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docs: update prose about image tag/name format
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Signed-off-by: David Karlsson <[email protected]>
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dvdksn committed Oct 17, 2024
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Expand Up @@ -12,38 +12,50 @@ Create a tag TARGET_IMAGE that refers to SOURCE_IMAGE

## Description

A full image name has the following format and components:

`[HOST[:PORT_NUMBER]/]PATH`

- `HOST`: The optional registry hostname specifies where the image is located.
The hostname must comply with standard DNS rules, but may not contain
underscores. If you don't specify a hostname, the command uses Docker's public
registry at `registry-1.docker.io` by default. Note that `docker.io` is the
canonical reference for Docker's public registry.
- `PORT_NUMBER`: If a hostname is present, it may optionally be followed by a
registry port number in the format `:8080`.
- `PATH`: The path consists of slash-separated components. Each
component may contain lowercase letters, digits and separators. A separator is
defined as a period, one or two underscores, or one or more hyphens. A component
may not start or end with a separator. While the
[OCI Distribution Specification](https://github.com/opencontainers/distribution-spec)
supports more than two slash-separated components, most registries only support
two slash-separated components. For Docker's public registry, the path format is
as follows:
- `[NAMESPACE/]REPOSITORY`: The first, optional component is typically a
user's or an organization's namespace. The second, mandatory component is the
repository name. When the namespace is not present, Docker uses `library`
as the default namespace.

After the image name, the optional `TAG` is a custom, human-readable manifest
identifier that's typically a specific version or variant of an image. The tag
must be valid ASCII and can contain lowercase and uppercase letters, digits,
underscores, periods, and hyphens. It can't start with a period or hyphen and
must be no longer than 128 characters. If you don't specify a tag, the command uses `latest` by default.

You can group your images together using names and tags, and then
[push](image_push.md) them to a registry.
A Docker image reference consists of several components that describe where the
image is stored and its identity. These components are:

```text
[HOST[:PORT]/]NAMESPACE/REPOSITORY[:TAG]
```

`HOST`
: Specifies the registry location where the image resides. If omitted, Docker
defaults to Docker Hub (`docker.io`).

`PORT`
: An optional port number for the registry, if necessary (for example, `:5000`).

`NAMESPACE/REPOSITORY`
: The namespace (optional) usually represents a user or organization. The
repository is required and identifies the specific image. If the namespace is
omitted, Docker defaults to `library`, the namespace reserved for Docker
Official Images.

`TAG`
: An optional identifier used to specify a particular version or variant of the
image. If no tag is provided, Docker defaults to `latest`.

### Example image references

`example.com:5000/team/my-app:2.0`

- Host: `example.com`
- Port: `5000`
- Namespace: `team`
- Repository: `my-app`
- Tag: `2.0`

`alpine`

- Host: `docker.io` (default)
- Namespace: `library` (default)
- Repository: `alpine`
- Tag: `latest` (default)

For more information on the structure and rules of image naming, refer to the
[Distribution reference](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/distribution/reference#pkg-overview)
as the canonical definition of the format.

## Examples

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