158 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
158 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: none
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group: unassigned
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#designated-technical-writers
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---
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# How to restart GitLab
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Depending on how you installed GitLab, there are different methods to restart
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its service(s).
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If you want the TL;DR versions, jump to:
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- [Omnibus GitLab restart](#omnibus-gitlab-restart)
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- [Omnibus GitLab reconfigure](#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure)
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- [Source installation restart](#installations-from-source)
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- [Helm chart installation restart](#helm-chart-installations)
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## Omnibus installations
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If you have used the [Omnibus packages](https://about.gitlab.com/install/) to install GitLab, then
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you should already have `gitlab-ctl` in your `PATH`.
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`gitlab-ctl` interacts with the Omnibus packages and can be used to restart the
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GitLab Rails application (Puma) as well as the other components, like:
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- GitLab Workhorse
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- Sidekiq
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- PostgreSQL (if you are using the bundled one)
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- NGINX (if you are using the bundled one)
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- Redis (if you are using the bundled one)
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- [Mailroom](reply_by_email.md)
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- Logrotate
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### Omnibus GitLab restart
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There may be times in the documentation where you will be asked to _restart_
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GitLab. In that case, you need to run the following command:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl restart
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```
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The output should be similar to this:
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```plaintext
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ok: run: gitlab-workhorse: (pid 11291) 1s
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ok: run: logrotate: (pid 11299) 0s
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ok: run: mailroom: (pid 11306) 0s
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ok: run: nginx: (pid 11309) 0s
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ok: run: postgresql: (pid 11316) 1s
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ok: run: redis: (pid 11325) 0s
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ok: run: sidekiq: (pid 11331) 1s
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ok: run: puma: (pid 11338) 0s
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```
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To restart a component separately, you can append its service name to the
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`restart` command. For example, to restart **only** NGINX you would run:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl restart nginx
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```
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To check the status of GitLab services, run:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl status
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```
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Notice that all services say `ok: run`.
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Sometimes, components time out (look for `timeout` in the logs) during the
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restart and sometimes they get stuck.
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In that case, you can use `gitlab-ctl kill <service>` to send the `SIGKILL`
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signal to the service, for example `sidekiq`. After that, a restart should
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perform fine.
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As a last resort, you can try to
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[reconfigure GitLab](#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure) instead.
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### Omnibus GitLab reconfigure
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There may be times in the documentation where you will be asked to _reconfigure_
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GitLab. Remember that this method applies only for the Omnibus packages.
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Reconfigure Omnibus GitLab with:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure
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```
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Reconfiguring GitLab should occur in the event that something in its
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configuration (`/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`) has changed.
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When you run this command, [Chef](https://www.chef.io/products/chef-infra/), the underlying configuration management
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application that powers Omnibus GitLab, will make sure that all things like directories,
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permissions, and services are in place and in the same shape that they were
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initially shipped.
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It will also restart GitLab components where needed, if any of their
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configuration files have changed.
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If you manually edit any files in `/var/opt/gitlab` that are managed by Chef,
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running reconfigure will revert the changes AND restart the services that
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depend on those files.
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## Installations from source
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If you have followed the official installation guide to [install GitLab from
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source](../install/installation.md), run the following command to restart GitLab:
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```shell
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sudo service gitlab restart
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```
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The output should be similar to this:
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```plaintext
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Shutting down GitLab Puma
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Shutting down GitLab Sidekiq
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Shutting down GitLab Workhorse
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Shutting down GitLab MailRoom
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...
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GitLab is not running.
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Starting GitLab Puma
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Starting GitLab Sidekiq
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Starting GitLab Workhorse
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Starting GitLab MailRoom
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...
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The GitLab Puma web server with pid 28059 is running.
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The GitLab Sidekiq job dispatcher with pid 28176 is running.
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The GitLab Workhorse with pid 28122 is running.
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The GitLab MailRoom email processor with pid 28114 is running.
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GitLab and all its components are up and running.
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```
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This should restart Puma, Sidekiq, GitLab Workhorse, and [Mailroom](reply_by_email.md)
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(if enabled). The init service file that does all the magic can be found on
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your server in `/etc/init.d/gitlab`.
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---
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If you are using other init systems, like systemd, you can check the
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[GitLab Recipes](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-recipes/tree/master/init) repository for some unofficial services. These are
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**not** officially supported so use them at your own risk.
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## Helm chart installations
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There is no single command to restart the entire GitLab application installed via
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the [cloud native Helm Chart](https://docs.gitlab.com/charts/). Usually, it should be
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enough to restart a specific component separately (for example, `gitaly`, `puma`,
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`workhorse`, or `gitlab-shell`) by deleting all the pods related to it:
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```shell
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kubectl delete pods -l release=<helm release name>,app=<component name>
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```
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The release name can be obtained from the output of the `helm list` command.
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