Docker Hub events, straight into Notion

Every image push — posted to Notion the moment it happens. No Notion app to install, no monthly automation subscription.

The gap this fills: Docker Hub doesn't ship an official Notion app. If you want image push to show up in Notion the moment it happens, the usual options are a paid third-party bot, custom code, or routing everything through a $20–50/month automation platform just to move one webhook from one URL to another. ZestyGlue does exactly that one thing for $9/month.

What it looks like

ZestyGlue
Docker Hub — Image Pushed
myorg/myapp:v1.4.0 pushed by myorg

A real Docker Hub event, shown as ZestyGlue formats it for Notion.

Setup — about two minutes

  1. Create the connector. In ZestyGlue, start a new Docker Hub → Notion connector. You'll get a unique webhook URL right away.
  2. Point Docker Hub at it. In your repository, go to Webhooks, and paste in your ZestyGlue webhook URL. That's the only setting — Docker Hub's webhooks have no secret to configure.
  3. Point Notion at ZestyGlue. Create an integration at notion.so/my-integrations, share your target database with it, then copy the database ID from its URL and enter both into ZestyGlue. The database needs a “Name” title property.
Tip: Docker Hub's webhook fires on every push to the repository, including automated CI pushes — if you only want to know about release tags, consider a second repository just for tagged releases.

Events you can forward

image pushed

Questions

Does this work for private repositories?

Yes — Docker Hub's webhook feature works the same for private and public repositories, as long as you have admin access to configure it.

Will this fire for automated builds, not just manual pushes?

Yes, any push triggers the webhook, whether it came from docker push, a CI pipeline, or Docker Hub's own autobuild feature.

Do I need a paid Notion plan?

No, Notion's free plan supports integrations and the API calls ZestyGlue makes to create a new row.

What happens if my ZestyGlue subscription lapses?

Events are silently dropped rather than causing errors on Docker Hub's side — Docker Hub never sees a failure response, so it won't retry aggressively or flag your webhook as broken. Your dashboard will simply stop showing new events until you resubscribe.

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