Artipie is an experimental binary artifact management tool, similar to Artifactory, Nexus, Archiva, ProGet, and many others. The following set of features makes Artipie unique among all others:
- It is open source (MIT license)
- It is horizontally scalable, you can add servers easily
- It is written in reactive Java (using Vert.x)
- It supports Maven, Docker, Rubygems, Go, Helm, Npm, NuGet, Composer, Pip, Rpm, and others
- It is database-free
- It can host the data in the file system, Amazon S3, Google Cloud, HuaweiCloud OBS etc.
- Its quality of Java code is extraordinary high :)
The fastest way to start using Artipie is via Docker:
docker run --rm --name artipie -p 8080:8080 --user=artipie:artipie artipie/artipie:latestIt'll start a new Docker container with latest Artipie image. A new image generates
default server config if not found at /etc/artipie/artipie.yml, prints initial
credentials to console and prints a link to the dashboard. If started on localhost with command
above, the dashboard URI is http://localhost:8080/dashboard/artipie.
To create a new artifact repository:
- Go to the dashboard
- Enter the name of a new repository, choose a type, and click button "Add"
- Artipie generates standard configuration for this kind of repository, and asks for review or edit. You can ignore this step for now.
- Below the repository configuration, the page will have a simple configuration
for your client, and usage examples, e.g. the code for
pom.xmlfor Maven repository.
Default server configuration refers to /var/artipie/repos to look up for repository configurations.
You may want to mount local configurations here to edit it manually by adding docker run mount option:
-v <your-local-config-dir>:/var/artipie/repo, where <your-local-config-dir> is you local config directory.
Important: check that <your-local-config-dir> has correct permissions, it should be 2020:2021, to change it correctly use
chown -R 2020:2021 <your-local-config-dir>.
More examples are here.
We recommend you read the "Architecture" section in our White Paper to fully understand how Artipie is designed.
For now, we support two storage types: file system and S3 storages. To configure file system storage it is enough to set the path where Artipie will store all the items:
storage:
type: fs
path: /urs/local/aripie/dataS3 storage configuration requires specifying bucket and credentials:
storage:
type: s3
bucket: my-bucket
region: my-region # optional
endpoint: https://my-s3-provider.com # optional
credentials:
type: basic
accessKeyId: xxx
secretAccessKey: xxxStorages can be configured for each repository individually in repo configuration yaml or in
the _storages.yaml file along with aliases:
storages:
default:
type: fs
path: ./.storage/data Then default storage alias can be used to configure a repository:
repo:
type: maven
storage: defaultPermissions for repository operations can be granted in the repo configuration file:
repo:
...
permissions:
jane:
- read
- write
admin:
- "*"
/readers:
- readAll repositories support read and write operations, other specific permissions may be supported
in certain repository types.
Group names should start with /, is the example above read operation is granted for readers group
and every user within the group can read from the repository, user named jane is allowed to read and write.
We also support asterisk wildcard for "any operation" or "any user", user admin in the example
can perform any operation in the repository.
If permissions section is absent in repo config, then any supported operation is allowed for everyone,
empty permissions section restricts any operations for anyone.
You may want to run Artipie for your company, which has a few teams.
Each team may want to have its own repository. To do this, you create
a global configuration file /etc/artipie/artipie.yml:
meta:
layout: org
storage:
type: fs
path: /tmp/artipie/data/my-docker
credentials:
type: file
path: _credentials.ymlIf the type is set to file, another YAML file is required in the storage, with
a list of users who will be allowed to create repos
(type is password format, plain and sha256 types are supported):
credentials:
jane:
type: plain
pass: qwerty
email: [email protected] # Optional
john:
type: sha256
pass: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
groups: # Optional
- readers
- dev-leadsUsers can be assigned to some groups, all repository permissions granted to the group are applied to the users participating in this group.
If the type is set to env, the following environment variables are expected:
ARTIPIE_USER_NAME and ARTIPIE_USER_PASS. For example, you start
Docker container with the -e option:
docker run -d -v /var/artipie:/var/artipie` -p 80:80 \
-e ARTIPIE_USER_NAME=artipie -e ARTIPIE_USER_PASS=qwerty \
artipie/artipie:latestArtipie repositories may run on separate ports if configured. This feature may be especially useful for Docker repository, as it's API is not well suited to serve multiple repositories on single port.
To run repository on its own port
port parameter should be specified in repository configuration YAML as follows:
repo:
type: <repository type>
port: 54321
...NOTE: Artipie scans repositories for port configuration only on start, so server requires restart in order to apply changes made in runtime.
You may enable some basic metrics collecting and periodic publishing to application log
by adding metrics to meta section of global configuration file /etc/artipie/artipie.yml:
meta:
metrics:
type: log # Metrics type, for now only `log` type is supported
interval: 5 # Publishing interval in seconds, default value is 5To collect metrics via Prometheus, simply configure metrics like this :
meta :
metrics :
type : prometheusArtipie provides a set of APIs to manage repositories and users. The current APIs are fully documented here.
You may want configure it via environment variables:
SSL_TRUSTALL- trust all unknown certificates
To configure repository config files location, add to the global configuration file /etc/artipie/artipie.yml:
meta:
repo_configs: configsLocation is the storage key relatively to the main storage, or, in file system storage terms, subdirectory where repo configs are located relatively to the storage.
Thanks to FreePik for the logo.