# Workhorse configuration For historical reasons Workhorse uses both command line flags, a configuration file and environment variables. All new configuration options that get added to Workhorse should go into the configuration file. ## CLI options ``` gitlab-workhorse [OPTIONS] Options: -apiCiLongPollingDuration duration Long polling duration for job requesting for runners (default 50s - enabled) (default 50ns) -apiLimit uint Number of API requests allowed at single time -apiQueueDuration duration Maximum queueing duration of requests (default 30s) -apiQueueLimit uint Number of API requests allowed to be queued -authBackend string Authentication/authorization backend (default "http://localhost:8080") -authSocket string Optional: Unix domain socket to dial authBackend at -cableBackend string Optional: ActionCable backend (default authBackend) -cableSocket string Optional: Unix domain socket to dial cableBackend at (default authSocket) -config string TOML file to load config from -developmentMode Allow the assets to be served from Rails app -documentRoot string Path to static files content (default "public") -listenAddr string Listen address for HTTP server (default "localhost:8181") -listenNetwork string Listen 'network' (tcp, tcp4, tcp6, unix) (default "tcp") -listenUmask int Umask for Unix socket -logFile string Log file location -logFormat string Log format to use defaults to text (text, json, structured, none) (default "text") -pprofListenAddr string pprof listening address, e.g. 'localhost:6060' -prometheusListenAddr string Prometheus listening address, e.g. 'localhost:9229' -proxyHeadersTimeout duration How long to wait for response headers when proxying the request (default 5m0s) -secretPath string File with secret key to authenticate with authBackend (default "./.gitlab_workhorse_secret") -version Print version and exit ``` The 'auth backend' refers to the GitLab Rails application. The name is a holdover from when GitLab Workhorse only handled Git push/pull over HTTP. GitLab Workhorse can listen on either a TCP or a Unix domain socket. It can also open a second listening TCP listening socket with the Go [net/http/pprof profiler server](http://golang.org/pkg/net/http/pprof/). GitLab Workhorse can listen on redis events (currently only builds/register for runners). This requires you to pass a valid TOML config file via `-config` flag. For regular setups it only requires the following (replacing the string with the actual socket) ## Redis GitLab Workhorse integrates with Redis to do long polling for CI build requests. This is configured via two things: - Redis settings in the TOML config file - The `-apiCiLongPollingDuration` command line flag to control polling behavior for CI build requests It is OK to enable Redis in the config file but to leave CI polling disabled; this just results in an idle Redis pubsub connection. The opposite is not possible: CI long polling requires a correct Redis configuration. Below we discuss the options for the `[redis]` section in the config file. ``` [redis] URL = "unix:///var/run/gitlab/redis.sock" Password = "my_awesome_password" Sentinel = [ "tcp://sentinel1:23456", "tcp://sentinel2:23456" ] SentinelMaster = "mymaster" ``` - `URL` takes a string in the format `unix://path/to/redis.sock` or `tcp://host:port`. - `Password` is only required if your redis instance is password-protected - `Sentinel` is used if you are using Sentinel. *NOTE* that if both `Sentinel` and `URL` are given, only `Sentinel` will be used Optional fields are as follows: ``` [redis] DB = 0 ReadTimeout = "1s" KeepAlivePeriod = "5m" MaxIdle = 1 MaxActive = 1 ``` - `DB` is the Database to connect to. Defaults to `0` - `ReadTimeout` is how long a redis read-command can take. Defaults to `1s` - `KeepAlivePeriod` is how long the redis connection is to be kept alive without anything flowing through it. Defaults to `5m` - `MaxIdle` is how many idle connections can be in the redis-pool at once. Defaults to 1 - `MaxActive` is how many connections the pool can keep. Defaults to 1 ## Relative URL support If you are mounting GitLab at a relative URL, e.g. `example.com/gitlab`, then you should also use this relative URL in the `authBackend` setting: ``` gitlab-workhorse -authBackend http://localhost:8080/gitlab ``` ## Interaction of authBackend and authSocket The interaction between `authBackend` and `authSocket` can be a bit confusing. It comes down to: if `authSocket` is set it overrides the _host_ part of `authBackend` but not the relative path. In table form: |authBackend|authSocket|Workhorse connects to?|Rails relative URL| |---|---|---|---| |unset|unset|`localhost:8080`|`/`| |`http://localhost:3000`|unset|`localhost:3000`|`/`| |`http://localhost:3000/gitlab`|unset|`localhost:3000`|`/gitlab`| |unset|`/path/to/socket`|`/path/to/socket`|`/`| |`http://localhost:3000`|`/path/to/socket`|`/path/to/socket`|`/`| |`http://localhost:3000/gitlab`|`/path/to/socket`|`/path/to/socket`|`/gitlab`| The same applies to `cableBackend` and `cableSocket`. ## Error tracking GitLab-Workhorse supports remote error tracking with [Sentry](https://sentry.io). To enable this feature set the `GITLAB_WORKHORSE_SENTRY_DSN` environment variable. You can also set the `GITLAB_WORKHORSE_SENTRY_ENVIRONMENT` environment variable to use the Sentry environment functionality to separate staging, production and development. Omnibus (`/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`): ``` gitlab_workhorse['env'] = { 'GITLAB_WORKHORSE_SENTRY_DSN' => 'https://foobar' 'GITLAB_WORKHORSE_SENTRY_ENVIRONMENT' => 'production' } ``` Source installations (`/etc/default/gitlab`): ``` export GITLAB_WORKHORSE_SENTRY_DSN='https://foobar' export GITLAB_WORKHORSE_SENTRY_ENVIRONMENT='production' ``` ## Distributed Tracing Workhorse supports distributed tracing through [LabKit][] using [OpenTracing APIs](https://opentracing.io). By default, no tracing implementation is linked into the binary, but different OpenTracing providers can be linked in using [build tags][build-tags]/[build constraints][build-tags]. This can be done by setting the `BUILD_TAGS` make variable. For more details of the supported providers, see LabKit, but as an example, for Jaeger tracing support, include the tags: `BUILD_TAGS="tracer_static tracer_static_jaeger"`. ```shell make BUILD_TAGS="tracer_static tracer_static_jaeger" ``` Once Workhorse is compiled with an opentracing provider, the tracing configuration is configured via the `GITLAB_TRACING` environment variable. For example: ```shell GITLAB_TRACING=opentracing://jaeger ./gitlab-workhorse ``` ## Continuous Profiling Workhorse supports continuous profiling through [LabKit][] using [Stackdriver Profiler](https://cloud.google.com/profiler). By default, the Stackdriver Profiler implementation is linked in the binary using [build tags][build-tags], though it's not required and can be skipped. For example: ```shell make BUILD_TAGS="" ``` Once Workhorse is compiled with Continuous Profiling, the profiler configuration can be set via `GITLAB_CONTINUOUS_PROFILING` environment variable. For example: ```shell GITLAB_CONTINUOUS_PROFILING="stackdriver?service=workhorse&service_version=1.0.1&project_id=test-123 ./gitlab-workhorse" ``` More information about see the [LabKit monitoring docs](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/labkit/-/blob/master/monitoring/doc.go). [LabKit]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/labkit/ [build-tags]: https://golang.org/pkg/go/build/#hdr-Build_Constraints