208 lines
8.5 KiB
Markdown
208 lines
8.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Systems
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group: Distribution
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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/#assignments
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---
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# Getting started with an offline GitLab Installation **(FREE SELF)**
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This is a step-by-step guide that helps you install, configure, and use a self-managed GitLab
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instance entirely offline.
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## Installation
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NOTE:
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This guide assumes the server is Ubuntu 20.04 using the [Omnibus installation method](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/) and will be running GitLab [Enterprise Edition](https://about.gitlab.com/install/ce-or-ee/). Instructions for other servers may vary.
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This guide also assumes the server host resolves as `my-host.internal`, which you should replace with your
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server's FQDN, and that you have access to a different server with Internet access to download the required package files.
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<i class="fa fa-youtube-play youtube" aria-hidden="true"></i>
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For a video walkthrough of this process, see [Offline GitLab Installation: Downloading & Installing](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TJaq4ua2Prw).
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### Download the GitLab package
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You should [manually download the GitLab package](../../update/package/index.md#upgrade-using-a-manually-downloaded-package) and relevant dependencies using a server of the same operating system type that has access to the Internet.
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If your offline environment has no local network access, you must manually transport across the relevant package files through physical media, such as a USB drive or writable DVD.
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In Ubuntu, this can be performed on a server with Internet access using the following commands:
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```shell
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# Download the bash script to prepare the repository
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curl --silent "https://packages.gitlab.com/install/repositories/gitlab/gitlab-ee/script.deb.sh" | sudo bash
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# Download the gitlab-ee package and dependencies to /var/cache/apt/archives
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sudo apt-get install --download-only gitlab-ee
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# Copy the contents of the apt download folder to a mounted media device
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sudo cp /var/cache/apt/archives/*.deb /path/to/mount
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```
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### Install the GitLab package
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Prerequisites:
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- Before installing the GitLab package on your offline environment, ensure that you have installed all required dependencies first.
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If you are using Ubuntu, you can install the dependency `.deb` packages you copied across with `dpkg`. Do not install the GitLab package yet.
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```shell
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# Navigate to the physical media device
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sudo cd /path/to/mount
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# Install the dependency packages
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sudo dpkg -i <package_name>.deb
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```
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[Use the relevant commands for your operating system to install the package](../../update/package/index.md#upgrade-using-a-manually-downloaded-package) but make sure to specify an `http`
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URL for the `EXTERNAL_URL` installation step. Once installed, we can manually
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configure the SSL ourselves.
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It is strongly recommended to setup a domain for IP resolution rather than bind
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to the server's IP address. This better ensures a stable target for our certs' CN
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and makes long-term resolution simpler.
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The following example for Ubuntu specifies the `EXTERNAL_URL` using HTTP and installs the GitLab package:
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```shell
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sudo EXTERNAL_URL="http://my-host.internal" dpkg -i <gitlab_package_name>.deb
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```
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## Enabling SSL
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Follow these steps to enable SSL for your fresh instance. Note that these steps reflect those for
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[manually configuring SSL in Omnibus's NGINX configuration](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/nginx.html#manually-configuring-https):
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1. Make the following changes to `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
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```ruby
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# Update external_url from "http" to "https"
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external_url "https://my-host.internal"
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# Set Let's Encrypt to false
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letsencrypt['enable'] = false
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```
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1. Create the following directories with the appropriate permissions for generating self-signed
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certificates:
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```shell
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sudo mkdir -p /etc/gitlab/ssl
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sudo chmod 755 /etc/gitlab/ssl
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sudo openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout /etc/gitlab/ssl/my-host.internal.key -out /etc/gitlab/ssl/my-host.internal.crt
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```
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1. Reconfigure your instance to apply the changes:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure
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```
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## Enabling the GitLab Container Registry
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Follow these steps to enable the container registry. Note that these steps reflect those for
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[configuring the container registry under an existing domain](../../administration/packages/container_registry.md#configure-container-registry-under-an-existing-gitlab-domain):
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1. Make the following changes to `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
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```ruby
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# Change external_registry_url to match external_url, but append the port 4567
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external_url "https://gitlab.example.com"
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registry_external_url "https://gitlab.example.com:4567"
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```
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1. Reconfigure your instance to apply the changes:
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure
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```
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## Allow the Docker daemon to trust the registry and GitLab Runner
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Provide your Docker daemon with your certs by
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[following the steps for using trusted certificates with your registry](../../administration/packages/container_registry.md#using-self-signed-certificates-with-container-registry):
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```shell
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sudo mkdir -p /etc/docker/certs.d/my-host.internal:5000
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sudo cp /etc/gitlab/ssl/my-host.internal.crt /etc/docker/certs.d/my-host.internal:5000/ca.crt
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```
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Provide your GitLab Runner (to be installed next) with your certs by
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[following the steps for using trusted certificates with your runner](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/install/docker.html#installing-trusted-ssl-server-certificates):
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```shell
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sudo mkdir -p /etc/gitlab-runner/certs
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sudo cp /etc/gitlab/ssl/my-host.internal.crt /etc/gitlab-runner/certs/ca.crt
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```
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## Enabling GitLab Runner
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[Following a similar process to the steps for installing our GitLab Runner as a
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Docker service](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/install/docker.html#docker-image-installation), we must first register our runner:
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```shell
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$ sudo docker run --rm -it -v /etc/gitlab-runner:/etc/gitlab-runner gitlab/gitlab-runner register
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Updating CA certificates...
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Runtime platform arch=amd64 os=linux pid=7 revision=1b659122 version=12.8.0
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Running in system-mode.
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Please enter the gitlab-ci coordinator URL (e.g. https://gitlab.com/):
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https://my-host.internal
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Please enter the gitlab-ci token for this runner:
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XXXXXXXXXXX
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Please enter the gitlab-ci description for this runner:
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[eb18856e13c0]:
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Please enter the gitlab-ci tags for this runner (comma separated):
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Registering runner... succeeded runner=FSMwkvLZ
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Please enter the executor: custom, docker, virtualbox, kubernetes, docker+machine, docker-ssh+machine, docker-ssh, parallels, shell, ssh:
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docker
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Please enter the default Docker image (e.g. ruby:2.6):
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ruby:2.6
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Runner registered successfully. Feel free to start it, but if it's running already the config should be automatically reloaded!
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```
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Now we must add some additional configuration to our runner:
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Make the following changes to `/etc/gitlab-runner/config.toml`:
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- Add Docker socket to volumes `volumes = ["/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock", "/cache"]`
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- Add `pull_policy = "if-not-present"` to the executor configuration
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Now we can start our runner:
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```shell
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sudo docker run -d --restart always --name gitlab-runner -v /etc/gitlab-runner:/etc/gitlab-runner -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock gitlab/gitlab-runner:latest
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90646b6587127906a4ee3f2e51454c6e1f10f26fc7a0b03d9928d8d0d5897b64
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```
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### Authenticating the registry against the host OS
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As noted in [Docker's registry authentication documentation](https://docs.docker.com/registry/insecure/#docker-still-complains-about-the-certificate-when-using-authentication),
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certain versions of Docker require trusting the certificate chain at the OS level.
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In the case of Ubuntu, this involves using `update-ca-certificates`:
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```shell
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sudo cp /etc/docker/certs.d/my-host.internal\:5000/ca.crt /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/my-host.internal.crt
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sudo update-ca-certificates
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```
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If all goes well, this is what you should see:
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```plaintext
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1 added, 0 removed; done.
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Running hooks in /etc/ca-certificates/update.d...
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done.
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```
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### Disable Version Check and Service Ping
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The Version Check and Service Ping services improve the GitLab user experience and ensure that
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users are on the most up-to-date instances of GitLab. These two services can be turned off for offline
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environments so that they do not attempt and fail to reach out to GitLab services.
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Learn more about [disabling usage statistics](../../user/admin_area/settings/usage_statistics.md#enable-or-disable-usage-statistics).
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