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README.md |
Migrate GitLab CI to GitLab CE or EE
Beginning with version 8.0 of GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE), GitLab CI is no longer its own application, but is instead built into the CE and EE applications.
This guide will detail the process of migrating your CI installation and data into your GitLab CE or EE installation.
Before we begin
You need to have a working installation of GitLab CI version 7.14 to perform this migration. The older versions are not supported and will most likely break this migration procedure.
This migration cannot be performed online and takes a significant amount of time. Make sure to plan ahead.
If you are running a version of GitLab CI prior to 7.14 please follow the appropriate update guide.
The migration is divided into three parts:
Part I: GitLab CI
1. Stop GitLab CI
sudo service gitlab_ci stop
2. Create a backup
The migration procedure modifies the structure of the CI database. If something goes wrong, you will not be able to revert to a previous version without a backup:
cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec backup:create RAILS_ENV=production
3. Rename database tables
To prevent naming conflicts with database tables in GitLab CE or EE, we need to
rename CI's tables to begin with a ci_
prefix:
cat <<EOF | bundle exec rails dbconsole production
ALTER TABLE application_settings RENAME TO ci_application_settings;
ALTER TABLE builds RENAME TO ci_builds;
ALTER TABLE commits RENAME TO ci_commits;
ALTER TABLE events RENAME TO ci_events;
ALTER TABLE jobs RENAME TO ci_jobs;
ALTER TABLE projects RENAME TO ci_projects;
ALTER TABLE runner_projects RENAME TO ci_runner_projects;
ALTER TABLE runners RENAME TO ci_runners;
ALTER TABLE services RENAME TO ci_services;
ALTER TABLE tags RENAME TO ci_tags;
ALTER TABLE taggings RENAME TO ci_taggings;
ALTER TABLE trigger_requests RENAME TO ci_trigger_requests;
ALTER TABLE triggers RENAME TO ci_triggers;
ALTER TABLE variables RENAME TO ci_variables;
ALTER TABLE web_hooks RENAME TO ci_web_hooks;
EOF
4. Remove cronjob
cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec whenever --clear-crontab
5. Create a database dump
In this step, you will need to know information about both your CI and CE (or EE) databases, such as the server types, hosts, and ports, and the usernames and passwords.
We can obtain the necessary information from the config/database.yml
files for
each installation.
-
Get the information for the CI database:
cat /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci/config/database.yml
-
Then for the CE (or EE) database:
cat /home/git/gitlab/config/database.yml
-
The output of each command should look something like this:
production: adapter: postgresql (or mysql2) encoding: utf8 reconnect: false database: GITLAB_CI_DATABASE pool: 5 username: DB_USERNAME password: DB_PASSWORD host: DB_HOSTNAME port: DB_PORT # socket: /tmp/mysql.sock
-
Depending on the values for
adapter
, you will have to use different commands to perform the database dump.NOTE: For any of the commands below, you'll need to substitute the values
IN_UPPERCASE
with the corresponding values from your CI installation'sconfig/database.yml
files above.-
If both your CI and CE (or EE) installations use mysql2 as the
adapter
, usemysqldump
:mysqldump --default-character-set=utf8 --complete-insert --no-create-info \ --host=DB_USERNAME --port=DB_PORT --user=DB_HOSTNAME -p GITLAB_CI_DATABASE \ ci_application_settings ci_builds ci_commits ci_events ci_jobs ci_projects \ ci_runner_projects ci_runners ci_services ci_tags ci_taggings ci_trigger_requests \ ci_triggers ci_variables ci_web_hooks > gitlab_ci.sql
-
If both your CI and CE (or EE) installations use postgresql as the
adapter
, usepg_dump
:pg_dump -h DB_HOSTNAME -U DB_USERNAME -p DB_PORT \ --data-only GITLAB_CI_DATABASE -t "ci_*" > gitlab_ci.sql
-
If your CI installation uses mysql2 as the
adapter
and your CE (or EE) installation uses postgresql, usemysqldump
to dump the database and then convert it to PostgreSQL using mysql-postgresql-converter:# Dump existing MySQL database first mysqldump --default-character-set=utf8 --compatible=postgresql --complete-insert \ --host=DB_USERNAME --port=DB_PORT --user=DB_HOSTNAME -p GITLAB_CI_DATABASE \ ci_application_settings ci_builds ci_commits ci_events ci_jobs ci_projects \ ci_runner_projects ci_runners ci_services ci_tags ci_taggings ci_trigger_requests \ ci_triggers ci_variables ci_web_hooks > gitlab_ci.sql.tmp # Convert database to be compatible with PostgreSQL git clone https://github.com/gitlabhq/mysql-postgresql-converter.git -b gitlab python mysql-postgresql-converter/db_converter.py gitlab_ci.sql.tmp gitlab_ci.sql.tmp2 ed -s gitlab_ci.sql.tmp2 < mysql-postgresql-converter/move_drop_indexes.ed # Filter to only include INSERT statements grep "^\(START\|SET\|INSERT\|COMMIT\)" gitlab_ci.sql.tmp2 > gitlab_ci.sql
-
Part II: GitLab CE (or EE)
1. Ensure GitLab is updated
Your GitLab CE or EE installation must be version 8.0. If it's not, follow the update guide.
2. Stop GitLab
Before you can migrate data you need to stop the GitLab service first:
sudo service gitlab stop
3. Create a backup
This migration poses a significant risk of breaking your GitLab installation. Create a backup before proceeding:
cd /home/git/gitlab
sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:backup:create RAILS_ENV=production
4. Copy secret tokens from CI
The secrets.yml
file stores encryption keys for secure variables.
You need to copy the contents of GitLab CI's config/secrets.yml
file to the
same file in GitLab CE:
sudo cp /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci/config/secrets.yml /home/git/gitlab/config/secrets.yml
sudo chown git:git /home/git/gitlab/config/secrets.yml
sudo chown 0600 /home/git/gitlab/config/secrets.yml
5. New configuration options for gitlab.yml
There are new configuration options available for gitlab.yml
. View them with
the command below and apply them manually to your current gitlab.yml
:
git diff origin/7-14-stable:config/gitlab.yml.example origin/8-0-stable:config/gitlab.yml.example
The new options include configuration settings for GitLab CI.
6. Copy build logs
You need to copy the contents of GitLab CI's builds/
directory to the
corresponding directory in GitLab CE or EE:
sudo rsync -av /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci/builds /home/git/gitlab/builds
sudo chown -R git:git /home/git/gitlab/builds
The build logs are usually quite big so it may take a significant amount of time.
7. Import GitLab CI database
Now you'll import the GitLab CI database dump that you created earlier into the GitLab CE or EE database:
sudo mv /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci/gitlab_ci.sql /home/git/gitlab/gitlab_ci.sql
sudo chown git:git /home/git/gitlab/gitlab_ci.sql
sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake ci:migrate CI_DUMP=/home/git/gitlab/gitlab_ci.sql RAILS_ENV=production
This task will:
- Delete data from all existing CI tables
- Import data from database dump
- Fix database auto-increments
- Fix tags assigned to Builds and Runners
- Fix services used by CI
8. Start GitLab
You can start GitLab CI (or EE) now and see if everything is working:
sudo service gitlab start
Part III: Finishing Up
1. Update Nginx configuration
To ensure that your existing CI runners are able to communicate with the migrated installation, and that existing build triggers still work, you'll need to update your Nginx configuration to redirect requests for the old locations to the new ones.
Edit /etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab_ci
and paste:
# GITLAB CI
server {
listen 80 default_server; # e.g., listen 192.168.1.1:80;
server_name YOUR_CI_SERVER_FQDN; # e.g., server_name source.example.com;
access_log /var/log/nginx/gitlab_ci_access.log;
error_log /var/log/nginx/gitlab_ci_error.log;
# expose API to fix runners
location /api {
proxy_read_timeout 300;
proxy_connect_timeout 300;
proxy_redirect off;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
# You need to specify your DNS servers that are able to resolve YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN
resolver 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4;
proxy_pass $scheme://YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN/ci$request_uri;
}
# expose build endpoint to allow trigger builds
location ~ ^/projects/\d+/build$ {
proxy_read_timeout 300;
proxy_connect_timeout 300;
proxy_redirect off;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
# You need to specify your DNS servers that are able to resolve YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN
resolver 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4;
proxy_pass $scheme://YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN/ci$request_uri;
}
# redirect all other CI requests
location / {
return 301 $scheme://YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN/ci$request_uri;
}
# adjust this to match the largest build log your runners might submit,
# set to 0 to disable limit
client_max_body_size 10m;
}
Make sure you substitute these placeholder values with your real ones:
YOUR_CI_SERVER_FQDN
: The existing public-facing address of your GitLab CI install (e.g.,ci.gitlab.com
).YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN
: The current public-facing address of your GitLab CE (or EE) install (e.g.,gitlab.com
).
Make sure not to remove the /ci$request_uri
part. This is required to properly forward the requests.
You should also make sure that you can:
curl https://YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN/
from your previous GitLab CI server.curl https://YOUR_CI_SERVER_FQDN/
from your GitLab CE (or EE) server.
2. Check Nginx configuration
sudo nginx -t
3. Restart Nginx
sudo /etc/init.d/nginx restart
4. Done!
If everything went well you should be able to access your migrated CI install by
visiting https://gitlab.example.com/ci/
.
If you visit the old GitLab CI address, you should be redirected to the new one.
Enjoy!