gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/development/geo.md

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Geo (development) (PREMIUM SELF)

Geo connects GitLab instances together. One GitLab instance is designated as a primary site and can be run with multiple secondary sites. Geo orchestrates quite a few components that can be seen on the diagram below and are described in more detail within this document.

Geo Architecture Diagram

Replication layer

Geo handles replication for different components:

  • Database: includes the entire application, except cache and jobs.
  • Git repositories: includes both projects and wikis.
  • Uploaded blobs: includes anything from images attached on issues to raw logs and assets from CI.

With the exception of the Database replication, on a secondary site, everything is coordinated by the Geo Log Cursor.

Geo Log Cursor daemon

The Geo Log Cursor daemon is a separate process running on each secondary site. It monitors the Geo Event Log for new events and creates background jobs for each specific event type.

For example when a repository is updated, the Geo primary site creates a Geo event with an associated repository updated event. The Geo Log Cursor daemon picks the event up and schedules a Geo::ProjectSyncWorker job which will use the Geo::RepositorySyncService and Geo::WikiSyncService classes to update the repository and the wiki respectively.

The Geo Log Cursor daemon can operate in High Availability mode automatically. The daemon will try to acquire a lock from time to time and once acquired, it will behave as the active daemon.

Any additional running daemons on the same site, will be in standby mode, ready to resume work if the active daemon releases its lock.

We use the ExclusiveLease lock type with a small TTL, that is renewed at every pooling cycle. That allows us to implement this global lock with a timeout.

At the end of the pooling cycle, if the daemon can't renew and/or reacquire the lock, it switches to standby mode.

Database replication

Geo uses streaming replication to replicate the database from the primary to the secondary sites. This replication gives the secondary sites access to all the data saved in the database. So users can log in on the secondary and read all the issues, merge requests, and so on, on the secondary site.

Repository replication

Geo also replicates repositories. Each secondary site keeps track of the state of every repository in the tracking database.

There are a few ways a repository gets replicated by the:

Project Registry

The Geo::ProjectRegistry class defines the model used to track the state of repository replication. For each project in the main database, one record in the tracking database is kept.

It records the following about repositories:

  • The last time they were synced.
  • The last time they were successfully synced.
  • If they need to be resynced.
  • When a retry should be attempted.
  • The number of retries.
  • If and when they were verified.

It also stores these attributes for project wikis in dedicated columns.

Repository Sync worker

The Geo::RepositorySyncWorker class runs periodically in the background and it searches the Geo::ProjectRegistry model for projects that need updating. Those projects can be:

  • Unsynced: Projects that have never been synced on the secondary site and so do not exist yet.
  • Updated recently: Projects that have a last_repository_updated_at timestamp that is more recent than the last_repository_successful_sync_at timestamp in the Geo::ProjectRegistry model.
  • Manual: The administrator can manually flag a repository to resync in the Geo Admin Area.

When we fail to fetch a repository on the secondary RETRIES_BEFORE_REDOWNLOAD times, Geo does a so-called re-download. It will do a clean clone into the @geo-temporary directory in the root of the storage. When it's successful, we replace the main repository with the newly cloned one.

Uploads replication

File uploads are also being replicated to the secondary site. To track the state of syncing, the Geo::UploadRegistry model is used.

Upload Registry

Similar to the Project Registry, there is a Geo::UploadRegistry model that tracks the synced uploads.

CI Job Artifacts and LFS objects are synced in a similar way as uploads, but they are tracked by Geo::JobArtifactRegistry, and Geo::LfsObjectRegistry models respectively.

Authentication

To authenticate file transfers, each GeoNode record has two fields:

  • A public access key (access_key field).
  • A secret access key (secret_access_key field).

The secondary site authenticates itself via a JWT request. When the secondary site wishes to download a file, it sends an HTTP request with the Authorization header:

Authorization: GL-Geo <access_key>:<JWT payload>

The primary site uses the access_key field to look up the corresponding secondary site and decrypts the JWT payload, which contains additional information to identify the file request. This ensures that the secondary site downloads the right file for the right database ID. For example, for an LFS object, the request must also include the SHA256 sum of the file. An example JWT payload looks like:

{"data": {sha256: "31806bb23580caab78040f8c45d329f5016b0115"}, iat: "1234567890"}

If the requested file matches the requested SHA256 sum, then the Geo primary site sends data via the X-Sendfile feature, which allows NGINX to handle the file transfer without tying up Rails or Workhorse.

NOTE: JWT requires synchronized clocks between the machines involved, otherwise it may fail with an encryption error.

Git Push to Geo secondary

The Git Push Proxy exists as a functionality built inside the gitlab-shell component. It is active on a secondary site only. It allows the user that has cloned a repository from the secondary site to push to the same URL.

Git push requests directed to a secondary site will be sent over to the primary site, while pull requests will continue to be served by the secondary site for maximum efficiency.

HTTPS and SSH requests are handled differently:

  • With HTTPS, we will give the user a HTTP 302 Redirect pointing to the project on the primary site. The Git client is wise enough to understand that status code and process the redirection.
  • With SSH, because there is no equivalent way to perform a redirect, we have to proxy the request. This is done inside gitlab-shell, by first translating the request to the HTTP protocol, and then proxying it to the primary site.

The gitlab-shell daemon knows when to proxy based on the response from /api/v4/allowed. A special HTTP 300 status code is returned and we execute a "custom action", specified in the response body. The response contains additional data that allows the proxied push operation to happen on the primary site.

Using the Tracking Database

Along with the main database that is replicated, a Geo secondary site has its own separate Tracking database.

The tracking database contains the state of the secondary site.

Any database migration that needs to be run as part of an upgrade needs to be applied to the tracking database on each secondary site.

Configuration

The database configuration is set in config/database.yml. The directory ee/db/geo contains the schema and migrations for this database.

To write a migration for the database, run:

rails g migration [args] [options] --database geo

Geo should continue using Gitlab::Database::Migration[1.0] until the gitlab_geo schema is supported, and is for the time being exempt from being validated by Gitlab::Database::Migration[2.0]. This requires a developer to manually amend the migration file to change from [2.0] to [1.0] due to the migration defaults being 2.0.

For more information, see the Enable Geo migrations to use Migration[2.0] issue.

To migrate the tracking database, run:

bundle exec rake db:migrate:geo

Finders

Geo uses Finders, which are classes take care of the heavy lifting of looking up projects/attachments/ and so on, in the tracking database and main database.

Redis

Redis on the secondary site works the same as on the primary site. It is used for caching, storing sessions, and other persistent data.

Redis data replication between primary and secondary site is not used, so sessions and so on, aren't shared between sites.

Object Storage

GitLab can optionally use Object Storage to store data it would otherwise store on disk. These things can be:

  • LFS Objects
  • CI Job Artifacts
  • Uploads

Objects that are stored in object storage, are not handled by Geo. Geo ignores items in object storage. Either:

  • The object storage layer should take care of its own geographical replication.
  • All secondary sites should use the same storage site.

Verification

Repository verification

Repositories are verified with a checksum.

The primary site calculates a checksum on the repository. It basically hashes all Git refs together and stores that hash in the project_repository_states table of the database.

The secondary site does the same to calculate the hash of its clone, and compares the hash with the value the primary site calculated. If there is a mismatch, Geo will mark this as a mismatch and the administrator can see this in the Geo Admin Area.

Glossary

Primary site

A primary site is the single site in a Geo setup that read-write capabilities. It's the single source of truth and the Geo secondary sites replicate their data from there.

In a Geo setup, there can only be one primary site. All secondary sites connect to that primary.

Secondary site

A secondary site is a read-only replica of the primary site running in a different geographical location.

Streaming replication

Geo depends on the streaming replication feature of PostgreSQL. It completely replicates the database data and the database schema. The database replica is a read-only copy.

Streaming replication depends on the Write Ahead Logs, or WAL. Those logs are copied over to the replica and replayed there.

Since streaming replication also replicates the schema, the database migration do not need to run on the secondary sites.

Tracking database

A database on each Geo secondary site that keeps state for the site on which it resides. Read more in Using the Tracking database.

Geo Event Log

The Geo primary stores events in the geo_event_log table. Each entry in the log contains a specific type of event. These type of events include:

  • Repository Deleted event
  • Repository Renamed event
  • Repositories Changed event
  • Repository Created event
  • Hashed Storage Migrated event
  • LFS Object Deleted event
  • Hashed Storage Attachments event
  • Job Artifact Deleted event
  • Upload Deleted event

Geo Log Cursor

The process running on the secondary site that looks for new Geo::EventLog rows.

Code features

Gitlab::Geo utilities

Small utility methods related to Geo go into the ee/lib/gitlab/geo.rb file.

Many of these methods are cached using the RequestStore class, to reduce the performance impact of using the methods throughout the codebase.

Current site

The class method .current_node returns the GeoNode record for the current site.

We use the host, port, and relative_url_root values from gitlab.yml and search in the database to identify which site we are in (see GeoNode.current_node).

Primary or secondary

To determine whether the current site is a primary site or a secondary site use the .primary? and .secondary? class methods.

It is possible for these methods to both return false on a site when the site is not enabled. See Enablement.

Geo Database configured?

There is also an additional gotcha when dealing with things that happen during initialization time. In a few places, we use the Gitlab::Geo.geo_database_configured? method to check if the site has the tracking database, which only exists on the secondary site. This overcomes race conditions that could happen during bootstrapping of a new site.

Enablement

We consider Geo feature enabled when the user has a valid license with the feature included, and they have at least one site defined at the Geo Nodes screen.

See Gitlab::Geo.enabled? and Gitlab::Geo.license_allows? methods.

Read-only

All Geo secondary sites are read-only.

The general principle of a read-only database applies to all Geo secondary sites. So the Gitlab::Database.read_only? method will always return true on a secondary site.

When some write actions are not allowed because the site is a secondary, consider adding the Gitlab::Database.read_only? or Gitlab::Database.read_write? guard, instead of Gitlab::Geo.secondary?.

The database itself will already be read-only in a replicated setup, so we don't need to take any extra step for that.

Steps needed to replicate a new data type

As GitLab evolves, we constantly need to add new resources to the Geo replication system. The implementation depends on resource specifics, but there are several things that need to be taken care of:

  • Event generation on the primary site. Whenever a new resource is changed/updated, we need to create a task for the Log Cursor.
  • Event handling. The Log Cursor needs to have a handler for every event type generated by the primary site.
  • Dispatch worker (cron job). Make sure the backfill condition works well.
  • Sync worker.
  • Registry with all possible states.
  • Verification.
  • Cleaner. When sync settings are changed for the secondary site, some resources need to be cleaned up.
  • Geo Node Status. We need to provide API endpoints as well as some presentation in the GitLab Admin Area.
  • Health Check. If we can perform some pre-cheсks and make site unhealthy if something is wrong, we should do that. The rake gitlab:geo:check command has to be updated too.

History of communication channel

The communication channel has changed since first iteration, you can check here historic decisions and why we moved to new implementations.

Custom code (GitLab 8.6 and earlier)

In GitLab versions before 8.6, custom code is used to handle notification from primary site to secondary sites by HTTP requests.

System hooks (GitLab 8.7 to 9.5)

Later, it was decided to move away from custom code and begin using system hooks. More people were using them, so many would benefit from improvements made to this communication layer.

There is a specific internal endpoint in our API code (Grape), that receives all requests from this System Hooks: /api/v4/geo/receive_events.

We switch and filter from each event by the event_name field.

Geo Log Cursor (GitLab 10.0 and up)

In GitLab 10.0 and later, System Webhooks are no longer used and Geo Log Cursor is used instead. The Log Cursor traverses the Geo::EventLog rows to see if there are changes since the last time the log was checked and will handle repository updates, deletes, changes, and renames.

The table is within the replicated database. This has two advantages over the old method:

  • Replication is synchronous and we preserve the order of events.
  • Replication of the events happen at the same time as the changes in the database.

Self-service framework

If you want to add easy Geo replication of a resource you're working on, check out our self-service framework.

Geo development workflow

GET:Geo pipeline

As part of the package-and-qa pipeline, there is an option to manually trigger a job named GET:Geo. This pipeline uses GET to spin up a 1k Geo installation, and run the gitlab-qa Geo scenario against the instance. When working on Geo features, it is a good idea to ensure the qa-geo job passes in a triggered GET:Geo pipeline.

The pipelines that control the provisioning and teardown of the instance are included in The GitLab Environment Toolkit Configs Geo subproject.

When adding new functionality, consider adding new tests to verify the behavior. For steps, see the QA documentation.

Architecture

The pipeline involves the interaction of multiple different projects:

  • GitLab - The package-and-qa job is launched from merge requests in this project.
  • omnibus-gitlab - Builds relevant artifacts containing the changes from the triggering merge request pipeline.
  • GET-Configs/Geo - Coordinates the lifecycle of a short-lived Geo installation that can be evaluated.
  • GET - Contains the necessary logic for creating and destroying Geo installations. Used by GET-Configs/Geo.
  • gitlab-qa - Tool for running automated tests against a GitLab instance.
flowchart TD;
  GET:Geo-->getcg
  Provision-->Terraform
  Configure-->Ansible
  Geo-->Ansible
  QA-->gagq

  subgraph "omnibus-gitlab-mirror"
    GET:Geo
  end

  subgraph getcg [GitLab-environment-toolkit-configs/Geo]
    direction LR
    Generate-terraform-config-->Provision
    Provision-->Generate-ansible-config
    Generate-ansible-config-->Configure
    Configure-->Geo
    Geo-->QA
    QA-->Destroy-geo
  end

  subgraph get [GitLab Environment Toolkit]
    Terraform
    Ansible
  end

  subgraph GitLab QA
     gagq[GitLab QA Geo Scenario]
  end