--- stage: Configure group: Configure 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/#assignments --- # Prepare Auto DevOps for deployment **(FREE)** If you enable Auto DevOps without setting the base domain and deployment strategy, GitLab can't deploy your application directly. Therefore, we recommend that you prepare them before enabling Auto DevOps. ## Deployment strategy > - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/issues/38542) in GitLab 11.0. When using Auto DevOps to deploy your applications, choose the [continuous deployment strategy](../../ci/introduction/index.md) that works best for your needs: | Deployment strategy | Setup | Methodology | |--|--|--| | **Continuous deployment to production** | Enables [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy) with the default branch continuously deployed to production. | Continuous deployment to production.| | **Continuous deployment to production using timed incremental rollout** | Sets the [`INCREMENTAL_ROLLOUT_MODE`](customize.md#timed-incremental-rollout-to-production) variable to `timed`. | Continuously deploy to production with a 5 minutes delay between rollouts. | | **Automatic deployment to staging, manual deployment to production** | Sets [`STAGING_ENABLED`](customize.md#deploy-policy-for-staging-and-production-environments) to `1` and [`INCREMENTAL_ROLLOUT_MODE`](customize.md#incremental-rollout-to-production) to `manual`. | The default branch is continuously deployed to staging and continuously delivered to production. | You can choose the deployment method when enabling Auto DevOps or later: 1. In GitLab, go to your project's **Settings > CI/CD > Auto DevOps**. 1. Choose the deployment strategy. 1. Select **Save changes**. NOTE: Use the [blue-green deployment](../../ci/environments/incremental_rollouts.md#blue-green-deployment) technique to minimize downtime and risk. ## Auto DevOps base domain The Auto DevOps base domain is required to use [Auto Review Apps](stages.md#auto-review-apps), [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy), and [Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring). To define the base domain, either: - In the project, group, or instance level: go to your cluster settings and add it there. - In the project or group level: add it as an environment variable: `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN`. - In the instance level: go to **Menu >** **{admin}** **Admin > Settings > CI/CD> Continuous Integration and Delivery** and add it there. The base domain variable `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN` follows the same order of precedence as other environment [variables](../../ci/variables/index.md#cicd-variable-precedence). If you don't specify the base domain in your projects and groups, Auto DevOps uses the instance-wide **Auto DevOps domain**. Auto DevOps requires a wildcard DNS A record matching the base domain(s). For a base domain of `example.com`, you'd need a DNS entry like: ```plaintext *.example.com 3600 A 1.2.3.4 ``` In this case, the deployed applications are served from `example.com`, and `1.2.3.4` is the IP address of your load balancer, generally NGINX ([see requirements](requirements.md)). Setting up the DNS record is beyond the scope of this document; check with your DNS provider for information. Alternatively, you can use free public services like [nip.io](https://nip.io) which provide automatic wildcard DNS without any configuration. For [nip.io](https://nip.io), set the Auto DevOps base domain to `1.2.3.4.nip.io`. After completing setup, all requests hit the load balancer, which routes requests to the Kubernetes pods running your application.