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| Primary | This marks a Geo site as **primary** site. There can be only one **primary** site. |
| Name | The unique identifier for the Geo site. It's highly recommended to use a physical location as a name. Good examples are "London Office" or "us-east-1". Avoid words like "primary", "secondary", "Geo", or "DR". This makes the failover process easier because the physical location does not change, but the Geo site role can. All nodes in a single Geo site use the same site name. Nodes use the `gitlab_rails['geo_node_name']` setting in `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` to lookup their Geo site record in the PostgreSQL database. If `gitlab_rails['geo_node_name']` is not set, the node's `external_url` with trailing slash is used as fallback. The value of `Name` is case-sensitive, and most characters are allowed. |
| URL | The instance's user-facing URL. |
The site you're currently browsing is indicated with a blue `Current` label, and
the **primary** node is listed first as `Primary site`.
## Secondary site settings
**Secondary** sites have a number of additional settings available:
| Setting | Description |
|---------------------------|-------------|
| Selective synchronization | Enable Geo [selective sync](../../administration/geo/replication/configuration.md#selective-synchronization) for this **secondary** site. |
| Repository sync capacity | Number of concurrent requests this **secondary** site makes to the **primary** site when backfilling repositories. |
| File sync capacity | Number of concurrent requests this **secondary** site makes to the **primary** site when backfilling files. |
## Geo backfill
**Secondary** sites are notified of changes to repositories and files by the **primary** site,
and always attempt to synchronize those changes as quickly as possible.
Backfill is the act of populating the **secondary** site with repositories and files that
existed *before* the **secondary** site was added to the database. Because there may be
extremely large numbers of repositories and files, it's not feasible to attempt to
download them all at once; so, GitLab places an upper limit on the concurrency of
these operations.
How long the backfill takes is dependent on the maximum concurrency, but higher
values place more strain on the **primary** site. The limits are configurable.
If your **primary** site has lots of surplus capacity,
you can increase the values to complete backfill in a shorter time. If it's