gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/administration/high_availability/gitlab.md

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Configuring GitLab for HA

Assuming you have already configured a database, Redis, and NFS, you can configure the GitLab application server(s) now. Complete the steps below for each GitLab application server in your environment.

Note: There is some additional configuration near the bottom for additional GitLab application servers. It's important to read and understand these additional steps before proceeding with GitLab installation.

  1. If necessary, install the NFS client utility packages using the following commands:

    # Ubuntu/Debian
    apt-get install nfs-common
    
    # CentOS/Red Hat
    yum install nfs-utils nfs-utils-lib
    
  2. Specify the necessary NFS shares. Mounts are specified in /etc/fstab. The exact contents of /etc/fstab will depend on how you chose to configure your NFS server. See NFS documentation for the various options. Here is an example snippet to add to /etc/fstab:

    10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/.ssh /var/opt/gitlab/.ssh nfs defaults,soft,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nobootwait,lookupcache=positive 0 2
    10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads nfs defaults,soft,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nobootwait,lookupcache=positive 0 2
    10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared nfs defaults,soft,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nobootwait,lookupcache=positive 0 2
    10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds nfs defaults,soft,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nobootwait,lookupcache=positive 0 2
    10.1.1.1:/var/opt/gitlab/git-data /var/opt/gitlab/git-data nfs defaults,soft,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nobootwait,lookupcache=positive 0 2
    
  3. Create the shared directories. These may be different depending on your NFS mount locations.

    mkdir -p /var/opt/gitlab/.ssh /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds /var/opt/gitlab/git-data
    
  4. Download/install GitLab Omnibus using steps 1 and 2 from GitLab downloads. Do not complete other steps on the download page.

  5. Create/edit /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb and use the following configuration. Be sure to change the external_url to match your eventual GitLab front-end URL. Depending your the NFS configuration, you may need to change some GitLab data locations. See NFS documentation for /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb configuration values for various scenarios. The example below assumes you've added NFS mounts in the default data locations.

    external_url 'https://gitlab.example.com'
    
    # Prevent GitLab from starting if NFS data mounts are not available
    high_availability['mountpoint'] = '/var/opt/gitlab/git-data'
    
    # Disable components that will not be on the GitLab application server
    postgresql['enable'] = false
    redis['enable'] = false
    
    # PostgreSQL connection details
    gitlab_rails['db_adapter'] = 'postgresql'
    gitlab_rails['db_encoding'] = 'unicode'
    gitlab_rails['db_host'] = '10.1.0.5' # IP/hostname of database server
    gitlab_rails['db_password'] = 'DB password'
    
    # Redis connection details
    gitlab_rails['redis_port'] = '6379'
    gitlab_rails['redis_host'] = '10.1.0.6' # IP/hostname of Redis server
    gitlab_rails['redis_password'] = 'Redis Password'
    

    Note: To maintain uniformity of links across HA clusters, the external_url on the first application server as well as the additional application servers should point to the external url that users will use to access GitLab. In a typical HA setup, this will be the url of the load balancer which will route traffic to all GitLab application servers in the HA cluster.

  6. Run sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure to compile the configuration.

First GitLab application server

As a final step, run the setup rake task on the first GitLab application server. It is not necessary to run this on additional application servers.

  1. Initialize the database by running sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:setup.

WARNING: Only run this setup task on NEW GitLab instances because it will wipe any existing data.

Note: When you specify https in the external_url, as in the example above, GitLab assumes you have SSL certificates in /etc/gitlab/ssl/. If certificates are not present, Nginx will fail to start. See Nginx documentation for more information.

Extra configuration for additional GitLab application servers

Additional GitLab servers (servers configured after the first GitLab server) need some extra configuration.

  1. Configure shared secrets. These values can be obtained from the primary GitLab server in /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json. Add these to /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb prior to running the first reconfigure in the steps above.

    gitlab_shell['secret_token'] = 'fbfb19c355066a9afb030992231c4a363357f77345edd0f2e772359e5be59b02538e1fa6cae8f93f7d23355341cea2b93600dab6d6c3edcdced558fc6d739860'
    gitlab_rails['otp_key_base'] = 'b719fe119132c7810908bba18315259ed12888d4f5ee5430c42a776d840a396799b0a5ef0a801348c8a357f07aa72bbd58e25a84b8f247a25c72f539c7a6c5fa'
    gitlab_rails['secret_key_base'] = '6e657410d57c71b4fc3ed0d694e7842b1895a8b401d812c17fe61caf95b48a6d703cb53c112bc01ebd197a85da81b18e29682040e99b4f26594772a4a2c98c6d'
    gitlab_rails['db_key_base'] = 'bf2e47b68d6cafaef1d767e628b619365becf27571e10f196f98dc85e7771042b9203199d39aff91fcb6837c8ed83f2a912b278da50999bb11a2fbc0fba52964'
    
  2. Run touch /etc/gitlab/skip-auto-migrations to prevent database migrations from running on upgrade. Only the primary GitLab application server should handle migrations.

Troubleshooting

  • mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on

You have not installed the necessary NFS client utilities. See step 1 above.

  • mount: mount point /var/opt/gitlab/... does not exist

This particular directory does not exist on the NFS server. Ensure the share is exported and exists on the NFS server and try to remount.


Read more on high-availability configuration:

  1. Configure the database
  2. Configure Redis
  3. Configure NFS
  4. Configure the load balancers