Container Registries

Validated on 27 Apr 2020 • Last edited on 23 Mar 2026

DigitalOcean now supports up to nine additional registries (for a total maximum of 10) per team if your container registry uses the Professional subscription plan. The storage is shared among the registries. This set of new APIs is backward compatible with /v2/registry. However, if you create more than one registry under a Professional plan, some of the /v2/registry APIs would not work. Hence, it is recommended to use /v2/registries for multiple registries.

Base URL https://api.digitalocean.com

GET List All Container Registries

/v2/registries
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To get information about any container registry in your account, send a GET request to /v2/registries/.

curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.get()

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with the key registry containing information about your registry.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

registries array of oneOf optional
401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "registries": [
    {
      "created_at": "2020-03-21T16:02:37Z",
      "name": "example",
      "region": "fra1",
      "storage_usage_bytes": 29393920,
      "storage_usage_bytes_updated_at": "2020-11-04T21:39:49.530562231Z"
    }
  ]
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

POST Create Container Registry

/v2/registries
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:create

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To create your container registry, send a POST request to /v2/registries.

The name becomes part of the URL for images stored in the registry. For example, if your registry is called example, an image in it will have the URL registry.digitalocean.com/example/image:tag.

Request Body: application/json

name string required
Example: example

A globally unique name for the container registry. Must be lowercase and be composed only of numbers, letters and -, up to a limit of 63 characters.

region string (enum) optional
Example: fra1

Slug of the region where registry data is stored. When not provided, a region will be selected.

subscription_tier_slug string, one of: starter, basic, professional optional
Example: basic

The slug of the subscription tier to sign up for. Valid values can be retrieved using the options endpoint.

Content type application/json
{
  "name": "example",
  "region": "fra1",
  "subscription_tier_slug": "basic"
}
curl -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  -d '{"name": "example", "subscription_tier_slug": "basic", "region": "fra1"}' \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

req = {
  "name": "example",
  "region": "fra1",
  "subscription_tier_slug": "basic"
}

resp = client.registries.create(body=req)

Responses

201

The response will be a JSON object with the key registry containing information about your registry.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

registry object optional
Show child properties
created_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-03-21T16:02:37Z

A time value given in ISO8601 combined date and time format that represents when the registry was created.

name string optional
Example: example

A globally unique name for the container registry. Must be lowercase and be composed only of numbers, letters and -, up to a limit of 63 characters.

region string optional
Example: fra1

Slug of the region where registry data is stored

storage_usage_bytes integer optional read-only
Example: 29393920

The amount of storage used in the registry in bytes.

storage_usage_bytes_updated_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-11-04T21:39:49.530562231Z

The time at which the storage usage was updated. Storage usage is calculated asynchronously, and may not immediately reflect pushes to the registry.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "registry": {
    "created_at": "2020-03-21T16:02:37Z",
    "name": "example",
    "region": "fra1",
    "storage_usage_bytes": 29393920,
    "storage_usage_bytes_updated_at": "2020-11-04T21:39:49.530562231Z"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET List Registry Options (Subscription Tiers and Available Regions)

/v2/registries/options
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

This endpoint serves to provide additional information as to which option values are available when creating a container registry. There are multiple subscription tiers available for container registry. Each tier allows a different number of image repositories to be created in your registry, and has a different amount of storage and transfer included. There are multiple regions available for container registry and controls where your data is stored. To list the available options, send a GET request to /v2/registries/options. This is similar to GET /v2/registry/options.

curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/options"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.get_options()

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with a key called options which contains a key called subscription_tiers listing the available tiers.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

options object optional
Show child properties
available_regions array of string optional
Example: ["nyc3"]
subscription_tiers array of object optional
Show child properties
allow_storage_overage boolean optional
Example: true

A boolean indicating whether the subscription tier supports additional storage above what is included in the base plan at an additional cost per GiB used.

included_bandwidth_bytes integer optional
Example: 5368709120

The amount of outbound data transfer included in the subscription tier in bytes.

included_repositories integer optional
Example: 5

The number of repositories included in the subscription tier. 0 indicates that the subscription tier includes unlimited repositories.

included_storage_bytes integer optional
Example: 5368709120

The amount of storage included in the subscription tier in bytes.

monthly_price_in_cents integer optional
Example: 500

The monthly cost of the subscription tier in cents.

name string optional
Example: Basic

The name of the subscription tier.

slug string optional
Example: basic

The slug identifier of the subscription tier.

storage_overage_price_in_cents integer optional
Example: 2

The price paid in cents per GiB for additional storage beyond what is included in the subscription plan.

eligibility_reasons array of string, one of: OverRepositoryLimit, OverStorageLimit optional
Example: ["OverRepositoryLimit"]

If your account is not eligible to use a certain subscription tier, this will include a list of reasons that prevent you from using the tier.

eligible boolean optional
Example: true

A boolean indicating whether your account it eligible to use a certain subscription tier.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "options": {
    "available_regions": [
      "nyc3",
      "sfo3",
      "ams3",
      "sgp1",
      "fra1"
    ],
    "subscription_tiers": [
      {
        "allow_storage_overage": false,
        "eligibility_reasons": [
          "OverRepositoryLimit"
        ],
        "eligible": false,
        "included_bandwidth_bytes": 524288000,
        "included_repositories": 1,
        "included_storage_bytes": 524288000,
        "monthly_price_in_cents": 0,
        "name": "Starter",
        "slug": "starter"
      },
      {
        "allow_storage_overage": true,
        "eligible": true,
        "included_bandwidth_bytes": 5368709120,
        "included_repositories": 5,
        "included_storage_bytes": 5368709120,
        "monthly_price_in_cents": 500,
        "name": "Basic",
        "slug": "basic"
      },
      {
        "allow_storage_overage": true,
        "eligible": true,
        "included_bandwidth_bytes": 107374182400,
        "included_repositories": 0,
        "included_storage_bytes": 107374182400,
        "monthly_price_in_cents": 2000,
        "name": "Professional",
        "slug": "professional"
      }
    ]
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET Get Subscription Information

/v2/registries/subscription
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

A subscription is automatically created when you configure your container registry. To get information about your subscription, send a GET request to /v2/registries/subscription. It is similar to GET /v2/registry/subscription.

curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/subscription"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.get_subscription()

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with a key called subscription containing information about your subscription.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

subscription object optional
Show child properties
created_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-01-23T21:19:12Z

The time at which the subscription was created.

tier object optional
Show child properties
allow_storage_overage boolean optional
Example: true

A boolean indicating whether the subscription tier supports additional storage above what is included in the base plan at an additional cost per GiB used.

included_bandwidth_bytes integer optional
Example: 5368709120

The amount of outbound data transfer included in the subscription tier in bytes.

included_repositories integer optional
Example: 5

The number of repositories included in the subscription tier. 0 indicates that the subscription tier includes unlimited repositories.

included_storage_bytes integer optional
Example: 5368709120

The amount of storage included in the subscription tier in bytes.

monthly_price_in_cents integer optional
Example: 500

The monthly cost of the subscription tier in cents.

name string optional
Example: Basic

The name of the subscription tier.

slug string optional
Example: basic

The slug identifier of the subscription tier.

storage_overage_price_in_cents integer optional
Example: 2

The price paid in cents per GiB for additional storage beyond what is included in the subscription plan.

updated_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-11-05T15:53:24Z

The time at which the subscription was last updated.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "subscription": {
    "created_at": "2020-01-23T21:19:12Z",
    "tier": {
      "allow_storage_overage": true,
      "included_bandwidth_bytes": 5368709120,
      "included_repositories": 5,
      "included_storage_bytes": 5368709120,
      "monthly_price_in_cents": 500,
      "name": "Basic",
      "slug": "basic",
      "storage_overage_price_in_cents": 2
    },
    "updated_at": "2020-11-05T15:53:24Z"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

POST Update Subscription Tier

/v2/registries/subscription
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:update

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

After creating your registry, you can switch to a different subscription tier to better suit your needs. To do this, send a POST request to /v2/registries/subscription. It is similar to POST /v2/registry/subscription.

Request Body: application/json

tier_slug string, one of: starter, basic, professional optional
Example: basic

The slug of the subscription tier to sign up for.

Content type application/json
{
  "tier_slug": "basic"
}
curl -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  -d '{"tier_slug": "professional"}' \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/subscription"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

req = {
  "tier_slug": "basic"
}

resp = client.registries.update_subscription(body=req)

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with a key called subscription containing information about your subscription.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

subscription object optional
Show child properties
created_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-01-23T21:19:12Z

The time at which the subscription was created.

tier object optional
Show child properties
allow_storage_overage boolean optional
Example: true

A boolean indicating whether the subscription tier supports additional storage above what is included in the base plan at an additional cost per GiB used.

included_bandwidth_bytes integer optional
Example: 5368709120

The amount of outbound data transfer included in the subscription tier in bytes.

included_repositories integer optional
Example: 5

The number of repositories included in the subscription tier. 0 indicates that the subscription tier includes unlimited repositories.

included_storage_bytes integer optional
Example: 5368709120

The amount of storage included in the subscription tier in bytes.

monthly_price_in_cents integer optional
Example: 500

The monthly cost of the subscription tier in cents.

name string optional
Example: Basic

The name of the subscription tier.

slug string optional
Example: basic

The slug identifier of the subscription tier.

storage_overage_price_in_cents integer optional
Example: 2

The price paid in cents per GiB for additional storage beyond what is included in the subscription plan.

updated_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-11-05T15:53:24Z

The time at which the subscription was last updated.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "subscription": {
    "created_at": "2020-01-23T21:19:12Z",
    "tier": {
      "allow_storage_overage": true,
      "included_bandwidth_bytes": 5368709120,
      "included_repositories": 5,
      "included_storage_bytes": 5368709120,
      "monthly_price_in_cents": 500,
      "name": "Basic",
      "slug": "basic",
      "storage_overage_price_in_cents": 2
    },
    "updated_at": "2020-11-05T15:53:24Z"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

POST Validate a Container Registry Name

/v2/registries/validate-name
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:create

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To validate that a container registry name is available for use, send a POST request to /v2/registries/validate-name.

If the name is both formatted correctly and available, the response code will be 204 and contain no body. If the name is already in use, the response will be a 409 Conflict.

It is similar to /v2/registry/validate-name.

Request Body: application/json

name string required
Example: example

A globally unique name for the container registry. Must be lowercase and be composed only of numbers, letters and -, up to a limit of 63 characters.

Content type application/json
{
  "name": "example"
}
curl -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  -d '{"name": "example"}' \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/validate-name"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

req = {
  "name": "example"
}

resp = client.registries.validate_name(body=req)

Responses

204

The action was successful and the response body is empty.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

409

The request could not be completed due to a conflict.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "conflict",
  "message": "The request could not be completed due to a conflict."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET Get a Container Registry By Name

/v2/registries/{registry_name}
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To get information about any container registry in your account, send a GET request to /v2/registries/{registry_name}.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.get(registry_name="example")

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with the key registry containing information about your registry.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

registry object optional
Show child properties
created_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-03-21T16:02:37Z

A time value given in ISO8601 combined date and time format that represents when the registry was created.

name string optional
Example: example

A globally unique name for the container registry. Must be lowercase and be composed only of numbers, letters and -, up to a limit of 63 characters.

region string optional
Example: fra1

Slug of the region where registry data is stored

storage_usage_bytes integer optional read-only
Example: 29393920

The amount of storage used in the registry in bytes.

storage_usage_bytes_updated_at string (date-time) optional read-only
Example: 2020-11-04T21:39:49.530562231Z

The time at which the storage usage was updated. Storage usage is calculated asynchronously, and may not immediately reflect pushes to the registry.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "registry": {
    "created_at": "2020-03-21T16:02:37Z",
    "name": "example",
    "region": "fra1",
    "storage_usage_bytes": 29393920,
    "storage_usage_bytes_updated_at": "2020-11-04T21:39:49.530562231Z"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

DELETE Delete Container Registry By Name

/v2/registries/{registry_name}
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:delete

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To delete your container registry, destroying all container image data stored in it, send a DELETE request to /v2/registries/{registry_name}.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

curl -X DELETE \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.delete(registry_name="example")

Responses

204

The action was successful and the response body is empty.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET Get Docker Credentials By Registry Name

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/docker-credentials
Authorizations: bearer_auth (2 scopes)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read registry:update

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

In order to access your container registry with the Docker client or from a Kubernetes cluster, you will need to configure authentication. The necessary JSON configuration can be retrieved by sending a GET request to /v2/registries/{registry_name}/docker-credentials.

The response will be in the format of a Docker config.json file. To use the config in your Kubernetes cluster, create a Secret with:

kubectl create secret generic docr \
  --from-file=.dockerconfigjson=config.json \
  --type=kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson

By default, the returned credentials have read-only access to your registry and cannot be used to push images. This is appropriate for most Kubernetes clusters. To retrieve read/write credentials, suitable for use with the Docker client or in a CI system, read_write may be provided as query parameter. For example: /v2/registries/{registry_name}/docker-credentials?read_write=true

By default, the returned credentials will not expire. To retrieve credentials with an expiry set, expiry_seconds may be provided as a query parameter. For example: /v2/registries/{registry_name}/docker-credentials?expiry_seconds=3600 will return credentials that expire after one hour.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/docker-credentials"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.get_docker_credentials(registry_name="example")

Responses

200

A Docker config.json file for the container registry.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

auths object optional
Show child properties
registry.digitalocean.com object optional
Show child properties
auth string optional
Example: YjdkMDNhNjk0N2IyMTdlZmI2ZjNlYzNiZDM1MDQ1ODI6YjdkMDNhNjk0N2IyMTdlZmI2ZjNlYzNiZDM1MDQ1ODIK

A base64 encoded string containing credentials for the container registry.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "auths": {
    "registry.digitalocean.com": {
      "auth": "YjdkMDNhNjk0N2IyMTdlZmI2ZjNlYzNiZDM1MDQ1ODI6YjdkMDNhNjk0N2IyMTdlZmI2ZjNlYzNiZDM1MDQ1ODIK"
    }
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET Get Active Garbage Collection

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/garbage-collection
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To get information about the currently-active garbage collection for a registry, send a GET request to /v2/registry/$REGISTRY_NAME/garbage-collection.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/garbage-collection"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.get_garbage_collection(registry_name="example")

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with a key of garbage_collection. This will be a json object with attributes representing the currently-active garbage collection.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

garbage_collection object optional
Show child properties
blobs_deleted integer optional
Example: 42

The number of blobs deleted as a result of this garbage collection.

created_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:24Z

The time the garbage collection was created.

freed_bytes integer optional
Example: 667

The number of bytes freed as a result of this garbage collection.

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

status string (enum) optional
Example: requested

The current status of this garbage collection.

updated_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:44Z

The time the garbage collection was last updated.

uuid string optional
Example: eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8

A string specifying the UUID of the garbage collection.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "garbage_collection": {
    "blobs_deleted": 42,
    "created_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:24Z",
    "freed_bytes": 667,
    "registry_name": "example",
    "status": "requested",
    "updated_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:44Z",
    "uuid": "eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

POST Start Garbage Collection

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/garbage-collection
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:update

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

Garbage collection enables users to clear out unreferenced blobs (layer & manifest data) after deleting one or more manifests from a repository. If there are no unreferenced blobs resulting from the deletion of one or more manifests, garbage collection is effectively a noop. See here for more information about how and why you should clean up your container registry periodically.

To request a garbage collection run on your registry, send a POST request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/garbage-collection. This will initiate the following sequence of events on your registry.

  • Set the registry to read-only mode, meaning no further write-scoped JWTs will be issued to registry clients. Existing write-scoped JWTs will continue to work until they expire which can take up to 15 minutes.
  • Wait until all existing write-scoped JWTs have expired.
  • Scan all registry manifests to determine which blobs are unreferenced.
  • Delete all unreferenced blobs from the registry.
  • Record the number of blobs deleted and bytes freed, mark the garbage collection status as success.
  • Remove the read-only mode restriction from the registry, meaning write-scoped JWTs will once again be issued to registry clients.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

curl -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/garbage-collection"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.run_garbage_collection(registry_name="example")

Responses

201

The response will be a JSON object with a key of garbage_collection. This will be a json object with attributes representing the currently-active garbage collection.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

garbage_collection object optional
Show child properties
blobs_deleted integer optional
Example: 42

The number of blobs deleted as a result of this garbage collection.

created_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:24Z

The time the garbage collection was created.

freed_bytes integer optional
Example: 667

The number of bytes freed as a result of this garbage collection.

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

status string (enum) optional
Example: requested

The current status of this garbage collection.

updated_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:44Z

The time the garbage collection was last updated.

uuid string optional
Example: eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8

A string specifying the UUID of the garbage collection.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "garbage_collection": {
    "blobs_deleted": 42,
    "created_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:24Z",
    "freed_bytes": 667,
    "registry_name": "example",
    "status": "requested",
    "updated_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:44Z",
    "uuid": "eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

PUT Update Garbage Collection

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/garbage-collection/{garbage_collection_uuid}
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:update

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To cancel the currently-active garbage collection for a registry, send a PUT request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/garbage-collection/$GC_UUID and specify one or more of the attributes below. It is similar to PUT /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/garbage-collection/$GC_UUID.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

garbage_collection_uuid string required
Example: eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8

The UUID of a garbage collection run.

Request Body: application/json

cancel boolean optional
Example: true

A boolean value indicating that the garbage collection should be cancelled.

Content type application/json
{
  "cancel": true
}
curl -X PUT \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/garbage-collection/example-gc-uuid"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.run_garbage_collection(registry_name="example")

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with a key of garbage_collection. This will be a json object with attributes representing the currently-active garbage collection.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

garbage_collection object optional
Show child properties
blobs_deleted integer optional
Example: 42

The number of blobs deleted as a result of this garbage collection.

created_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:24Z

The time the garbage collection was created.

freed_bytes integer optional
Example: 667

The number of bytes freed as a result of this garbage collection.

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

status string (enum) optional
Example: requested

The current status of this garbage collection.

updated_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:44Z

The time the garbage collection was last updated.

uuid string optional
Example: eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8

A string specifying the UUID of the garbage collection.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "garbage_collection": {
    "blobs_deleted": 42,
    "created_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:24Z",
    "freed_bytes": 667,
    "registry_name": "example",
    "status": "requested",
    "updated_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:44Z",
    "uuid": "eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET List Garbage Collections

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/garbage-collections
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To get information about past garbage collections for a registry, send a GET request to /v2/registry/$REGISTRY_NAME/garbage-collections.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

Query Parameters

per_page integer 1 – 200 optional
Example: 2

Number of items returned per page

Default: 20
page integer >= 1 optional
Example: 1

Which 'page' of paginated results to return.

Default: 1
curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/garbage-collections"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.list_garbage_collections(registry_name="example")

Responses

200

The response will be a JSON object with a key of garbage_collections. This will be set to an array containing objects representing each past garbage collection. Each will contain the standard Garbage Collection attributes.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

garbage_collections array of object optional
Show child properties
blobs_deleted integer optional
Example: 42

The number of blobs deleted as a result of this garbage collection.

created_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:24Z

The time the garbage collection was created.

freed_bytes integer optional
Example: 667

The number of bytes freed as a result of this garbage collection.

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

status string (enum) optional
Example: requested

The current status of this garbage collection.

updated_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-10-30T21:03:44Z

The time the garbage collection was last updated.

uuid string optional
Example: eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8

A string specifying the UUID of the garbage collection.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "garbage_collections": [
    {
      "blobs_deleted": 42,
      "created_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:24.000Z",
      "freed_bytes": 667,
      "registry_name": "example",
      "status": "requested",
      "updated_at": "2020-10-30T21:03:44.000Z",
      "uuid": "eff0feee-49c7-4e8f-ba5c-a320c109c8a8"
    }
  ],
  "meta": {
    "total": 1
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

DELETE Delete Container Registry Repository

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/repositories/{repository_name}
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:delete

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To delete a container repository including all of its tags, send a DELETE request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME.

A successful request will receive a 204 status code with no body in response. This indicates that the request was processed successfully.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

repository_name string required
Example: repo-1

The name of a container registry repository. If the name contains / characters, they must be URL-encoded, e.g. %2F.

curl -X DELETE \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/repositories/repo-1"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.delete_repository(registry_name="example", repository_name="repo-1")

Responses

204

The action was successful and the response body is empty.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET List All Container Registry Repository Manifests

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/repositories/{repository_name}/digests
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To list all manifests in your container registry repository, send a GET request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/digests.

Note that if your repository name contains / characters, it must be URL-encoded in the request URL. For example, to list manifests for registry.digitalocean.com/example/my/repo, the path would be /v2/registry/example/repositories/my%2Frepo/digests.

It is similar to /v2/registry/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/digests.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

repository_name string required
Example: repo-1

The name of a container registry repository. If the name contains / characters, they must be URL-encoded, e.g. %2F.

Query Parameters

per_page integer 1 – 200 optional
Example: 2

Number of items returned per page

Default: 20
page integer >= 1 optional
Example: 1

Which 'page' of paginated results to return.

Default: 1
curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/repositories/repo-1/digests"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.list_repository_manifests(registry_name="example", repository_name="repo01")

Responses

200

The response body will be a JSON object with a key of manifests. This will be set to an array containing objects each representing a manifest.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

manifests array of object optional
Show child properties
blobs array of object optional

All blobs associated with this manifest

Show child properties
compressed_size_bytes integer optional
Example: 2803255

The compressed size of the blob in bytes.

digest string optional
Example: sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221

The digest of the blob

compressed_size_bytes integer optional
Example: 2803255

The compressed size of the manifest in bytes.

digest string optional
Example: sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221

The manifest digest

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

repository string optional
Example: repo-1

The name of the repository.

size_bytes integer optional
Example: 5861888

The uncompressed size of the manifest in bytes (this size is calculated asynchronously so it may not be immediately available).

tags array of string optional
Example: ["latest","v1","v2"]

All tags associated with this manifest

updated_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-04-09T23:54:25Z

The time the manifest was last updated.

links object optional
Show child properties
pages anyOf optional
One of:
Forward Links
last string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=2

URI of the last page of the results.

next string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=2

URI of the next page of the results.

Backward Links
first string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=1

URI of the first page of the results.

prev string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=1

URI of the previous page of the results.

meta object required
401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "links": {
    "pages": {
      "first": "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registry/example/repositories/repo-1/digests?page=1\u0026per_page=1",
      "last": "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registry/example/repositories/repo-1/digests?page=3\u0026per_page=1",
      "next": "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registry/example/repositories/repo-1/digests?page=3\u0026per_page=1",
      "prev": "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registry/example/repositories/repo-1/digests?page=1\u0026per_page=1"
    }
  },
  "manifests": [
    {
      "blobs": [
        {
          "compressed_size_bytes": 1471,
          "digest": "sha256:14119a10abf4669e8cdbdff324a9f9605d99697215a0d21c360fe8dfa8471bab"
        },
        {
          "compressed_size_byte": 2814446,
          "digest": "sha256:a0d0a0d46f8b52473982a3c466318f479767577551a53ffc9074c9fa7035982e"
        },
        {
          "compressed_size_bytes": 528,
          "digest": "sha256:69704ef328d05a9f806b6b8502915e6a0a4faa4d72018dc42343f511490daf8a"
        }
      ],
      "compressed_size_bytes": 1972332,
      "digest": "sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221",
      "registry_name": "example",
      "repository": "repo-1",
      "size_bytes": 2816445,
      "tags": [
        "v1",
        "v2"
      ],
      "updated_at": "2021-04-09T23:54:25Z"
    }
  ],
  "meta": {
    "total": 3
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

DELETE Delete Container Registry Repository Manifest

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/repositories/{repository_name}/digests/{manifest_digest}
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:delete

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To delete a container repository manifest by digest in one of your registries, send a DELETE request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/digests/$MANIFEST_DIGEST.

Note that if your repository name contains / characters, it must be URL-encoded in the request URL. For example, to delete registry.digitalocean.com/example/my/repo@sha256:abcd, the path would be /v2/registry/example/repositories/my%2Frepo/digests/sha256:abcd.

A successful request will receive a 204 status code with no body in response. This indicates that the request was processed successfully.

It is similar to DELETE /v2/registry/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/digests/$MANIFEST_DIGEST.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

repository_name string required
Example: repo-1

The name of a container registry repository. If the name contains / characters, they must be URL-encoded, e.g. %2F.

manifest_digest string required
Example: sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221

The manifest digest of a container registry repository tag.

curl -X DELETE \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/repositories/repo-1/digests/sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.delete_repository_manifest(registry_name="example", repository_name="repo-1", manifest_digest="sha256:cb8a924afd")

Responses

204

The action was successful and the response body is empty.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET List All Container Registry Repository Tags

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/repositories/{repository_name}/tags
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To list all tags in one of your container registry's repository, send a GET request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/tags.

Note that if your repository name contains / characters, it must be URL-encoded in the request URL. For example, to list tags for registry.digitalocean.com/example/my/repo, the path would be /v2/registry/example/repositories/my%2Frepo/tags.

It is similar to GET /v2/registry/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/tags.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

repository_name string required
Example: repo-1

The name of a container registry repository. If the name contains / characters, they must be URL-encoded, e.g. %2F.

Query Parameters

per_page integer 1 – 200 optional
Example: 2

Number of items returned per page

Default: 20
page integer >= 1 optional
Example: 1

Which 'page' of paginated results to return.

Default: 1
curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/repositories/repo-1/tags"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.list_repository_tags(registry_name="example", repository_name="repo01")

Responses

200

The response body will be a JSON object with a key of tags. This will be set to an array containing objects each representing a tag.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

tags array of object optional
Show child properties
compressed_size_bytes integer optional
Example: 2803255

The compressed size of the tag in bytes.

manifest_digest string optional
Example: sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221

The digest of the manifest associated with the tag.

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

repository string optional
Example: repo-1

The name of the repository.

size_bytes integer optional
Example: 5861888

The uncompressed size of the tag in bytes (this size is calculated asynchronously so it may not be immediately available).

tag string optional
Example: latest

The name of the tag.

updated_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-04-09T23:54:25Z

The time the tag was last updated.

links object optional
Show child properties
pages anyOf optional
One of:
Forward Links
last string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=2

URI of the last page of the results.

next string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=2

URI of the next page of the results.

Backward Links
first string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=1

URI of the first page of the results.

prev string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=1

URI of the previous page of the results.

meta object required
401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "meta": {
    "total": 1
  },
  "tags": [
    {
      "compressed_size_bytes": 2803255,
      "manifest_digest": "sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221",
      "registry_name": "example",
      "repository": "repo-1",
      "size_bytes": 5861888,
      "tag": "latest",
      "updated_at": "2020-04-09T23:54:25Z"
    }
  ]
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

DELETE Delete Container Registry Repository Tag

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/repositories/{repository_name}/tags/{repository_tag}
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:delete

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To delete a container repository tag in on of our container registries, send a DELETE request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/tags/$TAG.

Note that if your repository name contains / characters, it must be URL-encoded in the request URL. For example, to delete registry.digitalocean.com/example/my/repo:mytag, the path would be /v2/registry/example/repositories/my%2Frepo/tags/mytag.

A successful request will receive a 204 status code with no body in response. This indicates that the request was processed successfully. It is similar to DELETE /v2/registry/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositories/$REPOSITORY_NAME/tags/$TAG.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

repository_name string required
Example: repo-1

The name of a container registry repository. If the name contains / characters, they must be URL-encoded, e.g. %2F.

repository_tag string required
Example: 06a447a

The name of a container registry repository tag.

curl -X DELETE \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/repositories/repo-1/tags/mytag"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.delete_repository_tag(registry_name="example", repository_name="repo-1", repository_tag="06a447a")

Responses

204

The action was successful and the response body is empty.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

GET List All Container Registry Repositories (V2)

/v2/registries/{registry_name}/repositoriesV2
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: registry:read

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To list all repositories in your container registry, send a GET request to /v2/registries/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositoriesV2. It is similar to GET /v2/registry/$REGISTRY_NAME/repositoriesV2.

Path Parameters

registry_name string required
Example: example

The name of a container registry.

Query Parameters

per_page integer 1 – 200 optional
Example: 2

Number of items returned per page

Default: 20
page integer >= 1 optional
Example: 1

Which 'page' of paginated results to return. Ignored when 'page_token' is provided.

Default: 1
page_token string optional
Example: eyJUb2tlbiI6IkNnZGpiMjlz

Token to retrieve of the next or previous set of results more quickly than using 'page'.

curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/repositoriesV2?page_size=1"
curl -X GET \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registries/example/repositoriesV2?page=2&page_token=JPZmZzZXQiOjB9&per_page=1"
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

resp = client.registries.list_repositories_v2(registry_name="example")

Responses

200

The response body will be a JSON object with a key of repositories. This will be set to an array containing objects each representing a repository.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

repositories array of object optional
Show child properties
latest_manifest object optional
Show child properties
blobs array of object optional

All blobs associated with this manifest

Show child properties
compressed_size_bytes integer optional
Example: 2803255

The compressed size of the blob in bytes.

digest string optional
Example: sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221

The digest of the blob

compressed_size_bytes integer optional
Example: 2803255

The compressed size of the manifest in bytes.

digest string optional
Example: sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221

The manifest digest

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

repository string optional
Example: repo-1

The name of the repository.

size_bytes integer optional
Example: 5861888

The uncompressed size of the manifest in bytes (this size is calculated asynchronously so it may not be immediately available).

tags array of string optional
Example: ["latest","v1","v2"]

All tags associated with this manifest

updated_at string (date-time) optional
Example: 2020-04-09T23:54:25Z

The time the manifest was last updated.

manifest_count integer optional
Example: 1

The number of manifests in the repository.

name string optional
Example: repo-1

The name of the repository.

registry_name string optional
Example: example

The name of the container registry.

tag_count integer optional
Example: 1

The number of tags in the repository.

links object optional
Show child properties
pages anyOf optional
One of:
Forward Links
last string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=2

URI of the last page of the results.

next string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=2

URI of the next page of the results.

Backward Links
first string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=1

URI of the first page of the results.

prev string optional
Example: https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/images?page=1

URI of the previous page of the results.

meta object required
400

There was an error parsing the request body.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "links": {
    "pages": {
      "last": "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registry/example/repositoriesV2?page=5\u0026per_page=1",
      "next": "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/registry/example/repositoriesV2?page=2\u0026page_token=JPZmZzZXQiOjB9\u0026per_page=1"
    }
  },
  "meta": {
    "total": 5
  },
  "repositories": [
    {
      "latest_manifest": {
        "blobs": [
          {
            "compressed_size_bytes": 1471,
            "digest": "sha256:14119a10abf4669e8cdbdff324a9f9605d99697215a0d21c360fe8dfa8471bab"
          },
          {
            "compressed_size_byte": 2814446,
            "digest": "sha256:a0d0a0d46f8b52473982a3c466318f479767577551a53ffc9074c9fa7035982e"
          },
          {
            "compressed_size_bytes": 528,
            "digest": "sha256:69704ef328d05a9f806b6b8502915e6a0a4faa4d72018dc42343f511490daf8a"
          }
        ],
        "compressed_size_bytes": 1972332,
        "digest": "sha256:cb8a924afdf0229ef7515d9e5b3024e23b3eb03ddbba287f4a19c6ac90b8d221",
        "registry_name": "example",
        "repository": "repo-1",
        "size_bytes": 2816445,
        "tags": [
          "v1",
          "v2"
        ],
        "updated_at": "2021-04-09T23:54:25Z"
      },
      "manifest_count": 82,
      "name": "repo-1",
      "registry_name": "example",
      "tag_count": 57
    }
  ]
}
{
  "id": "bad_request",
  "message": "error parsing request body",
  "request_id": "4851a473-1621-42ea-b2f9-5071c0ea8414"
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

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