/<type> |
Methods used by specific registry type. There should be no need to use type specific models. |
modules/packages |
Common methods and types used by multiple registry types |
modules/packages/<type> |
Registry type specific methods and types (e.g. metadata extraction of package files) |
routers/api/packages |
Route definitions for all registry types |
routers/api/packages/<type> |
Route implementation for a specific registry type |
services/packages |
Helper methods used by registry types to handle common tasks like package creation and deletion in routers |
services/packages/<type> |
Registry type specific methods used by routers and services |
Models
Every package registry implementation uses the same underlaying models:
Model | Description |
---|---|
Package |
The root of a package providing values fixed for every version (e.g. the package name) |
PackageVersion |
A version of a package containing metadata (e.g. the package description) |
PackageFile |
A file of a package describing its content (e.g. file name) |
PackageBlob |
The content of a file (may be shared by multiple files) |
PackageProperty |
Additional properties attached to Package , PackageVersion or PackageFile (e.g. used if metadata is needed for routing) |
The following diagram shows the relationship between the models:
Package <1---*> PackageVersion <1---*> PackageFile <*---1> PackageBlob
Adding a new package registry type
Before adding a new package registry type have a look at the existing implementation to get an impression of how it could work.
Most registry types offer endpoints to retrieve the metadata, upload and download package files.
The upload endpoint is often the heavy part because it must validate the uploaded blob, extract metadata and create the models.
The methods to validate and extract the metadata should be added in the modules/packages/<type>
package.
If the upload is valid the methods in services/packages
allow to store the upload and create the corresponding models.
It depends if the registry type allows multiple files per package version which method should be called:
CreatePackageAndAddFile
: error if package version already existsCreatePackageOrAddFileToExisting
: error if file already existsAddFileToExistingPackage
: error if package version does not exist or file already exists
services/packages
also contains helper methods to download a file or to remove a package version.
There are no helper methods for metadata endpoints because they are very type specific.