# # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # GitLab application config file # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # ########################### NOTE ##################################### # This file should not receive new settings. All configuration options # # * are being moved to ApplicationSetting model! # # If a setting requires an application restart say so in that screen. # # If you change this file in a merge request, please also create # # a MR on https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab/merge_requests. # # For more details see https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab/blob/master/doc/settings/gitlab.yml.md # # Be sure to create a MR against the GDK configuration # # file (https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit/-/blob/main/support/templates/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml.erb) too. # ######################################################################## # # # How to use: # 1. Copy file as gitlab.yml # 2. Update gitlab -> host with your fully qualified domain name # 3. Update gitlab -> email_from # 4. If you installed Git from source, change git -> bin_path to /usr/local/bin/git # IMPORTANT: If Git was installed in a different location use that instead. # You can check with `which git`. If a wrong path of Git is specified, it will # result in various issues such as failures of GitLab CI builds. # 5. Review this configuration file for other settings you may want to adjust production: &base # # 1. GitLab app settings # ========================== ## GitLab settings gitlab: ## Web server settings (note: host is the FQDN, do not include http://) host: localhost port: 80 # Set to 443 if using HTTPS, see installation.md#using-https for additional HTTPS configuration details https: false # Set to true if using HTTPS, see installation.md#using-https for additional HTTPS configuration details # Uncomment this line if you want to configure the Rails asset host for a CDN. # cdn_host: localhost # The maximum time Puma can spend on the request. This needs to be smaller than the worker timeout. # Default is 95% of the worker timeout max_request_duration_seconds: 57 # Uncomment this line below if your ssh host is different from HTTP/HTTPS one # (you'd obviously need to replace ssh.host_example.com with your own host). # Otherwise, ssh host will be set to the `host:` value above # ssh_host: ssh.host_example.com # Relative URL support # WARNING: We recommend using an FQDN to host GitLab in a root path instead # of using a relative URL. # Documentation: http://doc.gitlab.com/ce/install/relative_url.html # Uncomment and customize the following line to run in a non-root path # # relative_url_root: /gitlab # Content Security Policy # See https://guides.rubyonrails.org/security.html#content-security-policy content_security_policy: enabled: true report_only: false directives: base_uri: child_src: connect_src: "'self' http://localhost:* ws://localhost:* wss://localhost:*" default_src: "'self'" font_src: form_action: frame_ancestors: "'self'" frame_src: "'self' https://www.google.com/recaptcha/ https://www.recaptcha.net/ https://content.googleapis.com https://content-compute.googleapis.com https://content-cloudbilling.googleapis.com https://content-cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com" img_src: "* data: blob:" manifest_src: media_src: object_src: "'none'" script_src: "'self' 'unsafe-eval' http://localhost:* https://www.google.com/recaptcha/ https://www.recaptcha.net/ https://www.gstatic.com/recaptcha/ https://apis.google.com" style_src: "'self' 'unsafe-inline'" worker_src: "'self' blob:" report_uri: allowed_hosts: [] # Trusted Proxies # Customize if you have GitLab behind a reverse proxy which is running on a different machine. # Add the IP address for your reverse proxy to the list, otherwise users will appear signed in from that address. trusted_proxies: # Examples: #- 192.168.1.0/24 #- 192.168.2.1 #- 2001:0db8::/32 # Uncomment and customize if you can't use the default user to run GitLab (default: 'git') # user: git ## Date & Time settings # Uncomment and customize if you want to change the default time zone of GitLab application. # To see all available zones, run `bundle exec rake time:zones:all RAILS_ENV=production` # time_zone: 'UTC' ## Email settings # Uncomment and set to false if you need to disable email sending from GitLab (default: true) # email_enabled: true # Email address used in the "From" field in mails sent by GitLab email_from: example@example.com email_display_name: GitLab email_reply_to: noreply@example.com email_subject_suffix: '' email_smime: # Uncomment and set to true if you need to enable email S/MIME signing (default: false) # enabled: false # S/MIME private key file in PEM format, unencrypted # Default is '.gitlab_smime_key' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # key_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_smime_key # S/MIME public certificate key in PEM format, will be attached to signed messages # Default is '.gitlab_smime_cert' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # cert_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_smime_cert # S/MIME extra CA public certificates in PEM format, will be attached to signed messages # Optional # ca_certs_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_smime_ca_certs # Email server smtp settings are in config/initializers/smtp_settings.rb.sample # File location to read encrypted SMTP secrets from # email_smtp_secret_file: /mnt/gitlab/smtp.yaml.enc # Default: shared/encrypted_settings/smtp.yaml.enc # default_can_create_group: false # default: true # username_changing_enabled: false # default: true - User can change their username/namespace ## Default theme ID ## 1 - Indigo ## 2 - Dark ## 3 - Light ## 4 - Blue ## 5 - Green ## 6 - Light Indigo ## 7 - Light Blue ## 8 - Light Green ## 9 - Red ## 10 - Light Red # default_theme: 1 # default: 1 ## Automatic issue closing # If a commit message matches this regular expression, all issues referenced from the matched text will be closed. # This happens when the commit is pushed or merged into the default branch of a project. # When not specified the default issue_closing_pattern as specified below will be used. # Tip: you can test your closing pattern at http://rubular.com. # issue_closing_pattern: '\b((?:[Cc]los(?:e[sd]?|ing)|\b[Ff]ix(?:e[sd]|ing)?|\b[Rr]esolv(?:e[sd]?|ing)|\b[Ii]mplement(?:s|ed|ing)?)(:?) +(?:(?:issues? +)?%{issue_ref}(?:(?:, *| +and +)?)|([A-Z][A-Z0-9_]+-\d+))+)' ## Default project features settings default_projects_features: issues: true merge_requests: true wiki: true snippets: true builds: true container_registry: true ## Webhook settings # Number of seconds to wait for HTTP response after sending webhook HTTP POST request (default: 10) # webhook_timeout: 10 ### GraphQL Settings # Tells the rails application how long it has to complete a GraphQL request. # We suggest this value to be higher than the database timeout value # and lower than the worker timeout set in Puma. (default: 30) # graphql_timeout: 30 ## Repository downloads directory # When a user clicks e.g. 'Download zip' on a project, a temporary zip file is created in the following directory. # The default is 'shared/cache/archive/' relative to the root of the Rails app. # repository_downloads_path: shared/cache/archive/ ## Impersonation settings impersonation_enabled: true ## Disable jQuery and CSS animations # disable_animations: true ## Application settings cache expiry in seconds (default: 60) # application_settings_cache_seconds: 60 ## Print initial root password to stdout during initialization (default: false) # WARNING: setting this to true means that the root password will be printed in # plaintext. This can be a security risk. # display_initial_root_password: false # Allows delivery of emails using Microsoft Graph API with OAuth 2.0 client credentials flow. microsoft_graph_mailer: enabled: false # The unique identifier for the user. To use Microsoft Graph on behalf of the user. # user_id: "YOUR-USER-ID" # The directory tenant the application plans to operate against, in GUID or domain-name format. # tenant: "YOUR-TENANT-ID" # The application ID that's assigned to your app. You can find this information in the portal where you registered your app. # client_id: "YOUR-CLIENT-ID" # The client secret that you generated for your app in the app registration portal. # client_secret: "YOUR-CLIENT-SECRET-ID" # Defaults to "https://login.microsoftonline.com". # azure_ad_endpoint: # Defaults to "https://graph.microsoft.com". # graph_endpoint: ## Reply by email # Allow users to comment on issues and merge requests by replying to notification emails. # For documentation on how to set this up, see https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/reply_by_email.html incoming_email: enabled: false # The email address including the `%{key}` placeholder that will be replaced to reference the item being replied to. # The placeholder can be omitted but if present, it must appear in the "user" part of the address (before the `@`). # Please be aware that a placeholder is required for the Service Desk feature to work. address: "gitlab-incoming+%{key}@gmail.com" # Email account username # With third party providers, this is usually the full email address. # With self-hosted email servers, this is usually the user part of the email address. user: "gitlab-incoming@gmail.com" # Email account password password: "[REDACTED]" # IMAP server host host: "imap.gmail.com" # IMAP server port port: 993 # Whether the IMAP server uses SSL ssl: true # Whether the IMAP server uses StartTLS start_tls: false # The mailbox where incoming mail will end up. Usually "inbox". mailbox: "inbox" # The IDLE command timeout. idle_timeout: 60 # The log file path for the structured log file. # Since `mail_room` is run independently of Rails, an absolute path is preferred. # The default is 'log/mail_room_json.log' relative to the root of the Rails app. # # log_path: log/mail_room_json.log # If you are using Microsoft Graph instead of IMAP, set this to false to retain # messages in the inbox since deleted messages are auto-expunged after some time. delete_after_delivery: true # Whether to expunge (permanently remove) messages from the mailbox when they are marked as deleted after delivery # Only applies to IMAP. Microsoft Graph will auto-expunge any deleted messages. expunge_deleted: false # For Microsoft Graph support # inbox_method: microsoft_graph # inbox_options: # tenant_id: "YOUR-TENANT-ID" # client_id: "YOUR-CLIENT-ID" # client_secret: "YOUR-CLIENT-SECRET" # How mailroom delivers email content to Rails. There are two methods at the moment: # - sidekiq: mailroom pushes the email content to Sidekiq directly. This job # is then picked up by Sidekiq. # - webhook: mailroom triggers a HTTP POST request to Rails web server. The # content is embedded into the request body. # Default is sidekiq. # delivery_method: sidekiq # When the delivery method is webhook, those configs tell the url that # mailroom can contact to. Note that the combined url must not end with "/". # At the moment, the webhook delivery method doesn't support HTTP/HTTPs via # UNIX socket. # gitlab_url: "http://gitlab.example" # When the delivery method is webhook, this config is the file that # contains the shared secret key for verifying access for mailroom's # incoming_email. # Default is '.gitlab_mailroom_secret' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # secret_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_mailroom_secret # File location to read encrypted incoming email secrets from # encrypted_secret_file: /mnt/gitlab/smtp.yaml.enc # Default: shared/encrypted_settings/incoming_email.yaml.enc ## Consolidated object store config ## This will only take effect if the object_store sections are not defined ## within the types (e.g. artifacts, lfs, etc.). # object_store: # enabled: false # proxy_download: false # Passthrough all downloads via GitLab instead of using Redirects to Object Storage # connection: # provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment # aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID # aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY # region: us-east-1 # aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. # endpoint: 'https://s3.amazonaws.com' # default: nil - Useful for S3 compliant services such as DigitalOcean Spaces # storage_options: # server_side_encryption: AES256 # AES256, aws:kms # server_side_encryption_kms_key_id: # Amazon Resource Name. See https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/UsingKMSEncryption.html # objects: # artifacts: # bucket: artifacts # external_diffs: # bucket: external-diffs # lfs: # bucket: lfs-objects # uploads: # bucket: uploads # packages: # bucket: packages # dependency_proxy: # bucket: dependency_proxy ## Build Artifacts artifacts: enabled: true # The location where build artifacts are stored (default: shared/artifacts). # path: shared/artifacts # object_store: # enabled: false # remote_directory: artifacts # The bucket name # proxy_download: false # Passthrough all downloads via GitLab instead of using Redirects to Object Storage # connection: # provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment # aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID # aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY # region: us-east-1 # aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. # endpoint: 'https://s3.amazonaws.com' # default: nil - Useful for S3 compliant services such as DigitalOcean Spaces ## Merge request external diff storage external_diffs: # If disabled (the default), the diffs are in-database. Otherwise, they can # be stored on disk, or in object storage enabled: false # The location where external diffs are stored (default: shared/lfs-external-diffs). # storage_path: shared/external-diffs # object_store: # enabled: false # remote_directory: external-diffs # proxy_download: false # connection: # provider: AWS # aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID # aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY # region: us-east-1 ## Git LFS lfs: enabled: true # The location where LFS objects are stored (default: shared/lfs-objects). # storage_path: shared/lfs-objects object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: lfs-objects # Bucket name # proxy_download: false # Passthrough all downloads via GitLab instead of using Redirects to Object Storage connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 # Use the following options to configure an AWS compatible host # host: 'localhost' # default: s3.amazonaws.com # endpoint: 'http://127.0.0.1:9000' # default: nil # aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. # path_style: true # Use 'host/bucket_name/object' instead of 'bucket_name.host/object' ## Uploads (attachments, avatars, etc...) uploads: # The location where uploads objects are stored (default: public/). # storage_path: public/ # base_dir: uploads/-/system object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: uploads # Bucket name # proxy_download: false # Passthrough all downloads via GitLab instead of using Redirects to Object Storage connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. region: us-east-1 # host: 'localhost' # default: s3.amazonaws.com # endpoint: 'http://127.0.0.1:9000' # default: nil # path_style: true # Use 'host/bucket_name/object' instead of 'bucket_name.host/object' ## Packages (maven repository, npm registry, etc...) packages: enabled: true dpkg_deb_path: /usr/bin/dpkg-deb # The location where build packages are stored (default: shared/packages). # storage_path: shared/packages object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: packages # The bucket name # proxy_download: false # Passthrough all downloads via GitLab instead of using Redirects to Object Storage connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 # host: 'localhost' # default: s3.amazonaws.com # endpoint: 'http://127.0.0.1:9000' # default: nil # aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. # path_style: true # Use 'host/bucket_name/object' instead of 'bucket_name.host/object' ## Dependency Proxy dependency_proxy: enabled: true # The location where build packages are stored (default: shared/dependency_proxy). # storage_path: shared/dependency_proxy object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: dependency_proxy # The bucket name # proxy_download: false # Passthrough all downloads via GitLab instead of using Redirects to Object Storage connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 # host: 'localhost' # default: s3.amazonaws.com # endpoint: 'http://127.0.0.1:9000' # default: nil # aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. # path_style: true # Use 'host/bucket_name/object' instead of 'bucket_name.host/object' ## Terraform state terraform_state: enabled: true # The location where Terraform state files are stored (default: shared/terraform_state). # storage_path: shared/terraform_state object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: terraform # The bucket name connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 # host: 'localhost' # default: s3.amazonaws.com # endpoint: 'http://127.0.0.1:9000' # default: nil # aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. # path_style: true # Use 'host/bucket_name/object' instead of 'bucket_name.host/object' ## CI Secure Files ci_secure_files: enabled: true # storage_path: shared/ci_secure_files object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: ci-secure-files # The bucket name connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 # host: 'localhost' # default: s3.amazonaws.com # endpoint: 'http://127.0.0.1:9000' # default: nil # aws_signature_version: 4 # For creation of signed URLs. Set to 2 if provider does not support v4. # path_style: true # Use 'host/bucket_name/object' instead of 'bucket_name.host/object' ## GitLab Pages pages: enabled: false access_control: false # The location where pages are stored (default: shared/pages). # path: shared/pages # The domain under which the pages are served: # http://group.example.com/project # or project path can be a group page: group.example.com host: example.com port: 80 # Set to 443 if you serve the pages with HTTPS https: false # Set to true if you serve the pages with HTTPS artifacts_server: true # Set to false if you want to disable online view of HTML artifacts # external_http: ["1.1.1.1:80", "[2001::1]:80"] # If defined, enables custom domain support in GitLab Pages # external_https: ["1.1.1.1:443", "[2001::1]:443"] # If defined, enables custom domain and certificate support in GitLab Pages # File that contains the shared secret key for verifying access for gitlab-pages. # Default is '.gitlab_pages_secret' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # secret_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_pages_secret object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: pages # The bucket name connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 local_store: enabled: true # The location where pages are stored (default: shared/pages). # path: shared/pages ## Mattermost ## For enabling Add to Mattermost button mattermost: enabled: false host: 'https://mattermost.example.com' ## Jira connect ## To switch to a Jira connect development environment jira_connect: # atlassian_js_url: 'http://localhost:9292/atlassian.js' # enable_public_keys_storage: true # enforce_jira_base_url_https: false # additional_iframe_ancestors: ['localhost:*'] ## Gravatar ## If using gravatar.com, there's nothing to change here. For Libravatar ## you'll need to provide the custom URLs. For more information, ## see: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/libravatar.html gravatar: # Gravatar/Libravatar URLs: possible placeholders: %{hash} %{size} %{email} %{username} # plain_url: "http://..." # default: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/%{hash}?s=%{size}&d=identicon # ssl_url: "https://..." # default: https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/%{hash}?s=%{size}&d=identicon ## Sidekiq sidekiq: log_format: json # (default is the original format) # An array of tuples indicating the rules for re-routing a worker to a # desirable queue before scheduling. For example: # routing_rules: # - ["resource_boundary=cpu", "cpu_boundary"] # - ["feature_category=pages", null] # - ["*", "default"] ## Auxiliary jobs # Periodically executed jobs, to self-heal GitLab, do external synchronizations, etc. # Please read here for more information: https://github.com/ondrejbartas/sidekiq-cron#adding-cron-job cron_jobs: # Interval, in seconds, for each Sidekiq process to check for scheduled cron jobs that need to be enqueued. If not # set, the interval scales dynamically with the number of Sidekiq processes. If set to 0, disable polling for cron # jobs entirely. # poll_interval: 30 # Flag stuck CI jobs as failed stuck_ci_jobs_worker: cron: "0 * * * *" # Execute scheduled triggers pipeline_schedule_worker: cron: "3-59/10 * * * *" # Remove expired build artifacts expire_build_artifacts_worker: cron: "*/7 * * * *" # Remove expired pipeline artifacts ci_pipelines_expire_artifacts_worker: cron: "*/23 * * * *" # Remove files from object storage ci_schedule_delete_objects_worker: cron: "*/16 * * * *" # Stop expired environments environments_auto_stop_cron_worker: cron: "24 * * * *" # Delete stopped environments environments_auto_delete_cron_worker: cron: "34 * * * *" # Periodically run 'git fsck' on all repositories. If started more than # once per hour you will have concurrent 'git fsck' jobs. repository_check_worker: cron: "20 * * * *" # Archive live traces which have not been archived yet ci_archive_traces_cron_worker: cron: "17 * * * *" # Send admin emails once a week admin_email_worker: cron: "0 0 * * 0" # Send emails for personal tokens which are about to expire personal_access_tokens_expiring_worker: cron: "0 1 * * *" # Remove outdated repository archives repository_archive_cache_worker: cron: "0 * * * *" # Verify custom GitLab Pages domains pages_domain_verification_cron_worker: cron: "*/15 * * * *" # Periodically migrate diffs from the database to external storage schedule_migrate_external_diffs_worker: cron: "15 * * * *" # Update CI Platform Metrics daily ci_platform_metrics_update_cron_worker: cron: "47 9 * * *" # Periodically update ci_runner_versions table with up-to-date versions and status. ci_runner_versions_reconciliation_worker: cron: "@daily" # Periodically clean up stale runner machines. ci_runners_stale_machines_cleanup_worker: cron: "36 4 * * *" # GitLab EE only jobs. These jobs are automatically enabled for an EE # installation, and ignored for a CE installation. ee_cron_jobs: # Schedule snapshots for all devops adoption segments analytics_devops_adoption_create_all_snapshots_worker: cron: 0 0 1 * * # Snapshot active users statistics historical_data_worker: cron: "0 12 * * *" # In addition to refreshing users when they log in, # periodically refresh LDAP users membership. # NOTE: This will only take effect if LDAP is enabled ldap_sync_worker: cron: "30 1 * * *" # Periodically refresh LDAP groups membership. # NOTE: This will only take effect if LDAP is enabled ldap_group_sync_worker: cron: "0 * * * *" # GitLab Geo metrics update worker # NOTE: This will only take effect if Geo is enabled geo_metrics_update_worker: cron: "*/1 * * * *" # GitLab Geo prune event log worker # NOTE: This will only take effect if Geo is enabled (primary node only) geo_prune_event_log_worker: cron: "*/5 * * * *" # GitLab Geo repository sync worker # NOTE: This will only take effect if Geo is enabled (secondary nodes only) geo_repository_sync_worker: cron: "*/1 * * * *" # GitLab Geo registry backfill worker # NOTE: This will only take effect if Geo is enabled (secondary nodes only) geo_secondary_registry_consistency_worker: cron: "* * * * *" # GitLab Geo registry sync worker (for backfilling) # NOTE: This will only take effect if Geo is enabled (secondary nodes only) geo_registry_sync_worker: cron: "*/1 * * * *" # Elasticsearch bulk updater for incremental updates. # NOTE: This will only take effect if elasticsearch is enabled. elastic_index_bulk_cron_worker: cron: "*/1 * * * *" # Elasticsearch bulk updater for initial updates. # NOTE: This will only take effect if elasticsearch is enabled. elastic_index_initial_bulk_cron_worker: cron: "*/1 * * * *" # Elasticsearch reindexing worker # NOTE: This will only take effect if elasticsearch is enabled. elastic_index_initial_bulk_cron_worker: cron: "*/10 * * * *" # Periodically prune stale runners from namespaces having opted-in. ci_runners_stale_group_runners_prune_worker_cron: cron: "30 * * * *" registry: # enabled: true # host: registry.example.com # port: 5005 # api_url: http://localhost:5000/ # internal address to the registry, will be used by GitLab to directly communicate with API # key: config/registry.key # path: shared/registry # issuer: gitlab-issuer # notification_secret: '' # only set it when you use Geo replication feature without built-in Registry # Add notification settings if you plan to use Geo Replication for the registry # notifications: # - name: geo_event # url: https://example.com/api/v4/container_registry_event/events # timeout: 2s # threshold: 5 # backoff: 1s # headers: # Authorization: secret_phrase ## Error Reporting and Logging with Sentry sentry: # enabled: false # dsn: https://@sentry.io/ # clientside_dsn: https://@sentry.io/ # environment: 'production' # e.g. development, staging, production ## Geo # NOTE: These settings will only take effect if Geo is enabled geo: # This is an optional identifier which Geo nodes can use to identify themselves. # For example, if external_url is the same for two secondaries, you must specify # a unique Geo node name for those secondaries. # # If it is blank, it defaults to external_url. node_name: '' registry_replication: # enabled: true # primary_api_url: http://localhost:5000/ # internal address to the primary registry, will be used by GitLab to directly communicate with primary registry API ## Feature Flag https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/operations/feature_flags.html feature_flags: unleash: # enabled: false # url: https://gitlab.com/api/v4/feature_flags/unleash/ # app_name: gitlab.com # Environment name of your GitLab instance # instance_id: INSTANCE_ID # # 2. GitLab CI settings # ========================== gitlab_ci: # Default project notifications settings: # The location where build traces are stored (default: builds/). Relative paths are relative to Rails.root # builds_path: builds/ # # 3. Auth settings # ========================== ## LDAP settings # You can test connections and inspect a sample of the LDAP users with login # access by running: # bundle exec rake gitlab:ldap:check RAILS_ENV=production ldap: enabled: false prevent_ldap_sign_in: false # File location to read encrypted secrets from # secret_file: /mnt/gitlab/ldap.yaml.enc # Default: shared/encrypted_settings/ldap.yaml.enc # This setting controls the number of seconds between LDAP permission checks # for each user. After this time has expired for a given user, their next # interaction with GitLab (a click in the web UI, a git pull, etc.) will be # slower because the LDAP permission check is being performed. How much # slower depends on your LDAP setup, but it is not uncommon for this check # to add seconds of waiting time. The default value is to have a "slow # click" once every 3600 seconds (i.e., once per hour). # # Warning: if you set this value too low, every click in GitLab will be a # "slow click" for all of your LDAP users. # sync_time: 3600 servers: ########################################################################## # # Since GitLab 7.4, LDAP servers get ID's (below the ID is 'main'). GitLab # Enterprise Edition now supports connecting to multiple LDAP servers. # # If you are updating from the old (pre-7.4) syntax, you MUST give your # old server the ID 'main'. # ########################################################################## main: # 'main' is the GitLab 'provider ID' of this LDAP server ## label # # A human-friendly name for your LDAP server. It is OK to change the label later, # for instance if you find out it is too large to fit on the web page. # # Example: 'Paris' or 'Acme, Ltd.' label: 'LDAP' # Example: 'ldap.mydomain.com' host: '_your_ldap_server' # This port is an example, it is sometimes different but it is always an integer and not a string port: 389 # usually 636 for SSL uid: 'sAMAccountName' # This should be the attribute, not the value that maps to uid. # Examples: 'america\\momo' or 'CN=Gitlab Git,CN=Users,DC=mydomain,DC=com' bind_dn: '_the_full_dn_of_the_user_you_will_bind_with' password: '_the_password_of_the_bind_user' # Encryption method. The "method" key is deprecated in favor of # "encryption". # # Examples: "start_tls" or "simple_tls" or "plain" # # Deprecated values: "tls" was replaced with "start_tls" and "ssl" was # replaced with "simple_tls". # encryption: 'plain' # Enables SSL certificate verification if encryption method is # "start_tls" or "simple_tls". Defaults to true. verify_certificates: true # OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext options. tls_options: # Specifies the path to a file containing a PEM-format CA certificate, # e.g. if you need to use an internal CA. # # Example: '/etc/ca.pem' # ca_file: '' # Specifies the SSL version for OpenSSL to use, if the OpenSSL default # is not appropriate. # # Example: 'TLSv1_1' # ssl_version: '' # Specific SSL ciphers to use in communication with LDAP servers. # # Example: 'ALL:!EXPORT:!LOW:!aNULL:!eNULL:!SSLv2' ciphers: '' # Client certificate # # Example: # cert: | # -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- # MIIDbDCCAlSgAwIBAgIGAWkJxLmKMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAMHcxFDASBgNVBAoTC0dvb2dsZSBJ # bmMuMRYwFAYDVQQHEw1Nb3VudGFpbiBWaWV3MRQwEgYDVQQDEwtMREFQIENsaWVudDEPMA0GA1UE # CxMGR1N1aXRlMQswCQYDVQQGEwJVUzETMBEGA1UECBMKQ2FsaWZvcm5pYTAeFw0xOTAyMjAwNzE4 # rntnF4d+0dd7zP3jrWkbdtoqjLDT/5D7NYRmVCD5vizV98FJ5//PIHbD1gL3a9b2MPAc6k7NV8tl # ... # 4SbuJPAiJxC1LQ0t39dR6oMCAMab3hXQqhL56LrR6cRBp6Mtlphv7alu9xb/x51y2x+g2zWtsf80 # Jrv/vKMsIh/sAyuogb7hqMtp55ecnKxceg== # -----END CERTIFICATE ----- cert: '' # Client private key # key: | # -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY----- # MIIEvQIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKcwggSjAgEAAoIBAQC3DmJtLRmJGY4xU1QtI3yjvxO6 # bNuyE4z1NF6Xn7VSbcAaQtavWQ6GZi5uukMo+W5DHVtEkgDwh92ySZMuJdJogFbNvJvHAayheCdN # 7mCQ2UUT9jGXIbmksUn9QMeJVXTZjgJWJzPXToeUdinx9G7+lpVa62UATEd1gaI3oyL72WmpDy/C # rntnF4d+0dd7zP3jrWkbdtoqjLDT/5D7NYRmVCD5vizV98FJ5//PIHbD1gL3a9b2MPAc6k7NV8tl # ... # +9IhSYX+XIg7BZOVDeYqlPfxRvQh8vy3qjt/KUihmEPioAjLaGiihs1Fk5ctLk9A2hIUyP+sEQv9 # l6RG+a/mW+0rCWn8JAd464Ps9hE= # -----END PRIVATE KEY----- key: '' # Set a timeout, in seconds, for LDAP queries. This helps avoid blocking # a request if the LDAP server becomes unresponsive. # A value of 0 means there is no timeout. timeout: 10 # Enable smartcard authentication against the LDAP server. Valid values # are "false", "optional", and "required". smartcard_auth: false # This setting specifies if LDAP server is Active Directory LDAP server. # For non AD servers it skips the AD specific queries. # If your LDAP server is not AD, set this to false. active_directory: true # If allow_username_or_email_login is enabled, GitLab will ignore everything # after the first '@' in the LDAP username submitted by the user on login. # # Example: # - the user enters 'jane.doe@example.com' and 'p@ssw0rd' as LDAP credentials; # - GitLab queries the LDAP server with 'jane.doe' and 'p@ssw0rd'. # # If you are using "uid: 'userPrincipalName'" on ActiveDirectory you need to # disable this setting, because the userPrincipalName contains an '@'. allow_username_or_email_login: false # To maintain tight control over the number of active users on your GitLab installation, # enable this setting to keep new users blocked until they have been cleared by the admin # (default: false). block_auto_created_users: false # Base where we can search for users # # Ex. 'ou=People,dc=gitlab,dc=example' or 'DC=mydomain,DC=com' # base: '' # Filter LDAP users # # Format: RFC 4515 https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4515 # Ex. (employeeType=developer) # # Note: GitLab does not support omniauth-ldap's custom filter syntax. # # Example for getting only specific users: # '(&(objectclass=user)(|(samaccountname=momo)(samaccountname=toto)))' # user_filter: '' # Base where we can search for groups # # Ex. ou=Groups,dc=gitlab,dc=example # group_base: '' # LDAP group of users who should be admins in GitLab # # Ex. GLAdmins # admin_group: '' # LDAP group of users who should be marked as external users in GitLab # # Ex. ['Contractors', 'Interns'] # external_groups: [] # Name of attribute which holds a ssh public key of the user object. # If false or nil, SSH key syncronisation will be disabled. # # Ex. sshpublickey # sync_ssh_keys: false # Retry ldap search connection if got empty results with specified response code(s) # # Ex. [80] # retry_empty_result_with_codes: [] # LDAP attributes that GitLab will use to create an account for the LDAP user. # The specified attribute can either be the attribute name as a string (e.g. 'mail'), # or an array of attribute names to try in order (e.g. ['mail', 'email']). # Note that the user's LDAP login will always be the attribute specified as `uid` above. attributes: # The username will be used in paths for the user's own projects # (like `gitlab.example.com/username/project`) and when mentioning # them in issues, merge request and comments (like `@username`). # If the attribute specified for `username` contains an email address, # the GitLab username will be the part of the email address before the '@'. username: ['uid', 'userid', 'sAMAccountName'] email: ['mail', 'email', 'userPrincipalName'] # If no full name could be found at the attribute specified for `name`, # the full name is determined using the attributes specified for # `first_name` and `last_name`. name: 'cn' first_name: 'givenName' last_name: 'sn' # If lowercase_usernames is enabled, GitLab will lower case the username. lowercase_usernames: false # GitLab EE only: add more LDAP servers # Choose an ID made of a-z and 0-9 . This ID will be stored in the database # so that GitLab can remember which LDAP server a user belongs to. # uswest2: # label: # host: # .... ## Smartcard authentication settings smartcard: # Allow smartcard authentication enabled: false # Path to a file containing a CA certificate bundle ca_file: '/etc/ssl/certs/CA.pem' # Host and port where the client side certificate is requested by the # webserver (NGINX/Apache) # client_certificate_required_host: smartcard.gitlab.example.com # client_certificate_required_port: 3444 # Browser session with smartcard sign-in is required for Git access # required_for_git_access: false # Use X.509 SAN extensions certificates to identify GitLab users # Add a subjectAltName to your certificates like: email:user # san_extensions: true ## Kerberos settings kerberos: # Allow the HTTP Negotiate authentication method for Git clients enabled: false # Kerberos 5 keytab file. The keytab file must be readable by the GitLab user, # and should be different from other keytabs in the system. # (default: use default keytab from Krb5 config) # keytab: /etc/http.keytab # The Kerberos service name to be used by GitLab. # (default: accept any service name in keytab file) # service_principal_name: HTTP/gitlab.example.com@EXAMPLE.COM # Kerberos realms/domains that are allowed to automatically link LDAP identities. # By default, GitLab accepts a realm that matches the domain derived from the # LDAP `base` DN. For example, `ou=users,dc=example,dc=com` would allow users # with a realm matching `example.com`. # simple_ldap_linking_allowed_realms: ['example.com','kerberos.example.com'] # Dedicated port: Git before 2.4 does not fall back to Basic authentication if Negotiate fails. # To support both Basic and Negotiate methods with older versions of Git, configure # nginx to proxy GitLab on an extra port (e.g. 8443) and uncomment the following lines # to dedicate this port to Kerberos authentication. (default: false) # use_dedicated_port: true # port: 8443 # https: true ## OmniAuth settings omniauth: # Allow login via Twitter, Google, etc. using OmniAuth providers # enabled: true # Uncomment this to automatically sign in with a specific omniauth provider's without # showing GitLab's sign-in page (default: show the GitLab sign-in page) # auto_sign_in_with_provider: saml # Sync user's profile from the specified Omniauth providers every time the user logs in (default: empty). # Define the allowed providers using an array, e.g. ["cas3", "saml", "twitter"], # or as true/false to allow all providers or none. # When authenticating using LDAP, the user's email is always synced. # sync_profile_from_provider: [] # Select which info to sync from the providers above. (default: email). # Define the synced profile info using an array. Available options are "name", "email" and "location" # e.g. ["name", "email", "location"] or as true to sync all available. # This consequently will make the selected attributes read-only. # sync_profile_attributes: true # CAUTION! # This allows users to login without having a user account first. Define the allowed providers # using an array, e.g. ["saml", "twitter"], or as true/false to allow all providers or none. # User accounts will be created automatically when authentication was successful. allow_single_sign_on: ["saml"] # Locks down those users until they have been cleared by the admin (default: true). block_auto_created_users: true # Look up new users in LDAP servers. If a match is found (same uid), automatically # link the omniauth identity with the LDAP account. (default: false) auto_link_ldap_user: false # Allow users with existing accounts to login and auto link their account via SAML # login, without having to do a manual login first and manually add SAML # (default: false) auto_link_saml_user: false # CAUTION! # Allows larger SAML messages to be received. Numeric value in bytes (default: 250000) # Too high limits exposes instance to decompression DDoS attack type. saml_message_max_byte_size: 250000 # Allow users with existing accounts to sign in and auto link their account via OmniAuth # login, without having to do a manual login first and manually add OmniAuth. Links on email. # Define the allowed providers using an array, e.g. ["saml", "twitter"], or as true/false to # allow all providers or none. # (default: false) auto_link_user: ["saml", "twitter"] # Set different Omniauth providers as external so that all users creating accounts # via these providers will not be able to have access to internal projects. You # will need to use the full name of the provider, like `google_oauth2` for Google. # Refer to the examples below for the full names of the supported providers. # (default: []) external_providers: [] # CAUTION! # This allows users to login with the specified providers without two factor. Define the allowed providers # using an array, e.g. ["twitter", 'google_oauth2'], or as true/false to allow all providers or none. # This option should only be configured for providers which already have two factor. # This configration dose not apply to SAML. # (default: false) allow_bypass_two_factor: ["twitter", 'google_oauth2'] ## Auth providers # Uncomment the following lines and fill in the data of the auth provider you want to use # If your favorite auth provider is not listed you can use others: # see https://github.com/gitlabhq/gitlab-public-wiki/wiki/Custom-omniauth-provider-configurations # The 'app_id' and 'app_secret' parameters are always passed as the first two # arguments, followed by optional 'args' which can be either a hash or an array. # Documentation for this is available at http://doc.gitlab.com/ce/integration/omniauth.html providers: # - { name: 'alicloud', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } # See omniauth-cas3 for more configuration details # - { name: 'cas3', # label: 'cas3', # args: { # url: 'https://sso.example.com', # disable_ssl_verification: false, # login_url: '/cas/login', # service_validate_url: '/cas/p3/serviceValidate', # logout_url: '/cas/logout' } } # - { name: 'github', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', # url: "https://github.com/", # verify_ssl: true, # args: { scope: 'user:email' } } # - { name: 'bitbucket', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } # - { name: 'dingtalk', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } # - { name: 'gitlab', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', # args: { scope: 'api' } } # - { name: 'google_oauth2', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', # args: { access_type: 'offline', approval_prompt: '' } } # - { name: 'facebook', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } # - { name: 'twitter', # app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', # app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } # - { name: 'jwt', # args: { # secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', # algorithm: 'HS256', # Supported algorithms: 'RS256', 'RS384', 'RS512', 'ES256', 'ES384', 'ES512', 'HS256', 'HS384', 'HS512' # uid_claim: 'email', # required_claims: ['name', 'email'], # info_map: { name: 'name', email: 'email' }, # auth_url: 'https://example.com/', # valid_within: 3600 # 1 hour # } # } # - { name: 'saml', # label: 'Our SAML Provider', # groups_attribute: 'Groups', # external_groups: ['Contractors', 'Freelancers'], # args: { # assertion_consumer_service_url: 'https://gitlab.example.com/users/auth/saml/callback', # idp_cert_fingerprint: '43:51:43:a1:b5:fc:8b:b7:0a:3a:a9:b1:0f:66:73:a8', # idp_sso_target_url: 'https://login.example.com/idp', # issuer: 'https://gitlab.example.com', # name_identifier_format: 'urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:transient' # } } # # - { name: 'group_saml' } # # - { name: 'crowd', # args: { # crowd_server_url: 'CROWD SERVER URL', # application_name: 'YOUR_APP_NAME', # application_password: 'YOUR_APP_PASSWORD' } } # # - { name: 'auth0', # args: { # client_id: 'YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_ID', # client_secret: 'YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET', # namespace: 'YOUR_AUTH0_DOMAIN' } } # SSO maximum session duration in seconds. Defaults to CAS default of 8 hours. # cas3: # session_duration: 28800 # FortiAuthenticator settings forti_authenticator: # Allow using FortiAuthenticator as OTP provider enabled: false # Host and port of FortiAuthenticator instance # host: forti_authenticator.example.com # port: 443 # Username for accessing FortiAuthenticator API # username: john # Access token for FortiAuthenticator API # access_token: 123s3cr3t456 # FortiToken Cloud settings forti_token_cloud: # Allow using FortiToken Cloud as OTP provider enabled: false # Client ID and Secret to access FortiToken Cloud API # client_id: 'YOUR_FORTI_TOKEN_CLOUD_CLIENT_ID' # client_secret: 'YOUR_FORTI_TOKEN_CLOUD_CLIENT_SECRET' # Shared file storage settings shared: # path: /mnt/gitlab # Default: shared # Encrypted Settings configuration encrypted_settings: # path: /mnt/gitlab/encrypted_settings # Default: shared/encrypted_settings # Gitaly settings gitaly: # Default Gitaly authentication token. Can be overridden per storage. Can # be left blank when Gitaly is running locally on a Unix socket, which # is the normal way to deploy Gitaly. token: # # 4. Advanced settings # ========================== ## Repositories settings repositories: # Paths where repositories can be stored. Give the canonicalized absolute pathname. # IMPORTANT: None of the path components may be symlink, because # gitlab-shell invokes Dir.pwd inside the repository path and that results # real path not the symlink. storages: # You must have at least a `default` storage path. default: path: /home/git/repositories/ gitaly_address: unix:/home/git/gitlab/tmp/sockets/private/gitaly.socket # TCP connections are supported too (e.g. tcp://host:port). TLS connections are also supported using the system certificate pool (eg: tls://host:port). # gitaly_token: 'special token' # Optional: override global gitaly.token for this storage. ## Backup settings backup: path: "tmp/backups" # Relative paths are relative to Rails.root (default: tmp/backups/) # gitaly_backup_path: /home/git/gitaly/_build/bin/gitaly-backup # Path of the gitaly-backup binary (default: searches $PATH) # archive_permissions: 0640 # Permissions for the resulting backup.tar file (default: 0600) # keep_time: 604800 # default: 0 (forever) (in seconds) # pg_schema: public # default: nil, it means that all schemas will be backed up # upload: # # Fog storage connection settings, see https://fog.io/storage/ . # connection: # provider: AWS # region: eu-west-1 # aws_access_key_id: AKIAKIAKI # aws_secret_access_key: 'secret123' # # The remote 'directory' to store your backups. For S3, this would be the bucket name. # remote_directory: 'my.s3.bucket' # # Use multipart uploads when file size reaches 100MB, see # # http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/uploadobjusingmpu.html # multipart_chunk_size: 104857600 # # Specifies Amazon S3 storage class to use for backups (optional) # # storage_class: 'STANDARD' # # Turns on AWS Server-Side Encryption with Amazon Customer-Provided Encryption Keys for backups, this is optional # # 'encryption' must be set in order for this to have any effect. # # 'encryption_key' should be set to the 256-bit encryption key for Amazon S3 to use to encrypt or decrypt your data. # # encryption: 'AES256' # # encryption_key: '' # # # # Turns on AWS Server-Side Encryption with Amazon S3-Managed keys (optional) # # https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/serv-side-encryption.html # # For SSE-S3, set 'server_side_encryption' to 'AES256'. # # For SS3-KMS, set 'server_side_encryption' to 'aws:kms'. Set # # 'server_side_encryption_kms_key_id' to the ARN of customer master key. # # storage_options: # # server_side_encryption: 'aws:kms' # # server_side_encryption_kms_key_id: 'arn:aws:kms:YOUR-KEY-ID-HERE' ## GitLab Shell settings gitlab_shell: path: /home/git/gitlab-shell/ authorized_keys_file: /home/git/.ssh/authorized_keys # File that contains the secret key for verifying access for gitlab-shell. # Default is '.gitlab_shell_secret' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # secret_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_shell_secret # Git over HTTP upload_pack: true receive_pack: true # Git import/fetch timeout, in seconds. Defaults to 3 hours. # git_timeout: 10800 # If you use non-standard ssh port you need to specify it # ssh_port: 22 workhorse: # File that contains the secret key for verifying access for gitlab-workhorse. # Default is '.gitlab_workhorse_secret' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # secret_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_workhorse_secret gitlab_kas: # enabled: true # File that contains the secret key for verifying access for gitlab-kas. # Default is '.gitlab_kas_secret' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # secret_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_kas_secret # The URL to the external KAS API (used by the Kubernetes agents) # external_url: wss://kas.example.com # The URL to the internal KAS API (used by the GitLab backend) # internal_url: grpc://localhost:8153 # The URL to the Kubernetes API proxy (used by GitLab users) # external_k8s_proxy_url: https://localhost:8154 # default: nil suggested_reviewers: # File that contains the secret key for verifying access to GitLab internal API for Suggested Reviewers. # Default is '.gitlab_suggested_reviewers_secret' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). # secret_file: /home/git/gitlab/.gitlab_suggested_reviewers_secret ## GitLab Elasticsearch settings elasticsearch: indexer_path: /home/git/gitlab-elasticsearch-indexer/ ## Git settings # CAUTION! # Use the default values unless you really know what you are doing git: bin_path: /usr/bin/git ## Webpack settings # If enabled, this will tell rails to serve frontend assets from the webpack-dev-server running # on a given port instead of serving directly from /assets/webpack. This is only indended for use # in development. webpack: # dev_server: # enabled: true # host: localhost # port: 3808 ## Monitoring # Built in monitoring settings monitoring: # IP whitelist to access monitoring endpoints ip_whitelist: - 127.0.0.0/8 # Sidekiq exporter is a dedicated Prometheus metrics server optionally running alongside Sidekiq. sidekiq_exporter: # enabled: true # log_enabled: false # address: localhost # port: 8082 # tls_enabled: false # tls_cert_path: /path/to/cert.pem # tls_key_path: /path/to/key.pem sidekiq_health_checks: # enabled: true # address: localhost # port: 8092 # Web exporter is a dedicated Prometheus metrics server optionally running alongside Puma. web_exporter: # enabled: true # address: localhost # port: 8083 # tls_enabled: false # tls_cert_path: /path/to/cert.pem # tls_key_path: /path/to/key.pem ## Prometheus settings # Do not modify these settings here. They should be modified in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb # if you installed GitLab via Omnibus. # If you installed from source, you need to install and configure Prometheus # yourself, and then update the values here. # https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/monitoring/prometheus/ prometheus: # enabled: true # server_address: 'localhost:9090' snowplow_micro: enabled: true address: '127.0.0.1:9091' ## Consul settings consul: # api_url: 'http://localhost:8500' shutdown: # # blackout_seconds: # # defines an interval to block healthcheck, # # but continue accepting application requests # # this allows Load Balancer to notice service # # being shutdown and not interrupt any of the clients # blackout_seconds: 10 # # 5. Extra customization # ========================== extra: ## Google analytics. Uncomment if you want it # google_analytics_id: '_your_tracking_id' ## Google tag manager # google_tag_manager_id: '_your_tracking_id' ## OneTrust # one_trust_id: '_your_one_trust_id' ## Bizible. # bizible: true ## Matomo analytics. # matomo_url: '_your_matomo_url' # matomo_site_id: '_your_matomo_site_id' # matomo_disable_cookies: false ## Maximum file size for syntax highlighting ## https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/highlighting.html # maximum_text_highlight_size_kilobytes: 512 rack_attack: git_basic_auth: # Rack Attack IP banning enabled # enabled: true # # Whitelist requests from 127.0.0.1 for web proxies (NGINX/Apache) with incorrect headers # ip_whitelist: ["127.0.0.1"] # # Limit the number of Git HTTP authentication attempts per IP # maxretry: 10 # # Reset the auth attempt counter per IP after 60 seconds # findtime: 60 # # Ban an IP for one hour (3600s) after too many auth attempts # bantime: 3600 development: <<: *base # We want to run web/sidekiq exporters for devs # to catch errors from using them. # # We use random port to not block ability to run # multiple instances of the service monitoring: sidekiq_exporter: enabled: true address: 127.0.0.1 port: 0 web_exporter: enabled: true address: 127.0.0.1 port: 0 test: <<: *base gravatar: enabled: true external_diffs: enabled: false # Diffs may be `always` external (the default), or they can be made external # after they have become `outdated` (i.e., the MR is closed or a new version # has been pushed). # when: always # The location where external diffs are stored (default: shared/external-diffs). storage_path: tmp/tests/external-diffs object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: external-diffs # The bucket name connection: provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 lfs: enabled: false # The location where LFS objects are stored (default: shared/lfs-objects). # storage_path: shared/lfs-objects object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: lfs-objects # The bucket name connection: provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 artifacts: path: tmp/tests/artifacts enabled: true # The location where build artifacts are stored (default: shared/artifacts). # path: shared/artifacts object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: artifacts # The bucket name connection: provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 uploads: storage_path: tmp/tests/public object_store: enabled: false connection: provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 terraform_state: enabled: true storage_path: tmp/tests/terraform_state object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: terraform connection: provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 ci_secure_files: enabled: true storage_path: tmp/tests/ci_secure_files object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: ci-secure-files connection: provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 gitlab: host: localhost port: 80 content_security_policy: enabled: true report_only: false directives: base_uri: child_src: connect_src: default_src: "'self'" font_src: form_action: frame_ancestors: "'self'" frame_src: "'self' https://www.google.com/recaptcha/ https://www.recaptcha.net/ https://content.googleapis.com https://content-compute.googleapis.com https://content-cloudbilling.googleapis.com https://content-cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com" img_src: "* data: blob:" manifest_src: media_src: object_src: "'none'" script_src: "'self' 'unsafe-eval' http://localhost:* https://www.google.com/recaptcha/ https://www.recaptcha.net/ https://www.gstatic.com/recaptcha/ https://apis.google.com" style_src: "'self' 'unsafe-inline'" worker_src: "'self' blob:" report_uri: # When you run tests we clone and set up gitlab-shell # In order to set it up correctly you need to specify # your system username you use to run GitLab # user: YOUR_USERNAME pages: path: tmp/tests/pages object_store: enabled: false remote_directory: pages # The bucket name connection: provider: AWS aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY region: us-east-1 local_store: enabled: true path: tmp/tests/pages repositories: storages: default: path: tmp/tests/repositories/ gitaly_address: unix:tmp/tests/gitaly/praefect.socket gitaly: client_path: tmp/tests/gitaly/_build/bin token: secret workhorse: secret_file: tmp/gitlab_workhorse_test_secret backup: path: tmp/tests/backups gitaly_backup_path: tmp/tests/gitaly/_build/bin/gitaly-backup gitlab_shell: path: tmp/tests/gitlab-shell/ authorized_keys_file: tmp/tests/authorized_keys issues_tracker: redmine: title: "Redmine" project_url: "http://redmine/projects/:issues_tracker_id" issues_url: "http://redmine/:project_id/:issues_tracker_id/:id" new_issue_url: "http://redmine/projects/:issues_tracker_id/issues/new" jira: title: "Jira" url: https://sample_company.atlassian.net project_key: PROJECT omniauth: # enabled: true allow_single_sign_on: true external_providers: [] providers: - { name: 'alicloud', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } - { name: 'cas3', label: 'cas3', args: { url: 'https://sso.example.com', disable_ssl_verification: false, login_url: '/cas/login', service_validate_url: '/cas/p3/serviceValidate', logout_url: '/cas/logout' } } - { name: 'github', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', url: "https://github.com/", verify_ssl: false, args: { scope: 'user:email' } } - { name: 'bitbucket', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } - { name: 'dingtalk', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } - { name: 'gitlab', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', args: { scope: 'api' } } - { name: 'google_oauth2', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', args: { access_type: 'offline', approval_prompt: '' } } - { name: 'facebook', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } - { name: 'twitter', app_id: 'YOUR_APP_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET' } - { name: 'jwt', app_secret: 'YOUR_APP_SECRET', args: { algorithm: 'HS256', uid_claim: 'email', required_claims: ["name", "email"], info_map: { name: "name", email: "email" }, auth_url: 'https://example.com/', valid_within: null, } } - { name: 'auth0', args: { client_id: 'YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_ID', client_secret: 'YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET', namespace: 'YOUR_AUTH0_DOMAIN' } } - { name: 'salesforce', app_id: 'YOUR_CLIENT_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET' } - { name: 'atlassian_oauth2', app_id: 'YOUR_CLIENT_ID', app_secret: 'YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET', args: { scope: 'offline_access read:jira-user read:jira-work', prompt: 'consent' } } ldap: enabled: false servers: main: label: ldap host: 127.0.0.1 port: 3890 uid: 'uid' encryption: 'plain' # "start_tls" or "simple_tls" or "plain" base: 'dc=example,dc=com' user_filter: '' group_base: 'ou=groups,dc=example,dc=com' admin_group: '' prometheus: enabled: true server_address: 'localhost:9090' staging: <<: *base