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Request trialZITADEL is an open-source identity and access management (IAM) system that simplifies user authentication and authorization for applications.
Chainguard Containers are regularly-updated, secure-by-default container images.
For those with access, this container image is available on cgr.dev
:
Be sure to replace the ORGANIZATION
placeholder with the name used for your organization's private repository within the Chainguard Registry.
The Chainguard zitadel
container image is a drop-in replacement for the upstream zitadel image. This image is designed to be a minimal, secure alternative that runs as a non-root user. Switching to this image should not require any changes to your existing deployment configuration.
The zitadel
image can swapped out to replace the official zitadel image with Helm, docker compose, or other deployment methods.
To deploy with helm, update your helm values.yaml file and point the image to the Chainguard image. For example, here is a portion of values.yaml with updated image repository and tag:
For more information on configuring the Helm values for Zitadel, refer to the official Helm chart's repository here.
If deploying with Docker Compose following the official instructions here, replace the upstream image with the Chainguard image in docker-compose.yaml, like so:
Chainguard Containers are minimal container images that are secure by default.
In many cases, the Chainguard Containers tagged as :latest
contain only an open-source application and its runtime dependencies. These minimal container images typically do not contain a shell or package manager. Chainguard Containers are built with Wolfi, our Linux undistro designed to produce container images that meet the requirements of a more secure software supply chain.
The main features of Chainguard Containers include:
For cases where you need container images with shells and package managers to build or debug, most Chainguard Containers come paired with a -dev
variant.
Although the -dev
container image variants have similar security features as their more minimal versions, they feature additional software that is typically not necessary in production environments. We recommend using multi-stage builds to leverage the -dev
variants, copying application artifacts into a final minimal container that offers a reduced attack surface that won’t allow package installations or logins.
To better understand how to work with Chainguard Containers, please visit Chainguard Academy and Chainguard Courses.
In addition to Containers, Chainguard offers VMs and Libraries. Contact Chainguard to access additional products.
This software listing is packaged by Chainguard. The trademarks set forth in this offering are owned by their respective companies, and use of them does not imply any affiliation, sponsorship, or endorsement by such companies.
Chainguard container images contain software packages that are direct or transitive dependencies. The following licenses were found in the "latest" tag of this image:
AGPL-3.0
LGPL-2.1-or-later
MIT
MPL-2.0
For a complete list of licenses, please refer to this Image's SBOM.
Software license agreement