# Installation from source ## Consider the Omnibus package installation Since an installation from source is a lot of work and error prone we strongly recommend the fast and reliable [Omnibus package installation](https://about.gitlab.com/downloads/) (deb/rpm). One reason the Omnibus package is more reliable is its use of Runit to restart any of the GitLab processes in case one crashes. On heavily used GitLab instances the memory usage of the Sidekiq background worker will grow over time. Omnibus packages solve this by [letting the Sidekiq terminate gracefully](http://docs.gitlab.com/ce/operations/sidekiq_memory_killer.html) if it uses too much memory. After this termination Runit will detect Sidekiq is not running and will start it. Since installations from source don't have Runit, Sidekiq can't be terminated and its memory usage will grow over time. ## Select Version to Install Make sure you view [this installation guide](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/doc/install/installation.md) from the branch (version) of GitLab you would like to install (e.g., `11-7-stable`). You can select the branch in the version dropdown in the top left corner of GitLab (below the menu bar). If the highest number stable branch is unclear please check the [GitLab Blog](https://about.gitlab.com/blog/) for installation guide links by version. ## Important Notes This guide is long because it covers many cases and includes all commands you need, this is [one of the few installation scripts that actually works out of the box](https://twitter.com/robinvdvleuten/status/424163226532986880). This installation guide was created for and tested on **Debian/Ubuntu** operating systems. Please read [requirements.md](requirements.md) for hardware and operating system requirements. If you want to install on RHEL/CentOS we recommend using the [Omnibus packages](https://about.gitlab.com/downloads/). This is the official installation guide to set up a production server. To set up a **development installation** or for many other installation options please see [the installation section of the readme](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/README.md#installation). The following steps have been known to work. Please **use caution when you deviate** from this guide. Make sure you don't violate any assumptions GitLab makes about its environment. For example many people run into permission problems because they changed the location of directories or run services as the wrong user. If you find a bug/error in this guide please **submit a merge request** following the [contributing guide](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md). ## Overview The GitLab installation consists of setting up the following components: 1. Packages / Dependencies 1. Ruby 1. Go 1. Node 1. System Users 1. Database 1. Redis 1. GitLab 1. Nginx ## 1. Packages / Dependencies `sudo` is not installed on Debian by default. Make sure your system is up-to-date and install it. # run as root! apt-get update -y apt-get upgrade -y apt-get install sudo -y **Note:** During this installation some files will need to be edited manually. If you are familiar with vim set it as default editor with the commands below. If you are not familiar with vim please skip this and keep using the default editor. # Install vim and set as default editor sudo apt-get install -y vim sudo update-alternatives --set editor /usr/bin/vim.basic Install the required packages (needed to compile Ruby and native extensions to Ruby gems): sudo apt-get install -y build-essential zlib1g-dev libyaml-dev libssl-dev libgdbm-dev libre2-dev libreadline-dev libncurses5-dev libffi-dev curl openssh-server checkinstall libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libicu-dev logrotate rsync python-docutils pkg-config cmake Ubuntu 14.04 (Trusty Tahr) doesn't have the `libre2-dev` package available, but you can [install re2 manually](https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Install). If you want to use Kerberos for user authentication, then install libkrb5-dev: sudo apt-get install libkrb5-dev **Note:** If you don't know what Kerberos is, you can assume you don't need it. Make sure you have the right version of Git installed # Install Git sudo apt-get install -y git-core # Make sure Git is version 2.18.0 or higher git --version Is the system packaged Git too old? Remove it and compile from source. # Remove packaged Git sudo apt-get remove git-core # Install dependencies sudo apt-get install -y libcurl4-openssl-dev libexpat1-dev gettext libz-dev libssl-dev build-essential # Download and compile from source cd /tmp curl --remote-name --progress https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/git-2.18.0.tar.gz echo '94faf2c0b02a7920b0b46f4961d8e9cad08e81418614102898a55f980fa3e7e4 git-2.18.0.tar.gz' | shasum -a256 -c - && tar -xzf git-2.18.0.tar.gz cd git-2.18.0/ ./configure make prefix=/usr/local all # Install into /usr/local/bin sudo make prefix=/usr/local install # When editing config/gitlab.yml (Step 5), change the git -> bin_path to /usr/local/bin/git **Note:** In order to receive mail notifications, make sure to install a mail server. By default, Debian is shipped with exim4 but this [has problems](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/12754) while Ubuntu does not ship with one. The recommended mail server is postfix and you can install it with: sudo apt-get install -y postfix Then select 'Internet Site' and press enter to confirm the hostname. ## 2. Ruby The Ruby interpreter is required to run GitLab. **Note:** The current supported Ruby (MRI) version is 2.3.x. GitLab 9.0 dropped support for Ruby 2.1.x. The use of Ruby version managers such as [RVM], [rbenv] or [chruby] with GitLab in production, frequently leads to hard to diagnose problems. For example, GitLab Shell is called from OpenSSH, and having a version manager can prevent pushing and pulling over SSH. Version managers are not supported and we strongly advise everyone to follow the instructions below to use a system Ruby. Linux distributions generally have older versions of Ruby available, so these instructions are designed to install Ruby from the official source code. Remove the old Ruby 1.8 if present: sudo apt-get remove ruby1.8 Download Ruby and compile it: mkdir /tmp/ruby && cd /tmp/ruby curl --remote-name --progress https://cache.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/2.5/ruby-2.5.3.tar.gz echo 'f919a9fbcdb7abecd887157b49833663c5c15fda ruby-2.5.3.tar.gz' | shasum -c - && tar xzf ruby-2.5.3.tar.gz cd ruby-2.5.3 ./configure --disable-install-rdoc make sudo make install Then install the Bundler Gem: sudo gem install bundler --no-document ## 3. Go Since GitLab 8.0, GitLab has several daemons written in Go. To install GitLab we need a Go compiler. The instructions below assume you use 64-bit Linux. You can find downloads for other platforms at the [Go download page](https://golang.org/dl). # Remove former Go installation folder sudo rm -rf /usr/local/go curl --remote-name --progress https://dl.google.com/go/go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz echo 'fa1b0e45d3b647c252f51f5e1204aba049cde4af177ef9f2181f43004f901035 go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz' | shasum -a256 -c - && \ sudo tar -C /usr/local -xzf go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz sudo ln -sf /usr/local/go/bin/{go,godoc,gofmt} /usr/local/bin/ rm go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz ## 4. Node Since GitLab 8.17, GitLab requires the use of Node to compile javascript assets, and Yarn to manage javascript dependencies. The current minimum requirements for these are node >= v6.0.0 and yarn >= v1.2.0. In many distros the versions provided by the official package repositories are out of date, so we'll need to install through the following commands: # install node v8.x curl --location https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_8.x | sudo bash - sudo apt-get install -y nodejs curl --silent --show-error https://dl.yarnpkg.com/debian/pubkey.gpg | sudo apt-key add - echo "deb https://dl.yarnpkg.com/debian/ stable main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/yarn.list sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install yarn Visit the official websites for [node](https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/) and [yarn](https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install/) if you have any trouble with these steps. ## 5. System Users Create a `git` user for GitLab: sudo adduser --disabled-login --gecos 'GitLab' git ## 6. Database We recommend using a PostgreSQL database. For MySQL check the [MySQL setup guide](database_mysql.md). > **Note**: because we need to make use of extensions and concurrent index removal, you need at least PostgreSQL 9.2. 1. Install the database packages: ```bash sudo apt-get install -y postgresql postgresql-client libpq-dev postgresql-contrib ``` 1. Create a database user for GitLab: ```bash sudo -u postgres psql -d template1 -c "CREATE USER git CREATEDB;" ``` 1. Create the `pg_trgm` extension (required for GitLab 8.6+): ```bash sudo -u postgres psql -d template1 -c "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS pg_trgm;" ``` 1. Create the GitLab production database and grant all privileges on database: ```bash sudo -u postgres psql -d template1 -c "CREATE DATABASE gitlabhq_production OWNER git;" ``` 1. Try connecting to the new database with the new user: ```bash sudo -u git -H psql -d gitlabhq_production ``` 1. Check if the `pg_trgm` extension is enabled: ```bash SELECT true AS enabled FROM pg_available_extensions WHERE name = 'pg_trgm' AND installed_version IS NOT NULL; ``` If the extension is enabled this will produce the following output: ``` enabled --------- t (1 row) ``` 1. Quit the database session: ```bash gitlabhq_production> \q ``` ## 7. Redis GitLab requires at least Redis 2.8. If you are using Debian 8 or Ubuntu 14.04 and up, then you can simply install Redis 2.8 with: ```sh sudo apt-get install redis-server ``` If you are using Debian 7 or Ubuntu 12.04, follow the special documentation on [an alternate Redis installation](redis.md). Once done, follow the rest of the guide here. ``` # Configure redis to use sockets sudo cp /etc/redis/redis.conf /etc/redis/redis.conf.orig # Disable Redis listening on TCP by setting 'port' to 0 sed 's/^port .*/port 0/' /etc/redis/redis.conf.orig | sudo tee /etc/redis/redis.conf # Enable Redis socket for default Debian / Ubuntu path echo 'unixsocket /var/run/redis/redis.sock' | sudo tee -a /etc/redis/redis.conf # Grant permission to the socket to all members of the redis group echo 'unixsocketperm 770' | sudo tee -a /etc/redis/redis.conf # Create the directory which contains the socket mkdir /var/run/redis chown redis:redis /var/run/redis chmod 755 /var/run/redis # Persist the directory which contains the socket, if applicable if [ -d /etc/tmpfiles.d ]; then echo 'd /var/run/redis 0755 redis redis 10d -' | sudo tee -a /etc/tmpfiles.d/redis.conf fi # Activate the changes to redis.conf sudo service redis-server restart # Add git to the redis group sudo usermod -aG redis git ``` ## 8. GitLab # We'll install GitLab into home directory of the user "git" cd /home/git ### Clone the Source # Clone GitLab repository sudo -u git -H git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce.git -b 11-7-stable gitlab **Note:** You can change `11-7-stable` to `master` if you want the *bleeding edge* version, but never install master on a production server! ### Configure It # Go to GitLab installation folder cd /home/git/gitlab # Copy the example GitLab config sudo -u git -H cp config/gitlab.yml.example config/gitlab.yml # Update GitLab config file, follow the directions at top of file sudo -u git -H editor config/gitlab.yml # Copy the example secrets file sudo -u git -H cp config/secrets.yml.example config/secrets.yml sudo -u git -H chmod 0600 config/secrets.yml # Make sure GitLab can write to the log/ and tmp/ directories sudo chown -R git log/ sudo chown -R git tmp/ sudo chmod -R u+rwX,go-w log/ sudo chmod -R u+rwX tmp/ # Make sure GitLab can write to the tmp/pids/ and tmp/sockets/ directories sudo chmod -R u+rwX tmp/pids/ sudo chmod -R u+rwX tmp/sockets/ # Create the public/uploads/ directory sudo -u git -H mkdir public/uploads/ # Make sure only the GitLab user has access to the public/uploads/ directory # now that files in public/uploads are served by gitlab-workhorse sudo chmod 0700 public/uploads # Change the permissions of the directory where CI job traces are stored sudo chmod -R u+rwX builds/ # Change the permissions of the directory where CI artifacts are stored sudo chmod -R u+rwX shared/artifacts/ # Change the permissions of the directory where GitLab Pages are stored sudo chmod -R ug+rwX shared/pages/ # Copy the example Unicorn config sudo -u git -H cp config/unicorn.rb.example config/unicorn.rb # Find number of cores nproc # Enable cluster mode if you expect to have a high load instance # Set the number of workers to at least the number of cores # Ex. change amount of workers to 3 for 2GB RAM server sudo -u git -H editor config/unicorn.rb # Copy the example Rack attack config sudo -u git -H cp config/initializers/rack_attack.rb.example config/initializers/rack_attack.rb # Configure Git global settings for git user # 'autocrlf' is needed for the web editor sudo -u git -H git config --global core.autocrlf input # Disable 'git gc --auto' because GitLab already runs 'git gc' when needed sudo -u git -H git config --global gc.auto 0 # Enable packfile bitmaps sudo -u git -H git config --global repack.writeBitmaps true # Enable push options sudo -u git -H git config --global receive.advertisePushOptions true # Configure Redis connection settings sudo -u git -H cp config/resque.yml.example config/resque.yml # Change the Redis socket path if you are not using the default Debian / Ubuntu configuration sudo -u git -H editor config/resque.yml **Important Note:** Make sure to edit both `gitlab.yml` and `unicorn.rb` to match your setup. **Note:** If you want to use HTTPS, see [Using HTTPS](#using-https) for the additional steps. ### Configure GitLab DB Settings # PostgreSQL only: sudo -u git cp config/database.yml.postgresql config/database.yml # MySQL only: sudo -u git cp config/database.yml.mysql config/database.yml # MySQL and remote PostgreSQL only: # Update username/password in config/database.yml. # You only need to adapt the production settings (first part). # If you followed the database guide then please do as follows: # Change 'secure password' with the value you have given to $password # You can keep the double quotes around the password sudo -u git -H editor config/database.yml # PostgreSQL and MySQL: # Make config/database.yml readable to git only sudo -u git -H chmod o-rwx config/database.yml ### Install Gems **Note:** As of bundler 1.5.2, you can invoke `bundle install -jN` (where `N` the number of your processor cores) and enjoy the parallel gems installation with measurable difference in completion time (~60% faster). Check the number of your cores with `nproc`. For more information check this [post](https://robots.thoughtbot.com/parallel-gem-installing-using-bundler). First make sure you have bundler >= 1.5.2 (run `bundle -v`) as it addresses some [issues](https://devcenter.heroku.com/changelog-items/411) that were [fixed](https://github.com/bundler/bundler/pull/2817) in 1.5.2. # For PostgreSQL (note, the option says "without ... mysql") sudo -u git -H bundle install --deployment --without development test mysql aws kerberos # Or if you use MySQL (note, the option says "without ... postgres") sudo -u git -H bundle install --deployment --without development test postgres aws kerberos **Note:** If you want to use Kerberos for user authentication, then omit `kerberos` in the `--without` option above. ### Install GitLab Shell GitLab Shell is an SSH access and repository management software developed specially for GitLab. # Run the installation task for gitlab-shell (replace `REDIS_URL` if needed): sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:shell:install REDIS_URL=unix:/var/run/redis/redis.sock RAILS_ENV=production SKIP_STORAGE_VALIDATION=true # By default, the gitlab-shell config is generated from your main GitLab config. # You can review (and modify) the gitlab-shell config as follows: sudo -u git -H editor /home/git/gitlab-shell/config.yml **Note:** If you want to use HTTPS, see [Using HTTPS](#using-https) for the additional steps. **Note:** Make sure your hostname can be resolved on the machine itself by either a proper DNS record or an additional line in /etc/hosts ("127.0.0.1 hostname"). This might be necessary for example if you set up GitLab behind a reverse proxy. If the hostname cannot be resolved, the final installation check will fail with "Check GitLab API access: FAILED. code: 401" and pushing commits will be rejected with "[remote rejected] master -> master (hook declined)". **Note:** GitLab Shell application startup time can be greatly reduced by disabling RubyGems. This can be done in several manners: * Export `RUBYOPT=--disable-gems` environment variable for the processes * Compile Ruby with `configure --disable-rubygems` to disable RubyGems by default. Not recommended for system-wide Ruby. * Omnibus GitLab [replaces the *shebang* line of the `gitlab-shell/bin/*` scripts](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab/merge_requests/1707) ### Install gitlab-workhorse GitLab-Workhorse uses [GNU Make](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/). The following command-line will install GitLab-Workhorse in `/home/git/gitlab-workhorse` which is the recommended location. sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake "gitlab:workhorse:install[/home/git/gitlab-workhorse]" RAILS_ENV=production You can specify a different Git repository by providing it as an extra parameter: sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake "gitlab:workhorse:install[/home/git/gitlab-workhorse,https://example.com/gitlab-workhorse.git]" RAILS_ENV=production ### Install gitlab-pages GitLab-Pages uses [GNU Make](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/). This step is optional and only needed if you wish to host static sites from within GitLab. The following commands will install GitLab-Pages in `/home/git/gitlab-pages`. For additional setup steps, please consult the [administration guide](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/doc/administration/pages/source.md) for your version of GitLab as the GitLab Pages daemon can be ran several different ways. cd /home/git sudo -u git -H git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages.git cd gitlab-pages sudo -u git -H git checkout v$( ### Custom SSH Connection If you are running SSH on a non-standard port, you must change the GitLab user's SSH config. # Add to /home/git/.ssh/config host localhost # Give your setup a name (here: override localhost) user git # Your remote git user port 2222 # Your port number hostname 127.0.0.1; # Your server name or IP You also need to change the corresponding options (e.g. `ssh_user`, `ssh_host`, `admin_uri`) in the `config\gitlab.yml` file. ### Additional Markup Styles Apart from the always supported markdown style there are other rich text files that GitLab can display. But you might have to install a dependency to do so. Please see the [github-markup gem readme](https://github.com/gitlabhq/markup#markups) for more information. ## Troubleshooting ### "You appear to have cloned an empty repository." If you see this message when attempting to clone a repository hosted by GitLab, this is likely due to an outdated Nginx or Apache configuration, or a missing or misconfigured gitlab-workhorse instance. Double-check that you've [installed Go](#3-go), [installed gitlab-workhorse](#install-gitlab-workhorse), and correctly [configured Nginx](#site-configuration). ### google-protobuf "LoadError: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.14' not found" This can happen on some platforms for some versions of the google-protobuf gem. The workaround is to [install a source-only version of this gem](google-protobuf.md). [RVM]: https://rvm.io/ "RVM Homepage" [rbenv]: https://github.com/sstephenson/rbenv "rbenv on GitHub" [chruby]: https://github.com/postmodern/chruby "chruby on GitHub"