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NFS
You can view information and options set for each of the mounted NFS file
systems by running nfsstat -m
and cat /etc/fstab
.
NOTE: Note: Filesystem performance has a big impact on overall GitLab performance, especially for actions that read or write to Git repositories. See Filesystem Performance Benchmarking for steps to test filesystem performance.
NOTE: Note: Cloud Object Storage service with Gitaly is recommended over NFS wherever possible for improved performance.
NFS Server features
Required features
File locking: GitLab requires advisory file locking, which is only supported natively in NFS version 4. NFSv3 also supports locking as long as Linux Kernel 2.6.5+ is used. We recommend using version 4 and do not specifically test NFSv3.
Recommended options
When you define your NFS exports, we recommend you also add the following options:
no_root_squash
- NFS normally changes theroot
user tonobody
. This is a good security measure when NFS shares will be accessed by many different users. However, in this case only GitLab will use the NFS share so it is safe. GitLab recommends theno_root_squash
setting because we need to manage file permissions automatically. Without the setting you may receive errors when the Omnibus package tries to alter permissions. Note that GitLab and other bundled components do not run asroot
but as non-privileged users. The recommendation forno_root_squash
is to allow the Omnibus package to set ownership and permissions on files, as needed. In some cases where theno_root_squash
option is not available, theroot
flag can achieve the same result.sync
- Force synchronous behavior. Default is asynchronous and under certain circumstances it could lead to data loss if a failure occurs before data has synced.
Due to the complexities of running Omnibus with LDAP and the complexities of maintaining ID mapping without LDAP, in most cases you should enable numeric UIDs and GIDs (which is off by default in some cases) for simplified permission management between systems:
- NetApp instructions
- For non-NetApp devices, disable NFSv4
idmapping
by performing opposite of enable NFSv4 idmapper
Disable NFS server delegation
We recommend that all NFS users disable the NFS server delegation feature. This
is to avoid a Linux kernel bug
which causes NFS clients to slow precipitously due to
excessive network traffic from numerous TEST_STATEID
NFS messages.
To disable NFS server delegation, do the following:
-
On the NFS server, run:
echo 0 > /proc/sys/fs/leases-enable sysctl -w fs.leases-enable=0
-
Restart the NFS server process. For example, on CentOS run
service nfs restart
.
Important notes
The kernel bug may be fixed in more recent kernels with this commit.
Red Hat Enterprise 7 shipped a kernel update on August 6, 2019 that may also have resolved this problem.
You may not need to disable NFS server delegation if you know you are using a version of the Linux kernel that has been fixed. That said, GitLab still encourages instance administrators to keep NFS server delegation disabled.
Improving NFS performance with GitLab
Improving NFS performance with Unicorn
NOTE: Note: From GitLab 12.1, it will automatically be detected if Rugged can and should be used per storage.
If you previously enabled Rugged using the feature flag, you will need to unset the feature flag by using:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:features:unset_rugged
If the Rugged feature flag is explicitly set to either true or false, GitLab will use the value explicitly set.
Improving NFS performance with Puma
NOTE: Note: From GitLab 12.7, Rugged auto-detection is disabled if Puma thread count is greater than 1.
If you want to use Rugged with Puma, it is recommended to set Puma thread count to 1.
If you want to use Rugged with Puma thread count more than 1, Rugged can be enabled using the feature flag
If the Rugged feature flag is explicitly set to either true or false, GitLab will use the value explicitly set.
Known issues
Avoid using AWS's Elastic File System (EFS)
GitLab strongly recommends against using AWS Elastic File System (EFS). Our support team will not be able to assist on performance issues related to file system access.
Customers and users have reported that AWS EFS does not perform well for GitLab's
use-case. Workloads where many small files are written in a serialized manner, like git
,
are not well-suited for EFS. EBS with an NFS server on top will perform much better.
If you do choose to use EFS, avoid storing GitLab log files (e.g. those in /var/log/gitlab
)
there because this will also affect performance. We recommend that the log files be
stored on a local volume.
For more details on another person's experience with EFS, see this Commit Brooklyn 2019 video.
Avoid using CephFS and GlusterFS
GitLab strongly recommends against using CephFS and GlusterFS. These distributed file systems are not well-suited for GitLab's input/output access patterns because Git uses many small files and access times and file locking times to propagate will make Git activity very slow.
Avoid using PostgreSQL with NFS
GitLab strongly recommends against running your PostgreSQL database across NFS. The GitLab support team will not be able to assist on performance issues related to this configuration.
Additionally, this configuration is specifically warned against in the PostgreSQL Documentation:
PostgreSQL does nothing special for NFS file systems, meaning it assumes NFS behaves exactly like locally-connected drives. If the client or server NFS implementation does not provide standard file system semantics, this can cause reliability problems. Specifically, delayed (asynchronous) writes to the NFS server can cause data corruption problems.
For supported database architecture, please see our documentation on Configuring a Database for GitLab HA.
NFS Client mount options
Here is an example snippet to add to /etc/fstab
:
10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/.ssh /var/opt/gitlab/.ssh nfs4 defaults,vers=4.1,hard,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nofail,lookupcache=positive 0 2
10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads nfs4 defaults,vers=4.1,hard,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nofail,lookupcache=positive 0 2
10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared nfs4 defaults,vers=4.1,hard,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nofail,lookupcache=positive 0 2
10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds nfs4 defaults,vers=4.1,hard,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nofail,lookupcache=positive 0 2
10.1.0.1:/var/opt/gitlab/git-data /var/opt/gitlab/git-data nfs4 defaults,vers=4.1,hard,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,noatime,nofail,lookupcache=positive 0 2
Note there are several options that you should consider using:
Setting | Description |
---|---|
vers=4.1 |
NFS v4.1 should be used instead of v4.0 because there is a Linux NFS client bug in v4.0 that can cause significant problems due to stale data. |
nofail |
Don't halt boot process waiting for this mount to become available |
lookupcache=positive |
Tells the NFS client to honor positive cache results but invalidates any negative cache results. Negative cache results cause problems with Git. Specifically, a git push can fail to register uniformly across all NFS clients. The negative cache causes the clients to 'remember' that the files did not exist previously. |
hard |
Instead of soft . Further details. |
soft mount option
We recommend that you use hard
in your mount options, unless you have a specific
reason to use soft
.
On GitLab.com, we use soft
because there were times when we had NFS servers
reboot and soft
improved availability, but everyone's infrastructure is different.
If your NFS is provided by on-premise storage arrays with redundant controllers,
for example, you shouldn't need to worry about NFS server availability.
The NFS man page states:
"soft" timeout can cause silent data corruption in certain cases
Read the Linux man page to understand the difference,
and if you do use soft
, ensure that you've taken steps to mitigate the risks.
If you experience behaviour that might have been caused by
writes to disk on the NFS server not occurring, such as commits going missing,
use the hard
option, because (from the man page):
use the soft option only when client responsiveness is more important than data integrity
Other vendors make similar recommendations, including
SAP and NetApp's
knowledge base,
they highlight that if the NFS client driver caches data, soft
means there is no certainty if
writes by GitLab are actually on disk.
Mount points set with the option hard
may not perform as well, and if the
NFS server goes down, hard
will cause processes to hang when interacting with
the mount point. Use SIGKILL
(kill -9
) to deal with hung processes.
The intr
option
stopped working in the 2.6 kernel.
A single NFS mount
It's recommended to nest all GitLab data directories within a mount, that allows automatic restore of backups without manually moving existing data.
mountpoint
└── gitlab-data
├── builds
├── git-data
├── shared
└── uploads
To do so, we'll need to configure Omnibus with the paths to each directory nested in the mount point as follows:
Mount /gitlab-nfs
then use the following Omnibus
configuration to move each data location to a subdirectory:
git_data_dirs({"default" => { "path" => "/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/git-data"} })
gitlab_rails['uploads_directory'] = '/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/uploads'
gitlab_rails['shared_path'] = '/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/shared'
gitlab_ci['builds_directory'] = '/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/builds'
Run sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure
to start using the central location. Please
be aware that if you had existing data you will need to manually copy/rsync it
to these new locations and then restart GitLab.
Bind mounts
Alternatively to changing the configuration in Omnibus, bind mounts can be used to store the data on an NFS mount.
Bind mounts provide a way to specify just one NFS mount and then
bind the default GitLab data locations to the NFS mount. Start by defining your
single NFS mount point as you normally would in /etc/fstab
. Let's assume your
NFS mount point is /gitlab-nfs
. Then, add the following bind mounts in
/etc/fstab
:
/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/git-data /var/opt/gitlab/git-data none bind 0 0
/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/.ssh /var/opt/gitlab/.ssh none bind 0 0
/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/uploads /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads none bind 0 0
/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/shared /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared none bind 0 0
/gitlab-nfs/gitlab-data/builds /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds none bind 0 0
Using bind mounts will require manually making sure the data directories are empty before attempting a restore. Read more about the restore prerequisites.
Multiple NFS mounts
When using default Omnibus configuration you will need to share 4 data locations between all GitLab cluster nodes. No other locations should be shared. The following are the 4 locations need to be shared:
Location | Description | Default configuration |
---|---|---|
/var/opt/gitlab/git-data |
Git repository data. This will account for a large portion of your data | git_data_dirs({"default" => { "path" => "/var/opt/gitlab/git-data"} }) |
/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads |
User uploaded attachments | gitlab_rails['uploads_directory'] = '/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/uploads' |
/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared |
Build artifacts, GitLab Pages, LFS objects, temp files, etc. If you're using LFS this may also account for a large portion of your data | gitlab_rails['shared_path'] = '/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared' |
/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds |
GitLab CI/CD build traces | gitlab_ci['builds_directory'] = '/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds' |
Other GitLab directories should not be shared between nodes. They contain node-specific files and GitLab code that does not need to be shared. To ship logs to a central location consider using remote syslog. GitLab Omnibus packages provide configuration for UDP log shipping.
Having multiple NFS mounts will require manually making sure the data directories are empty before attempting a restore. Read more about the restore prerequisites.
Read more on high-availability configuration: