279 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
279 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
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---
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stage: Enablement
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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/#designated-technical-writers
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---
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# Upgrade GitLab using the GitLab Package **(FREE SELF)**
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This section describes how to upgrade GitLab to a new version using the
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GitLab package.
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We recommend performing upgrades between major and minor releases no more than once per
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week, to allow time for background migrations to finish. Decrease the time required to
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complete these migrations by increasing the number of
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[Sidekiq workers](../../administration/operations/extra_sidekiq_processes.md)
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that can process jobs in the `background_migration` queue.
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If you don't follow the steps in [zero downtime upgrades](../zero_downtime.md),
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your GitLab application will not be available to users while an upgrade is in progress.
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They either see a "Deploy in progress" message or a "502" error in their web browser.
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Prerequisites:
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- [Supported upgrade paths](../index.md#upgrade-paths)
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has suggestions on when to upgrade. Upgrade paths are enforced for version upgrades by
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default. This restricts performing direct upgrades that skip major versions (for
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example 10.3 to 12.7 in one jump) that **can break GitLab
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installations** due to multiple reasons like deprecated or removed configuration
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settings, upgrade of internal tools and libraries, and so on.
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- If you are upgrading from a non-Package installation to a GitLab Package installation, see
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[Upgrading from a non-Package installation to a GitLab Package installation](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/convert_to_omnibus.html).
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- It's important to ensure that any
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[background migrations](../index.md#checking-for-background-migrations-before-upgrading)
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have been fully completed before upgrading to a new major version. Upgrading
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before background migrations have finished may lead to data corruption.
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- Gitaly servers must be upgraded to the newer version prior to upgrading the application server.
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This prevents the gRPC client on the application server from sending RPCs that the old Gitaly version
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does not support.
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You can upgrade the GitLab Package using one of the following methods:
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- [Using the official repositories](#upgrade-using-the-official-repositories).
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- [Using a manually-downloaded package](#upgrade-using-a-manually-downloaded-package).
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Both automatically back up the GitLab database before installing a newer
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GitLab version. You may skip this automatic database backup by creating an empty file
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at `/etc/gitlab/skip-auto-backup`:
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```shell
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sudo touch /etc/gitlab/skip-auto-backup
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```
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For safety reasons, you should maintain an up-to-date backup on your own if you plan to use this flag.
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## Version-specific changes
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Updating to major versions might need some manual intervention. For more information,
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check the version your are upgrading to:
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- [GitLab 14](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/gitlab_14_changes.html)
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- [GitLab 13](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/gitlab_13_changes.html)
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- [GitLab 12](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/gitlab_12_changes.html)
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- [GitLab 11](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/gitlab_11_changes.html)
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## Upgrade using the official repositories
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All GitLab packages are posted to the GitLab [package server](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/).
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Five repositories are maintained:
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- [GitLab EE](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/gitlab-ee): for official
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[Enterprise Edition](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) releases.
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- [GitLab CE](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/gitlab-ce): for official Community Edition releases.
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- [Unstable](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/unstable): for release candidates and other unstable versions.
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- [Nighty Builds](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/nightly-builds): for nightly builds.
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- [Raspberry Pi](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/raspberry-pi2): for official Community Edition releases built for [Raspberry Pi](https://www.raspberrypi.org) packages.
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If you have installed Omnibus GitLab [Community Edition](https://about.gitlab.com/install/?version=ce)
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or [Enterprise Edition](https://about.gitlab.com/install/), then the
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official GitLab repository should have already been set up for you.
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To upgrade to the newest GitLab version, run:
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- For GitLab [Enterprise Edition](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/):
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```shell
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# Debian/Ubuntu
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sudo apt-get update
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sudo apt-get install gitlab-ee
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# Centos/RHEL
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sudo yum install gitlab-ee
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```
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- For GitLab Community Edition:
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```shell
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# Debian/Ubuntu
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sudo apt-get update
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sudo apt-get install gitlab-ce
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# Centos/RHEL
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sudo yum install gitlab-ce
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```
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### Upgrade to a specific version using the official repositories
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Linux package managers default to installing the latest available version of a
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package for installation and upgrades. Upgrading directly to the latest major
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version can be problematic for older GitLab versions that require a multi-stage
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[upgrade path](../index.md#upgrade-paths). An upgrade path can span multiple
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versions, so you must specify the specific GitLab package with each upgrade.
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To specify the intended GitLab version number in your package manager's install
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or upgrade command:
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1. First, identify the GitLab version number in your package manager:
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```shell
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# Ubuntu/Debian
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sudo apt-cache madison gitlab-ee
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# RHEL/CentOS 6 and 7
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yum --showduplicates list gitlab-ee
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# RHEL/CentOS 8
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dnf search gitlab-ee*
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```
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1. Then install the specific GitLab package:
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```shell
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# Ubuntu/Debian
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sudo apt install gitlab-ee=12.0.12-ee.0
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# RHEL/CentOS 6 and 7
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yum install gitlab-ee-12.0.12-ee.0.el7
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# RHEL/CentOS 8
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dnf install gitlab-ee-12.0.12-ee.0.el8
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# SUSE
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zypper install gitlab-ee=12.0.12-ee.0
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```
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## Upgrade using a manually-downloaded package
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NOTE:
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The [package repository](#upgrade-using-the-official-repositories) is recommended over
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a manual installation.
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If for some reason you don't use the official repositories, you can
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download the package and install it manually. This method can be used to either
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install GitLab for the first time or update it.
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To download and install GitLab:
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1. Visit the [official repository](#upgrade-using-the-official-repositories) of your package.
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1. Browse to the repository for the type of package you would like to see the
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list of packages that are available. Multiple packages exist for a
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single version, one for each supported distribution type. Next to the filename
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is a label indicating the distribution, as the file names may be the same.
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1. Find the package version you wish to install and click on it.
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1. Click the **Download** button in the upper right corner to download the package.
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1. After the GitLab package is downloaded, install it using the following commands:
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- For GitLab [Enterprise Edition](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/):
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```shell
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# Debian/Ubuntu
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dpkg -i gitlab-ee-<version>.deb
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# CentOS/RHEL
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rpm -Uvh gitlab-ee-<version>.rpm
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```
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- For GitLab Community Edition:
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```shell
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# GitLab Community Edition
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# Debian/Ubuntu
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dpkg -i gitlab-ce-<version>.deb
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# CentOS/RHEL
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rpm -Uvh gitlab-ce-<version>.rpm
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```
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## Troubleshooting
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### GitLab 13.7 and later unavailable on Amazon Linux 2
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Amazon Linux 2 is not an [officially supported operating system](../../administration/package_information/deprecated_os.md#supported-operating-systems).
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However, in past the [official package installation script](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/gitlab-ee/install)
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installed the `el/6` package repository if run on Amazon Linux. From GitLab 13.7, we no longer
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provide `el/6` packages so administrators must run the [installation script](https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/gitlab-ee/install)
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again to update the repository to `el/7`:
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```shell
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curl --silent "https://packages.gitlab.com/install/repositories/gitlab/gitlab-ee/script.rpm.sh" | sudo bash
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```
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See the [epic on support for GitLab on Amazon Linux 2](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/2195) for the latest details on official Amazon Linux 2 support.
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### Get the status of a GitLab installation
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```shell
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sudo gitlab-ctl status
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sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:check SANITIZE=true
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```
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- Information on using `gitlab-ctl` to perform [maintenance tasks](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/maintenance/index.html).
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- Information on using `gitlab-rake` to [check the configuration](../../administration/raketasks/maintenance.md#check-gitlab-configuration).
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### RPM 'package is already installed' error
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If you are using RPM and you are upgrading from GitLab Community Edition to GitLab Enterprise Edition you may get an error like this:
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```shell
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package gitlab-7.5.2_omnibus.5.2.1.ci-1.el7.x86_64 (which is newer than gitlab-7.5.2_ee.omnibus.5.2.1.ci-1.el7.x86_64) is already installed
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```
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You can override this version check with the `--oldpackage` option:
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```shell
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sudo rpm -Uvh --oldpackage gitlab-7.5.2_ee.omnibus.5.2.1.ci-1.el7.x86_64.rpm
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```
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### Package obsoleted by installed package
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CE and EE packages are marked as obsoleting and replacing each other so that both aren't installed and running at the same time.
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If you are using local RPM files to switch from CE to EE or vice versa, use `rpm` for installing the package rather than `yum`. If you try to use yum, then you may get an error like this:
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```plaintext
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Cannot install package gitlab-ee-11.8.3-ee.0.el6.x86_64. It is obsoleted by installed package gitlab-ce-11.8.3-ce.0.el6.x86_64
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```
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To avoid this issue, either:
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- Use the same instructions provided in the
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[Upgrade using a manually-downloaded package](#upgrade-using-a-manually-downloaded-package) section.
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- Temporarily disable this checking in yum by adding `--setopt=obsoletes=0` to the options given to the command.
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### 500 error when accessing Project > Settings > Repository
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When GitLab is migrated from CE > EE > CE, and then back to EE, you
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might get the following error when viewing a project's repository settings:
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```shell
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Processing by Projects::Settings::RepositoryController#show as HTML
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Parameters: {"namespace_id"=>"<namespace_id>", "project_id"=>"<project_id>"}
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Completed 500 Internal Server Error in 62ms (ActiveRecord: 4.7ms | Elasticsearch: 0.0ms | Allocations: 14583)
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NoMethodError (undefined method `commit_message_negative_regex' for #<PushRule:0x00007fbddf4229b8>
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Did you mean? commit_message_regex_change):
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```
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This error is caused by an EE feature being added to a CE instance on the initial move to EE.
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After the instance is moved back to CE and then is upgraded to EE again, the
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`push_rules` table already exists in the database. Therefore, a migration is
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unable to add the `commit_message_regex_change` column.
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This results in the [backport migration of EE tables](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/cf00e431024018ddd82158f8a9210f113d0f4dbc/db/migrate/20190402150158_backport_enterprise_schema.rb#L1619) not working correctly.
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The backport migration assumes that certain tables in the database do not exist when running CE.
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To fix this issue, manually add the missing `commit_message_negative_regex` column and restart GitLab:
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```shell
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# Access psql
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sudo gitlab-rails dbconsole
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# Add the missing column
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ALTER TABLE push_rules ADD COLUMN commit_message_negative_regex VARCHAR;
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# Exit psql
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\q
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# Restart GitLab
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sudo gitlab-ctl restart
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```
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### Error `Failed to connect to the internal GitLab API` on a separate GitLab Pages server
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Please see [GitLab Pages troubleshooting](../../administration/pages/index.md#failed-to-connect-to-the-internal-gitlab-api).
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