--- stage: Systems group: Distribution info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments --- # Load Balancer for multi-node GitLab **(FREE SELF)** In a multi-node GitLab configuration, you need a load balancer to route traffic to the application servers. The specifics on which load balancer to use or the exact configuration is beyond the scope of GitLab documentation. We hope that if you're managing HA systems like GitLab you have a load balancer of choice already. Some examples including HAProxy (open-source), F5 Big-IP LTM, and Citrix NetScaler. This documentation outlines what ports and protocols to use with GitLab. ## SSL How do you want to handle SSL in your multi-node environment? There are several different options: - Each application node terminates SSL - The load balancers terminate SSL and communication is not secure between the load balancers and the application nodes - The load balancers terminate SSL and communication is *secure* between the load balancers and the application nodes ### Application nodes terminate SSL Configure your load balancers to pass connections on port 443 as 'TCP' rather than 'HTTP(S)' protocol. This passes the connection to the application nodes NGINX service untouched. NGINX has the SSL certificate and listen on port 443. See the [HTTPS documentation](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/ssl.html) for details on managing SSL certificates and configuring NGINX. ### Load Balancers terminate SSL without backend SSL Configure your load balancers to use the `HTTP(S)` protocol rather than `TCP`. The load balancers is be responsible for managing SSL certificates and terminating SSL. Because communication between the load balancers and GitLab isn't secure, there is some additional configuration needed. See the [proxied SSL documentation](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/ssl.html#configure-a-reverse-proxy-or-load-balancer-ssl-termination) for details. ### Load Balancers terminate SSL with backend SSL Configure your load balancers to use the `HTTP(S)` protocol rather than `TCP`. The load balancers is responsible for managing SSL certificates that end users see. Traffic is secure between the load balancers and NGINX in this scenario. There is no need to add configuration for proxied SSL because the connection is secure all the way. However, configuration must be added to GitLab to configure SSL certificates. See the [HTTPS documentation](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/ssl.html) for details on managing SSL certificates and configuring NGINX. ## Ports ### Basic ports | LB Port | Backend Port | Protocol | | ------- | ------------ | ------------------------ | | 80 | 80 | HTTP (*1*) | | 443 | 443 | TCP or HTTPS (*1*) (*2*) | | 22 | 22 | TCP | - (*1*): [Web terminal](../ci/environments/index.md#web-terminals-deprecated) support requires your load balancer to correctly handle WebSocket connections. When using HTTP or HTTPS proxying, this means your load balancer must be configured to pass through the `Connection` and `Upgrade` hop-by-hop headers. See the [web terminal](integration/terminal.md) integration guide for more details. - (*2*): When using HTTPS protocol for port 443, you must add an SSL certificate to the load balancers. If you wish to terminate SSL at the GitLab application server instead, use TCP protocol. ### GitLab Pages Ports If you're using GitLab Pages with custom domain support you need some additional port configurations. GitLab Pages requires a separate virtual IP address. Configure DNS to point the `pages_external_url` from `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` at the new virtual IP address. See the [GitLab Pages documentation](pages/index.md) for more information. | LB Port | Backend Port | Protocol | | ------- | ------------- | --------- | | 80 | Varies (*1*) | HTTP | | 443 | Varies (*1*) | TCP (*2*) | - (*1*): The backend port for GitLab Pages depends on the `gitlab_pages['external_http']` and `gitlab_pages['external_https']` setting. See [GitLab Pages documentation](pages/index.md) for more details. - (*2*): Port 443 for GitLab Pages should always use the TCP protocol. Users can configure custom domains with custom SSL, which would not be possible if SSL was terminated at the load balancer. ### Alternate SSH Port Some organizations have policies against opening SSH port 22. In this case, it may be helpful to configure an alternate SSH hostname that allows users to use SSH on port 443. An alternate SSH hostname requires a new virtual IP address compared to the other GitLab HTTP configuration above. Configure DNS for an alternate SSH hostname such as `altssh.gitlab.example.com`. | LB Port | Backend Port | Protocol | | ------- | ------------ | -------- | | 443 | 22 | TCP | ## Readiness check It is strongly recommend that multi-node deployments configure load balancers to use the [readiness check](../user/admin_area/monitoring/health_check.md#readiness) to ensure a node is ready to accept traffic, before routing traffic to it. This is especially important when utilizing Puma, as there is a brief period during a restart where Puma doesn't accept requests. WARNING: Using the `all=1` parameter with the readiness check in GitLab versions 15.4 to 15.8 may cause [increased Praefect memory usage](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly/-/issues/4751) and lead to memory errors. ## Troubleshooting ### The health check is returning a `408` HTTP code via the load balancer If you are using [AWS's Classic Load Balancer](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/en_en/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-ssl-security-policy.html#ssl-ciphers) in GitLab 15.0 or later, you must to enable the `AES256-GCM-SHA384` cipher in NGINX. See [AES256-GCM-SHA384 SSL cipher no longer allowed by default by NGINX](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/update/gitlab_15_changes.html#aes256-gcm-sha384-ssl-cipher-no-longer-allowed-by-default-by-nginx) for more information. The default ciphers for a GitLab version can be viewed in the [`files/gitlab-cookbooks/gitlab/attributes/default.rb`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab/-/blob/master/files/gitlab-cookbooks/gitlab/attributes/default.rb) file and selecting the Git tag that correlates with your target GitLab version (for example `15.0.5+ee.0`). If required by your load balancer, you can then define [custom SSL ciphers](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/ssl.html#use-custom-ssl-ciphers) for NGINX.