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GitLab Pages administration for source installations
This is the documentation for configuring a GitLab Pages when you have installed GitLab from source and not using the Omnibus packages.
You are encouraged to read the Omnibus documentation as it provides some invaluable information to the configuration of GitLab Pages. Please proceed to read it before going forward with this guide.
We also highly recommend that you use the Omnibus GitLab packages, as we optimize them specifically for GitLab, and we will take care of upgrading GitLab Pages to the latest supported version.
Overview
Read the Omnibus overview section.
Prerequisites
Before proceeding with the Pages configuration, make sure that:
- You have a separate domain under which GitLab Pages will be served. In
this document we assume that to be
example.io
. - You have configured a wildcard DNS record for that domain.
- You have installed the
zip
andunzip
packages in the same server that GitLab is installed since they are needed to compress/uncompress the Pages artifacts. - (Optional) You have a wildcard certificate for the Pages domain if you
decide to serve Pages (
*.example.io
) under HTTPS. - (Optional but recommended) You have configured and enabled the Shared Runners so that your users don't have to bring their own.
DNS configuration
GitLab Pages expect to run on their own virtual host. In your DNS server/provider you need to add a wildcard DNS A record pointing to the host that GitLab runs. For example, an entry would look like this:
*.example.io. 1800 IN A 1.1.1.1
where example.io
is the domain under which GitLab Pages will be served
and 1.1.1.1
is the IP address of your GitLab instance.
Note: You should not use the GitLab domain to serve user pages. For more information see the security section.
Configuration
Depending on your needs, you can set up GitLab Pages in 4 different ways. The following options are listed from the easiest setup to the most advanced one. The absolute minimum requirement is to set up the wildcard DNS since that is needed in all configurations.
Wildcard domains
Requirements:
URL scheme: http://page.example.io
This is the minimum setup that you can use Pages with. It is the base for all other setups as described below. Nginx will proxy all requests to the daemon. The Pages daemon doesn't listen to the outside world.
-
Install the Pages daemon:
cd /home/git sudo -u git -H git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages.git cd gitlab-pages sudo -u git -H git checkout v0.2.4 sudo -u git -H make
-
Go to the GitLab installation directory:
cd /home/git/gitlab
-
Edit
gitlab.yml
and under thepages
setting, setenabled
totrue
and thehost
to the FQDN under which GitLab Pages will be served:## GitLab Pages pages: enabled: true # The location where pages are stored (default: shared/pages). # path: shared/pages host: example.io port: 80 https: false
-
Copy the
gitlab-pages-ssl
Nginx configuration file:sudo cp lib/support/nginx/gitlab-pages-ssl /etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf sudo ln -sf /etc/nginx/sites-{available,enabled}/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf
Replace
gitlab-pages-ssl
withgitlab-pages
if you are not using SSL. -
Restart NGINX
Wildcard domains with TLS support
Requirements:
- Wildcard DNS setup
- Wildcard TLS certificate
URL scheme: https://page.example.io
Nginx will proxy all requests to the daemon. Pages daemon doesn't listen to the outside world.
-
Install the Pages daemon:
cd /home/git sudo -u git -H git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages.git cd gitlab-pages sudo -u git -H git checkout v0.2.4 sudo -u git -H make
-
In
gitlab.yml
, set the port to443
and https totrue
:## GitLab Pages pages: enabled: true # The location where pages are stored (default: shared/pages). # path: shared/pages host: example.io port: 443 https: true
-
Copy the
gitlab-pages-ssl
Nginx configuration file:sudo cp lib/support/nginx/gitlab-pages-ssl /etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf sudo ln -sf /etc/nginx/sites-{available,enabled}/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf
Replace
gitlab-pages-ssl
withgitlab-pages
if you are not using SSL. -
Restart NGINX
Advanced configuration
In addition to the wildcard domains, you can also have the option to configure GitLab Pages to work with custom domains. Again, there are two options here: support custom domains with and without TLS certificates. The easiest setup is that without TLS certificates.
Custom domains
Requirements:
- Wildcard DNS setup
- Secondary IP
URL scheme: http://page.example.io
and http://domain.com
In that case, the pages daemon is running, Nginx still proxies requests to the daemon but the daemon is also able to receive requests from the outside world. Custom domains are supported, but no TLS.
-
Install the Pages daemon:
cd /home/git sudo -u git -H git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages.git cd gitlab-pages sudo -u git -H git checkout v0.2.4 sudo -u git -H make
-
Edit
gitlab.yml
to look like the example below. You need to change thehost
to the FQDN under which GitLab Pages will be served. Setexternal_http
to the secondary IP on which the pages daemon will listen for connections:pages: enabled: true # The location where pages are stored (default: shared/pages). # path: shared/pages host: example.io port: 80 https: false external_http: 1.1.1.2:80
-
Edit
/etc/default/gitlab
and setgitlab_pages_enabled
totrue
in order to enable the pages daemon. Ingitlab_pages_options
the-pages-domain
and-listen-http
must match thehost
andexternal_http
settings that you set above respectively:gitlab_pages_enabled=true gitlab_pages_options="-pages-domain example.io -pages-root $app_root/shared/pages -listen-proxy 127.0.0.1:8090 -listen-http 1.1.1.2:80"
-
Copy the
gitlab-pages-ssl
Nginx configuration file:sudo cp lib/support/nginx/gitlab-pages-ssl /etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf sudo ln -sf /etc/nginx/sites-{available,enabled}/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf
Replace
gitlab-pages-ssl
withgitlab-pages
if you are not using SSL. -
Edit all GitLab related configs in
/etc/nginx/site-available/
and replace0.0.0.0
with1.1.1.1
, where1.1.1.1
the primary IP where GitLab listens to. -
Restart NGINX
Custom domains with TLS support
Requirements:
- Wildcard DNS setup
- Wildcard TLS certificate
- Secondary IP
URL scheme: https://page.example.io
and https://domain.com
In that case, the pages daemon is running, Nginx still proxies requests to the daemon but the daemon is also able to receive requests from the outside world. Custom domains and TLS are supported.
-
Install the Pages daemon:
cd /home/git sudo -u git -H git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages.git cd gitlab-pages sudo -u git -H git checkout v0.2.4 sudo -u git -H make
-
Edit
gitlab.yml
to look like the example below. You need to change thehost
to the FQDN under which GitLab Pages will be served. Setexternal_http
andexternal_https
to the secondary IP on which the pages daemon will listen for connections:## GitLab Pages pages: enabled: true # The location where pages are stored (default: shared/pages). # path: shared/pages host: example.io port: 443 https: true external_http: 1.1.1.2:80 external_https: 1.1.1.2:443
-
Edit
/etc/default/gitlab
and setgitlab_pages_enabled
totrue
in order to enable the pages daemon. Ingitlab_pages_options
the-pages-domain
,-listen-http
and-listen-https
must match thehost
,external_http
andexternal_https
settings that you set above respectively. The-root-cert
and-root-key
settings are the wildcard TLS certificates of theexample.io
domain:gitlab_pages_enabled=true gitlab_pages_options="-pages-domain example.io -pages-root $app_root/shared/pages -listen-proxy 127.0.0.1:8090 -listen-http 1.1.1.2:80 -listen-https 1.1.1.2:443 -root-cert /path/to/example.io.crt -root-key /path/to/example.io.key
-
Copy the
gitlab-pages-ssl
Nginx configuration file:sudo cp lib/support/nginx/gitlab-pages-ssl /etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf sudo ln -sf /etc/nginx/sites-{available,enabled}/gitlab-pages-ssl.conf
Replace
gitlab-pages-ssl
withgitlab-pages
if you are not using SSL. -
Edit all GitLab related configs in
/etc/nginx/site-available/
and replace0.0.0.0
with1.1.1.1
, where1.1.1.1
the primary IP where GitLab listens to. -
Restart NGINX
Change storage path
Follow the steps below to change the default path where GitLab Pages' contents are stored.
-
Pages are stored by default in
/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/pages
. If you wish to store them in another location you must set it up in/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
:gitlab_rails['pages_path'] = "/mnt/storage/pages"
NGINX caveats
Note: The following information applies only for installations from source.
Be extra careful when setting up the domain name in the NGINX config. You must not remove the backslashes.
If your GitLab pages domain is example.io
, replace:
server_name ~^.*\.YOUR_GITLAB_PAGES\.DOMAIN$;
with:
server_name ~^.*\.example\.io$;
If you are using a subdomain, make sure to escape all dots (.
) except from
the first one with a backslash (). For example pages.example.io
would be:
server_name ~^.*\.pages\.example\.io$;
Change storage path
Follow the steps below to change the default path where GitLab Pages' contents are stored.
-
Pages are stored by default in
/home/git/gitlab/shared/pages
. If you wish to store them in another location you must set it up ingitlab.yml
under thepages
section:pages: enabled: true # The location where pages are stored (default: shared/pages). path: /mnt/storage/pages
Set maximum Pages size
The maximum size of the unpacked archive per project can be configured in the Admin area under the Application settings in the Maximum size of pages (MB). The default is 100MB.
Backup
Pages are part of the regular backup so there is nothing to configure.
Security
You should strongly consider running GitLab pages under a different hostname than GitLab to prevent XSS attacks.