debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/install/kubernetes/index.md
2019-02-15 15:39:39 +05:30

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description: 'Read through the different methods to deploy GitLab on Kubernetes.'
---
# Installing GitLab on Kubernetes
NOTE: **Kubernetes experience required:**
Our Helm charts are recommended for those who are familiar with Kubernetes.
If you're not sure if Kubernetes is for you, our
[Omnibus GitLab packages](../README.md#install-gitlab-using-the-omnibus-gitlab-package-recommended)
are mature, scalable, support [high availability](../../administration/high_availability/README.md)
and are used today on GitLab.com.
It is not necessary to have GitLab installed on Kubernetes in order to use [GitLab Kubernetes integration](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/clusters/index.html).
The easiest method to deploy GitLab on [Kubernetes](https://kubernetes.io/) is
to take advantage of GitLab's Helm charts. [Helm](https://github.com/kubernetes/helm/blob/master/README.md)
is a package management tool for Kubernetes, allowing apps to be easily managed via their
Charts. A [Chart](https://github.com/kubernetes/charts) is a detailed description
of the application including how it should be deployed, upgraded, and configured.
## GitLab Chart
This chart contains all the required components to get started, and can scale to
large deployments. It offers a number of benefits:
- Horizontal scaling of individual components
- No requirement for shared storage to scale
- Containers do not need `root` permissions
- Automatic SSL with Let's Encrypt
- An unprivileged GitLab Runner
- and plenty more.
Learn more about the [GitLab chart](gitlab_chart.md).
## GitLab Runner Chart
If you already have a GitLab instance running, inside or outside of Kubernetes,
and you'd like to leverage the Runner's
[Kubernetes capabilities](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/kubernetes.html),
it can be deployed with the GitLab Runner chart.
Learn more about [gitlab-runner chart](gitlab_runner_chart.md).