* **ProjectAdmin**: When creating a new project, you will be assigned the "ProjectAdmin" role to the project. Besides read-write privileges, the "ProjectAdmin" also has some management privileges, such as adding and removing members.
* **SysAdmin**: "SysAdmin" has the most privileges. In addition to the privileges mentioned above, "SysAdmin" can also list all projects, set an ordinary user as administrator and delete users. The public project "library" is also owned by the administrator.
* **Anonymous**: When a user is not logged in, the user is considered as an "Anonymous" user. An anonymous user has no access to private projects and has read-only access to public projects.
A user can register himself/herself in Harbor in this mode. To disable user self-registration, refer to the [installation guide](installation_guide.md) for initial configuration, or disable this feature in [Administrator Options](#administrator-options). When self-registration is disabled, the system administrator can add users into Harbor.
When registering or adding a new user, the username and email must be unique in the Harbor system. The password must contain at least 8 characters with 1 lowercase letter, 1 uppercase letter and 1 numeric character.
When you forgot your password, you can follow the below steps to reset the password:
When an LDAP/AD user logs in by *username* and *password*, Harbor binds to the LDAP/AD server with the **"LDAP Search DN"** and **"LDAP Search Password"** described in [installation guide](installation_guide.md). If it succeeded, Harbor looks up the user under the LDAP entry **"LDAP Base DN"** including substree. The attribute (such as uid, cn) specified by **"LDAP UID"** is used to match a user with the *username*. If a match is found, the user's *password* is verified by a bind request to the LDAP/AD server.
Self-registration, changing password and resetting password are not supported under LDAP/AD authentication mode because the users are managed by LDAP or AD.
A project in Harbor contains all repositories of an application. No images can be pushed to Harbor before the project is created. RBAC is applied to a project. There are two types of projects in Harbor:
The function is project-oriented, and once the system administrator set a rule to one project, all repositories under the project will be replicated to the remote registry. Each repository will start a job to run. If the project does not exist on the remote registry, a new project will be created automatically, but if it already exists and the user configured in policy has no write privilege to it, the process will fail. When a new repository is pushed to this project or an existing repository is deleted from this project, the same operation will also be replicated to the destination. The member information will not be replicated.
There may be a bit of delay during replication according to the situation of the network. If replication job fails due to the network issue, the job will be re-scheduled a few minutes later.
Start replication by creating a rule. Click "Add Replication Rule" on the "Replication" tab, fill in the necessary fields, if there is no endpoint in the list, you need to create one, and then click "OK", a rule for this project will be created. If "Enable" is chosen, the project will be replicated to the remote immediately.
You can enable, disable or delete a rule in the rule list view. Only rules which are disabled can be edited and only rules which are disabled and have no running jobs can be deleted. If a rule is disabled, the running jobs under it will be stopped.
Entering a keyword in the search field at the top lists all matching projects and repositories. The search result includes both public and private repositories you have access to.
Administrator can add "Administrator" role to an ordinary user by click button on the left and select "Set as Administrator". To delete a user, select "Delete".
You can change authentication mode between **Database**(default) and **LDAP** before any user is added, when there is at least one user(besides admin) in Harbor, you cannot change the authentication mode.
![browse project](img/new_auth.png)
When using LDAP mode, user's self-registration is disabled. The parameters of LDAP server must be filled in. For more information, refer to [User account](#user-account).
![browse project](img/ldap_auth.png)
### Managing project creation
Use the **Project Creation** drop-down menu to set which users can create projects. Select **Everyone** to allow all users to create projects. Select **Admin Only** to allow only users with the Administrator role to create projects.
![browse project](img/new_proj_create.png)
### Managing self-registration
You can manage whether a user can sign up for a new account. This option is not available if you use LDAP authentication.
![browse project](img/new_self_reg.png)
### Managing verification of remote certificate
You can choose whether to verify remote endpoint's certification. You may need to disable certificate verification if the remote registry uses a self-signed or an untrusted certificate.
![browse project](img/new_remote_cert.png)
### Managing email settings
You can change Harbor's email settings, the mail server is used to send out responses to users who request to reset their password.
Harbor supports HTTP by default and Docker client tries to connect to Harbor using HTTPS first, so if you encounter an error as below when you pull or push images, you need to add '--insecure-registry' option to ```/etc/default/docker``` (ubuntu) or ```/etc/sysconfig/docker``` (centos) and restart Docker:
```Error response from daemon: Get https://myregistrydomain.com/v1/users/: dial tcp myregistrydomain.com:443 getsockopt: connection refused.```
If this private registry supports only HTTP or HTTPS with an unknown CA certificate, please add
`--insecure-registry myregistrydomain.com` to the daemon's start up arguments.
In the case of HTTPS, if you have access to the registry's CA certificate, simply place the CA certificate at /etc/docker/certs.d/myregistrydomain.com/ca.crt .
**Note: Replace "10.117.169.182" with the IP address or domain name of your Harbor node. You cannot pull a unsigned image if you enabled content trust.**
**CAUTION: If both tag A and tag B refer to the same image, after deleting tag A, B will also get deleted. if you enabled content trust, you need to use notary command line tool to delete the tag's signature before you delete an image.**
Next, delete the actual files of the repository using the registry's garbage collection(GC). Make sure that no one is pushing images or Harbor is not running at all before you perform a GC. If someone were pushing an image while GC is running, there is a risk that the image's layers will be mistakenly deleted which results in a corrupted image. So before running GC, a preferred approach is to stop Harbor first.
If you want to enable content trust to ensure that images are signed, please set two environment variables in the command line before pushing or pulling any image:
If you are using a self-signed cert, make sure to copy the CA cert into ```/etc/docker/certs.d/10.117.169.182``` and ```$HOME/.docker/tls/10.117.169.182:4443/```. When an image is signed, it is indicated in the Web UI.
**Note: Replace "10.117.169.182" with the IP address or domain name of your Harbor node. In order to use content trust, HTTPS must be enabled in Harbor.**
When an image is signed, it has a tick shown in UI; otherwise, a cross sign(X) is displayed instead.