gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/install/azure/index.md
2017-08-25 11:18:20 +00:00

21 KiB

Install GitLab on Microsoft Azure

This article was originally written by Dave Wentzel and published on the GitLab Blog.

Ported to the GitLab documentation and updated on 2017-08-24 by Ian Scorer.

Azure is Microsoft's business cloud and GitLab is a pre-configured offering on the Azure Marketplace. Hopefully, you aren't surprised to hear that Microsoft and Azure have embraced open source software like Ubuntu, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and of course - GitLab! This means that you can spin up a pre-configured GitLab VM and have your very own private GitLab up and running in around 30 minutes. Let's get started.

Getting started

First, you'll need an account on Azure. There are three ways to do this:

  • If your company (or you) already has an account, then you are ready to go!
  • You can also open your own Azure account for free. At time of writing, you get $200 of credit to spend on Azure services for 30 days. You can use this credit to try out paid Azure services, exploring Microsoft's cloud for free. Even after the first 30 days, you never have to pay anything unless you decide to transition to paid services with a Pay-As-You-Go Azure subscription. This is a great way to try out Azure and cloud computing, and you can read more in their comprehensive FAQ.
  • If you have an MSDN subscription, you can activate your Azure subscriber benefits. Your MSDN subscription gives you recurring Azure credits every month, so why not put those credits to use and try out GitLab right now?

Working with Azure

Once you have an Azure account, you can get started. Login to Azure using portal.azure.com and the first thing you will see is the Dashboard:

Azure Dashboard

The Dashboard gives you a quick overview of Azure resources, and from here you you can build VMs, create SQL Databases, author websites, and perform lots of other cloud tasks.

Create New VM

The Azure Marketplace is an online store for pre-configured applications and services which have been optimized for the cloud by software vendors like GitLab, and both the Community Edition ("CE") and the Enterprise Edition ("EE") versions of GitLab are available on the Azure Marketplace as pre-configured solutions.

To begin creating a new GitLab VM, click on the + New icon, type "GitLab" into the search box, and then click the "GitLab Community Edition" search result:

Azure - New - Search for 'GitLab'

A new "blade" window will pop-out, where you can read more about the "GitLab Community Edition" offering which is freely available under the MIT Expat License:

Azure - New - Select 'GitLab Community Edition'

Click "Create" and you will be presented with the "Create virtual machine" blade:

Azure - Create Virtual Machine - Basics

Basics

The first items we need to configure are the basic settings of the underlying virtual machine:

  1. Enter a Name for the VM - e.g. "GitLab-CE"

  2. Select a VM disk type - either HDD (slower, lower cost) or SSD (faster, higher cost)

  3. Enter a User name - e.g. "gitlab-admin"

  4. Select an Authentication type, either SSH public key or Password:

    Note: if you're unsure which authentication type to use, select Password

    1. If you chose SSH public key - enter your SSH public key into the field provided (read the SSH documentation to learn more about how to setup SSH public keys)
    2. If you chose Password - enter the password you wish to use (this is the password that you will use later in this tutorial to SSH into the VM, so make sure it's a strong password/passphrase)
  5. Choose the appropriate Subscription tier for your Azure account

  6. Choose an existing Resource Group or create a new one - e.g. "GitLab-CE-Azure"

Note: a "Resource group" is a way to group related resources together for easier administration. We chose "GitLab-CE-Azure", but your resource group can have the same name as your VM.

  1. Choose a Location - if you're unsure, select the default location

Here are the settings we've used:

Azure - Create Virtual Machine - Basics Completed

Check the settings you have entered, and then click "OK" when you're ready to proceed.

Size

Next, you need to choose the size of your VM - selecting features such as the number of CPU cores, the amount of RAM, the size of storage (and its speed), etc.

Note: in common with other cloud vendors, Azure operates a resource/usage pricing model, i.e. the more resources your VM consumes the more it will cost you to run, so make your selection carefully. You'll see that Azure provides an estimated monthly cost beneath each VM Size to help guide your selection.

The default size - the lowest cost "DS1_V2 Standard" VM - meets the minimum system requirements to run a small GitLab environment for testing and evaluation purposes, and so we're going to go ahead and select this one, but please choose the size which best meets your own requirements:

Azure - Create Virtual Machine - Size

Note: be aware that whilst your VM is active (known as "allocated"), it will incur "compute charges" which, ultimately, you will be billed for. So, even if you're using the free trial credits, you'll likely want to learn how to properly shutdown an Azure VM to save money.

Go ahead and click your chosen size, then click "Select" when you're ready to proceed to the next step.

Settings

On the next blade, you're asked to configure the Storage, Network and Extension settings. We've gone with the default settings as they're sufficient for test-driving GitLab, but please choose the settings which best meet your own requirements:

Azure - Create Virtual Machine - Settings

Review the settings and then click "OK" when you're ready to proceed to the last step.

Purchase

The Purchase page is the last step and here you will be presented with the price per hour for your new VM. You'll be billed only for the VM itself (e.g. "Standard DS1 v2") because the "GitLab Community Edition" marketplace solution is free to use at 0 USD/hr:

Azure - Create Virtual Machine - Purchase

Note: at this stage, you can review and modify the any of the settings you have made during all previous steps, just click on any of the four steps to re-open them.

When you have read and agreed to the terms of use and are ready to proceed, click "Purchase".

Deployment

At this point, Azure will begin deploying your new VM. The deployment process will take a few minutes to complete, with progress displayed on the "Deployment" blade:

Azure - Create Virtual Machine - Deployment

Once the deployment process is complete, the new VM and its associated resources will be displayed on the Azure Dashboard (you may need to refresh the page):

Azure - Dashboard - All resources

The new VM can also be accessed by clicking the All resources or Virtual machines icons in the Azure Portal sidebar navigation menu.

Setup a domain name

The VM will have a public IP address (static by default), but Azure allows us to assign a friendly DNS name to the VM, so let's go ahead and do that.

From the Dashboard, click on the "GitLab-CE" tile to open the management blade for the new VM. The public IP address that the VM uses is shown in the 'Essentials' section:

Azure - VM - Management - Public IP Address

Click on the public IP address - which should open the "Public IP address - Configuration" blade, then click on "Configuration" (under "Settings"). Now enter a friendly DNS name for your instance in the DNS name label field:

Azure - VM - Domain Name

In the screenshot above, you'll see that we've set the DNS name label to "gitlab-ce-test". This will make our VM accessible at gitlab-ce-test.centralus.cloudapp.azure.com (the full domain name of your own VM will be different, of course).

Click "Save" for the changes to take effect.

Note: if you want to use your own domain name, you will need to add a DNS A record at your domain registrar which points to the public IP address of your Azure VM. If you do this, you'll need to make sure your VM is configured to use a static public IP address (i.e. not a dynamic one) or you will have to reconfigure the DNS A record each time Azure reassigns your VM a new public IP address. Read IP address types and allocation methods in Azure to learn more.

Let's open some ports!

At this stage you should have a running and fully operational VM. However, none of the services on your VM (e.g. GitLab) will be publicly accessible via the internet until you have opened up the neccessary ports to enable access to those services.

Ports are opened by adding security rules to the "Network security group" (NSG) which our VM has been assigned to. If you followed the process above, then Azure will have automatically created an NSG named GitLab-CE-nsg and assigned the GitLab-CE VM to it.

Note: if you gave your VM a different name then the NSG automatically created by Azure will also have a different name - the name you have your VM, with -nsg appended to it.

You can navigate to the NSG settings via many different routes in the Azure Portal, but one of the simplest ways is to go to the Azure Dashboard, and then click on the Network Security Group listed in the "All resources" tile:

Azure - Dashboard - All resources - Network security group

With the "Network security group" blade open, click on "Inbound security rules" under "Settings":

Azure - Network security group - Inbound security rules

Next, click "Add":

Azure - Network security group - Inbound security rules - Add

Which ports to open?

Like all servers, our VM will be running many services. However, we want to open up the correct ports to enable public internet access to two services in particular:

  1. HTTP (port 80) - opening port 80 will enable our VM to respond to HTTP requests, allowing public access to the instance of GitLab running on our VM.
  2. SSH (port 22) - opening port 22 will enable our VM to respond to SSH connection requests, allowing public access (with authentication) to remote terminal sessions (you'll see why we need SSH access to our VM later on in this tutorial)

Open HTTP on Port 80

In the "Add inbound security rule" blade, let's open port 80 so that our VM will accept HTTP connections:

Azure - Add inbound security rules - HTTP

  1. Enter "HTTP" in the Name field
  2. Select HTTP from the options in the Service drop-down
  3. Make sure the Action is set to Allow
  4. Click "OK"

Open SSH on Port 22

Repeat the above process, adding a second Inbound security rule to open port 22, enabling our VM to accept SSH connections:

Azure - Add inbound security rules - SSH

  1. Enter "SSH" in the Name field
  2. Select SSH from the options in the Service drop-down
  3. Make sure the Action is set to Allow
  4. Click "OK"

It will take a moment for Azure to add each new Inbound Security Rule (and you may need to click on "Inbound security rules" to refresh the list), but once completed, you should see the two new rules in the list:

Azure - Inbound security rules - List

Connecting to GitLab

Use the domain name you set up earlier (or the public IP address) to visit your new GitLab instance in your browser. If everything has gone according to plan you should be presented with the following page, asking you to set a new password for the administrator account automatically created by GitLab:

GitLab - Change Password

Enter your new password into both form fields, and then click "Change your password".

Once you have changed the password you will be redirected to the GitLab login page. Use root as the username, enter the new password you set in the previous step, and then click "Sign in":

GitLab - Login

Success?

After signing in successfully, you should see the GitLab Projects page displaying a "Welcome to GitLab!" message:

GitLab - Projects Page

If so, you now have a working GitLab instance on your own private Azure VM. Congratulations!

Creating your first GitLab project

You can skip this section if you are familiar with Git and GitLab. Otherwise, let's create our first project. From the Welcome page, click "New Project".

Let's give our project a name and a description, and then accept the default values for everything else:

  1. Enter "demo" into the Project path project name field
  2. Enter a description, e.g. "My awesome demo project!"
  3. Click "Create project"

GitLab - New Project

Once the new project has been created (which should only take a moment), you'll be redirected to homepage for the project:

GitLab - Empty Project

If you scroll further down the project's home page, you'll see some basic instructions on how to setup a local clone of your new repository and push and pull from it:

GitLab - Empty Project - Basic Instructions

That's it! You now have your own private GitLab environment installed and running in the cloud!

Maintaining your GitLab instance

It's important to keep your GitLab environment up-to-date. The GitLab team is constantly making enhancements and occasionally you may need to update for security reasons. So let's review how to update GitLab.

Checking our current version

To check which version of GitLab we're currently running, click on the "Admin Area" link - it's the the wrench icon displayed in the top-right, next to the search box.

In the following screenshot you can see an "update asap" notification message in the top-right. This particular message indicates that there is a newer version of GitLab available which contains one or more security fixes:

GitLab - update asap

Under the "Components" section, we can see that our VM is currently running version 8.6.5 of GitLab. This is the version of GitLab which was contained in the Azure Marketplace "GitLab Community Edition" offering we used to build the VM when we wrote this tutorial.

Note: The version of GitLab in your own VM instance may well be different, but the update process will still be the same.

Connect via SSH

To perform an update, we need to connect directly to our Azure VM instance and run some commands from the terminal. Our Azure VM is actually a server running Linux (Ubuntu), so we'll need to connect to it using SSH (Secure Shell).

If you're running Windows, you'll need to connect using PuTTY or an equivalent Windows SSH client. If you're running Linux or macOS, then you already have an SSH client installed.

Note:

SSH from the command-line

If you're running SSH from the command-line (terminal), then type in the following command to connect to your VM, substituting username and your-azure-domain-name.com for the correct values.

Again, remember that your Azure VM domain name will be the one you setup previously in the tutorial. If you didn't setup a domain name for your VM, you can use the IP address in its place in the following command:

ssh username@your-azure-domain-name.com

Provide your password at the prompt to authenticate.

SSH from Windows (PuTTY)

If you're using PuTTY in Windows as your SSH client, then you might want to take a quick read on using PuTTY in Windows.

Updating GitLab

Once you've logged in via SSH, enter the following command to update GitLab to the latest version:

sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install gitlab-ce

This command will update GitLab and its associated components to the latest versions, so it will take a little time to complete. You'll see various update tasks being completed in your SSH terminal window:

GitLab updating

Once the update process has completed, you'll see a message like this:

Upgrade complete! If your GitLab server is misbehaving try running

   sudo gitlab-ctl restart

before anything else.

Check out your updated GitLab

Refresh your GitLab instance in the browser and navigate to the Admin Area. You should now have an up-to-date GitLab instance.

When we wrote this tutorial our Azure VM GitLab instance was updated to the latest version at time of writing (9.4.0). You can see that the message which was previously displaying "update asap" is now showing "up-to-date":

GitLab up to date

Conclusion

Naturally, we believe that GitLab is a great git repository tool. However, GitLab is a whole lot more than that too. GitLab unifies issues, code review, CI and CD into a single UI, helping you to move faster from idea to production, and in this tutorial we showed you how quick and easy it is to setup and run your own instance of GitLab on Azure, Microsoft's cloud service.

Azure is a great way to experiment with GitLab, and if you decide (as we hope) that GitLab is for you, you can continue to use Azure as your secure, scalable cloud provider or of course run GitLab on any cloud service you choose.

Where to next?

Check out our other Technical Articles or browse the GitLab Documentation to learn more about GitLab.