info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
To make sure you're using the right version of the documentation, go to [the Geo page on GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/administration/geo/index.md) and choose the appropriate release from the **Switch branch/tag** dropdown list. For example, [`v13.7.6-ee`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/v13.7.6-ee/doc/administration/geo/index.md).
- Can be used for cloning and fetching projects, in addition to reading any data available in the GitLab web interface (see [limitations](#limitations)).
- Read-only **secondary** sites: Maintain one **primary** GitLab site while still enabling read-only **secondary** sites for each of your distributed teams.
- An intuitive UI: **Secondary** sites use the same web interface your team has grown accustomed to. In addition, there are visual notifications that block write operations and make it clear that a user is on a **secondary** sites.
Your Geo instance can be used for cloning and fetching projects, in addition to reading any data. This makes working with large repositories over large distances much faster.
- The **primary** site behaves as a full read-write GitLab instance.
- **Secondary** sites are read-only but proxy Git push operations to the **primary** site. This makes **secondary** sites appear to support push operations themselves.
The following table lists basic ports that must be open between the **primary** and **secondary** sites for Geo. To simplify failovers, you should open ports in both directions.
When using HTTP or HTTPS proxying, your load balancer must be configured to pass through the `Connection` and `Upgrade` hop-by-hop headers. See the [web terminal](../integration/terminal.md) integration guide for more details.
When something is marked to be updated in the tracking database instance, asynchronous jobs running on the **secondary** site execute the required operations and update the state.
This new architecture allows GitLab to be resilient to connectivity issues between the sites. It doesn't matter how long the **secondary** site is disconnected from the **primary** site as it is able to replay all the events in the correct order and become synchronized with the **primary** site again.
- Pushing directly to a **secondary** site redirects (for HTTP) or proxies (for SSH) the request to the **primary** site instead of [handling it directly](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/1381), except when using Git over HTTP with credentials embedded in the URI. For example, `https://user:password@secondary.tld`.
- The **primary** site has to be online for OAuth login to happen. Existing sessions and Git are not affected. Support for the **secondary** site to use an OAuth provider independent from the primary is [being planned](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/208465).
- The installation takes multiple manual steps that together can take about an hour depending on circumstances. Consider using [the GitLab Environment Toolkit](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-environment-toolkit) to deploy and operate production GitLab instances based on our [Reference Architectures](../reference_architectures/index.md), including automation of common daily tasks. We are planning to [improve Geo's installation even further](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/1465).
- Real-time updates of issues/merge requests (for example, via long polling) doesn't work on the **secondary** site.
- GitLab Runners cannot register with a **secondary** site. Support for this is [planned for the future](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/3294).
- [Selective synchronization](replication/configuration.md#selective-synchronization) only limits what repositories and files are replicated. The entire PostgreSQL data is still replicated. Selective synchronization is not built to accommodate compliance / export control use cases.
- [Pages access control](../../user/project/pages/pages_access_control.md) doesn't work on secondaries. See [GitLab issue #9336](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/9336) for details.
- [GitLab chart with Geo](https://docs.gitlab.com/charts/advanced/geo/) does not support [Unified URLs](secondary_proxy/index.md#set-up-a-unified-url-for-geo-sites). See [GitLab issue #3522](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/charts/gitlab/-/issues/3522) for more details.
- [Disaster recovery](disaster_recovery/index.md) for multi-secondary sites causes downtime due to the complete re-synchronization and re-configuration of all non-promoted secondaries.
- For Git over SSH, secondary sites must use the same port as the primary. [GitLab issue #339262](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/339262) proposes to remove this limitation.
There is a complete list of all GitLab [data types](replication/datatypes.md) and [existing support for replication and verification](replication/datatypes.md#limitations-on-replicationverification).
If you try to view replication data on the primary site, you receive a warning that this may be inconsistent:
> Viewing projects and designs data from a primary site is not possible when using a unified URL. Visit the secondary site directly.
The only way to view projects replication data for a particular secondary site is to visit that secondary site directly. For example, `https://<IP of your secondary site>/admin/geo/replication/projects`.
An [epic exists](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4623) to fix this limitation.
The only way to view designs replication data for a particular secondary site is to visit that secondary site directly. For example, `https://<IP of your secondary site>/admin/geo/replication/designs`.
An [epic exists](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4624) to fix this limitation.
When using Unified URL, visiting the secondary site directly means you must route your requests to the secondary site. Exactly how this might be done depends on your networking configuration. If using DNS to route requests to the appropriate site, then you can, for example, edit your local machine's `/etc/hosts` file to route your requests to the desired secondary site. If the Geo sites are all behind a load balancer, then depending on the load balancer, you might be able to configure all requests from your IP to go to a particular secondary site.
After installing GitLab on the **secondary** sites and performing the initial configuration, see the following documentation for post-installation information.
In some circumstances, like during [upgrades](replication/upgrading_the_geo_sites.md) or a [planned failover](disaster_recovery/planned_failover.md), it is desirable to pause replication between the primary and secondary.
If `postgresql` is on a standalone database node, ensure that `gitlab.rb` on that node contains the configuration line `gitlab_rails['geo_node_name'] = 'node_name'`, where `node_name` is the same as the `geo_name_name` on the application node.
For information on configuring Geo for multiple nodes, see [Geo for multiple servers](replication/multiple_servers.md).
### Configuring Geo with Object Storage
For information on configuring Geo with object storage, see [Geo with Object storage](replication/object_storage.md).
### Disaster Recovery
For information on using Geo in disaster recovery situations to mitigate data-loss and restore services, see [Disaster Recovery](disaster_recovery/index.md).
For more information on Geo security, see [Geo security review](replication/security_review.md).
### Tuning Geo
For more information on tuning Geo, see [Tuning Geo](replication/tuning.md).
### Set up a location-aware Git URL
For an example of how to set up a location-aware Git remote URL with AWS Route53, see [Location-aware Git remote URL with AWS Route53](replication/location_aware_git_url.md).
This file contains information about when Geo attempts to sync repositories and files. Each line in the file contains a separate JSON entry that can be ingested into. For example, Elasticsearch or Splunk.