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▸ Push docker images directly to remote servers without an external registry ◂

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Unregistry is a lightweight container image registry that stores and serves images directly from your Docker daemon's storage.

The included docker pussh command (extra 's' for SSH) lets you push images straight to remote Docker servers over SSH. It transfers only the missing layers, making it fast and efficient.

https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9d704b87-8e0d-4c8a-9544-17d4c63bd050

The problem

You've built a Docker image locally. Now you need it on your server. Your options suck:

You just want to move an image from A to B. Why is this so hard?

The solution

docker pussh myapp:latest user@server

That's it. Your image is on the remote server. No registry setup, no subscription, no intermediate storage, no exposed ports. Just a direct transfer of the missing layers over SSH.

Here's what happens under the hood:

  1. Establishes SSH tunnel to the remote server
  2. Starts a temporary unregistry container on the server
  3. Forwards a random localhost port to the unregistry port over the tunnel
  4. docker push to unregistry through the forwarded port, transferring only the layers that don't already exist remotely. The transferred image is instantly available on the remote Docker daemon
  5. Stops the unregistry container and closes the SSH tunnel

It's like rsync for Docker images — simple and efficient.

[!NOTE] Unregistry was created for Uncloud, a lightweight tool for deploying containers across multiple Docker hosts. We needed something simpler than a full registry but more efficient than save/load.

Requirements

On local machine

On remote server

Installation

macOS/Linux via Homebrew

brew install psviderski/tap/docker-pussh

After installation, to use docker-pussh as a Docker CLI plugin (docker pussh command) you need to create a symlink:

mkdir -p ~/.docker/cli-plugins
ln -sf $(brew --prefix)/bin/docker-pussh ~/.docker/cli-plugins/docker-pussh

macOS/Linux via direct download

Download the current version:

mkdir -p ~/.docker/cli-plugins

# Download the script to the docker plugins directory
curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/psviderski/unregistry/v0.2.1/docker-pussh \
  -o ~/.docker/cli-plugins/docker-pussh

# Make it executable
chmod +x ~/.docker/cli-plugins/docker-pussh

If you want to download and use the latest version from the main branch:

curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/psviderski/unregistry/main/docker-pussh \
  -o ~/.docker/cli-plugins/docker-pussh
chmod +x ~/.docker/cli-plugins/docker-pussh

Debian

Via unofficial repository packages created and maintained at unregistry-debian by @dariogriffo

You can install unregistry the debian way by running:

curl -sS https://debian.griffo.io/EA0F721D231FDD3A0A17B9AC7808B4DD62C41256.asc | sudo gpg --dearmor --yes -o /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/debian.griffo.io.gpg
echo "deb https://debian.griffo.io/apt $(lsb_release -sc 2>/dev/null) main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian.griffo.io.list
apt install -y unregistry
apt install docker-pussh

or in the releases page of the repository here

Windows

Windows is not currently supported, but you can try using WSL 2 with the above Linux instructions.

Verify installation

docker pussh --help

⚠️ Containerd image store configuration

Unregistry stores images directly in containerd's image store, which is the underlying container runtime used by Docker. However, by default, Docker maintains its own separate storage layer and doesn't directly use images from containerd.

When you enable containerd image store in Docker, it allows Docker to directly use the same images that unregistry stores in containerd, eliminating duplication.

Without containerd image store (default Docker behaviour)

How to enable containerd image store

Please refer to the official Docker documentation: Enable containerd image store on Docker Engine.

[!WARNING] Switching to containerd image store causes you to temporarily lose images and containers created using the classic storage driver. Those resources still exist on your filesystem, and you can retrieve them by turning off the containerd image store feature.

Usage

Push an image to a remote server. Please make sure the SSH user has permissions to run docker commands (user is root or non-root user is in docker group). If sudo is required, ensure the user can run sudo docker without a password prompt.

docker pussh myapp:latest user@server.example.com

With SSH key authentication if the private key is not added to your SSH agent:

docker pussh myapp:latest ubuntu@192.168.1.100 -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa

Using a custom SSH port:

docker pussh myapp:latest user@server:2222

Push a specific platform for a multi-platform image. The local Docker has to use containerd image store to support multi-platform images.

docker pussh myapp:latest user@server --platform linux/amd64

Use a specific unregistry image version on the remote host:

UNREGISTRY_IMAGE=ghcr.io/psviderski/unregistry:A.B.C docker pussh myapp:latest user@server.example.com

Use cases

Deploy to production servers

Build locally and push directly to your production servers. No middleman.

docker build --platform linux/amd64 -t myapp:1.2.3 .
docker pussh myapp:1.2.3 deploy@prod-server
ssh deploy@prod-server docker run -d myapp:1.2.3

CI/CD pipelines

Skip the registry complexity in your pipelines. Build and push directly to deployment targets.

- name: Build and deploy
  run: |
    docker build -t myapp:${{ github.sha }} .
    docker pussh myapp:${{ github.sha }} deploy@staging-server

Homelab and air-gapped environments

Distribute images in isolated networks that can't access public registries over the internet.

Advanced usage

Running unregistry standalone

Sometimes you want a local registry without the overhead. Unregistry works great for this:

# Run unregistry locally and expose it on port 5000
docker run -d -p 5000:5000 --name unregistry \
  -v /run/containerd/containerd.sock:/run/containerd/containerd.sock \
  ghcr.io/psviderski/unregistry

# Use it like any registry
docker tag myapp:latest localhost:5000/myapp:latest
docker push localhost:5000/myapp:latest

Custom SSH options

Need custom SSH settings? Use the standard SSH config file:

# ~/.ssh/config
Host prod-server
    HostName server.example.com
    User deploy
    Port 2222
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/deploy_key

# Now just use
docker pussh myapp:latest prod-server

Contributing

Found a bug or have a feature idea? We'd love your help!

Inspiration & acknowledgements

Built with ❤️ by Pasha Sviderski who just wanted to deploy his images

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