How to Delete Docker Image From Private Registry

Davide Imola
2 min readJun 12, 2020

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Photo by Ian Taylor on Unsplash

I have worked for a while with Docker, and I loved it, but in this post, I want to talk about something other than the pros of this application, because you can find tons of articles about it on the Internet. I want to focus more on registries, more specifically the private ones.

On Docker Hub the delete process is extremely simple, just click a big red button and write down the repository's name, and the game is done. True, you can miss spelling the name, but I am confident you can do it! 😄

In the private registry, this magic red button does not exist and the process gets complicated ☹️.

The only working solution I found is through Docker’s API, so prepare to execute some HTTP requests.

The first thing we have to obtain to perform image deletion is its reference code. To obtain this magic code, you must perform the following request.

curl -i -H "Accept: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json" https://registry.url/v2/<image_name>/manifests/<image_tag>

Have you got any response from the API? Yes? Perfect! I think the first lines must be something like that.

HTTP/2 200 content-type: application/vnd.docker.distribution.manifest.v2+json docker-content-digest: sha256:9d8a5598704c0427be6fed9937f62342db199c8a73083695f545e93fac3b08d8 docker-distribution-api-version: registry/2.0

The code we are seeking is in the header of the response and is the one called docker-content-digest, so we saved it because we have to use it in our next request.

After that, the image will be removed from our registry, but if you check the space is not change so much. Why? We have to execute the registry garbage collector to remove the image from the disk and clear some space.

To execute the garbage-collect you must perform the following code, but I suggest running it before with the -d to understand which change it will be made to our beautiful registry.

/bin/registry garbage-collect /pat/to/registry/config.yml

I hope this guide has been helpful to you, so I invite you to post a comment below if you have any advice or question.

Cheers!

Originally published at https://www.davideimola.com on June 12, 2020.

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Davide Imola
Davide Imola

Written by Davide Imola

DevOps Engineer @ RedCarbon • Community Manager @ Schrödinger Hat • Public Speaker and Trainer • Open Source Evangelist