164 lines
9.3 KiB
Markdown
164 lines
9.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: none
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group: unassigned
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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
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---
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# Uploads development guide
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Uploads are an integral part of many GitLab features. To understand how GitLab handles uploads, this page
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provides an overview of the key mechanisms for transferring files to a storage destination.
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GitLab uploads are configured by feature. All features that involve uploads provide the same configuration options,
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but they can be configured independently of one another. For example, Git LFS uploads can be configured
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independently of CI/CD build artifact uploads, but they both offer the same set of settings keys. These settings
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govern how an upload is processed, which can have a dramatic impact on performance and scalability.
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This page summarizes the upload settings that are important in deciding how such files are handled. The sections
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that follow then describe each of these mechanisms in more detail.
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## How upload settings drive upload flow
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Before we examine individual upload strategies in more detail, let's examine a high-level
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breakdown of which upload settings map to each of these strategies.
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Upload settings themselves are documented in [Uploads administration](../../administration/uploads.md).
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Here, we focus on how these settings drive the internals of GitLab upload logic.
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At the top level, we distinguish between two **destinations** for uploaded files:
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- [**Local storage**](#local-storage) - Files are stored on a volume attached to the web server node.
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- [**Object storage**](#object-storage) - Files are stored in a remote object store bucket.
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In this table, `x.y.z` specifies the path taken through `gitlab.yml`:
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| Setting | Value | Behavior |
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| -------------------------------------- | ------- | ------------------------------- |
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| `<feature>.object_store.enabled` | `false` | Files are stored locally in `<feature>.storage_path` |
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| `<feature>.object_store.enabled` | `true` | Files are stored remotely in `<feature>.object_store.remote_directory` |
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When using object storage, administrators can control how those files are moved into the respective bucket.
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This move can happen in one of these ways:
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- [Rails controller upload](#rails-controller-upload).
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- [Background upload](#background-upload).
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- [Direct upload](#direct-upload).
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These strategies activate as per the following `<feature>.object_store.*` settings:
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| | `background_upload` = `false` | `background_upload` = `true` |
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| ------------------------- | ----------------------------- | ------------------------------- |
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| `direct_upload` = `false` | Controller upload | Background upload |
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| `direct_upload` = `true` | Direct upload | Direct upload (takes precedence)|
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Individual Sidekiq workers might also store files in object storage, which is not something we cover here.
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More importantly, `background_upload` does not imply _all files are uploaded by Sidekiq._
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Sidekiq workers that store files in object storage could still exist when this setting is `false`.
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Those cases are never user-initiated uploads, but they might occur in response to another user-initiated
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action, such as exporting a GitLab repository.
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Finally, Workhorse assists most user-initiated uploads using an upload buffering mechanism to keep slow work out of Rails controllers.
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This mechanism is explained in [Workhorse assisted uploads](#workhorse-assisted-uploads),
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as it runs orthogonal to much of what we discuss beforehand.
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We now look at each case in more detail.
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## Local storage
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Local storage is the simplest path an upload can take. It was how GitLab treated uploads in its early days.
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It assumes a storage volume (like a disk or network attached storage) is accessible
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to the Rails application at `storage_path`. This file path is relative to the Rails root directory and,
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like any upload setting, configurable per feature.
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When a client sends a file upload, Workhorse first buffers the file to disk, a mechanism explained in more
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detail in [Workhorse assisted uploads](#workhorse-assisted-uploads). When the request reaches the Rails
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application, the file already exists on local storage, so Rails merely has to move it to the specified
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directory to finalize the transaction.
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Local storage cannot be used with cloud-native GitLab (CNG) installations. It is therefore not used for
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GitLab SaaS either.
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## Object storage
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To provide horizontally scalable storage, you must use an object store provider such as:
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- Amazon AWS.
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- Google Cloud Storage (GCS).
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- Azure Cloud Storage.
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Using object storage provides two main benefits:
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- Ease of adding more storage capacity: cloud providers do this for you automatically.
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- Enabling horizontal scaling of your GitLab installation: multiple GitLab application servers can access the same data
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when it is stored in object storage.
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CNG installations including GitLab SaaS always use object storage (GCS in the case of GitLab SaaS.)
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A challenge with uploading to a remote object store is that it includes an outgoing HTTP request from
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GitLab to the object store provider. As mentioned above, there are three different strategies available for how
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this HTTP request is sent.
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- [Rails controller upload](#rails-controller-upload).
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- [Background upload](#background-upload).
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- [Direct upload](#direct-upload).
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### Rails controller upload
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When neither background upload nor direct upload are available, Rails uploads the file to object storage
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as part of the controller `create` action. Which controller is responsible depends on the kind of file uploaded.
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A Rails controller upload is very similar to uploading to local storage. The main difference: Rails must
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send an HTTP request to the object store. This happens via the [CarrierWave Fog](https://github.com/carrierwaveuploader/carrierwave#fog)
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uploader.
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As with local storage, this strategy benefits from [Workhorse assistance](#workhorse-assisted-uploads) to
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keep some of the costly I/O work out of Ruby and Rails. Direct upload does a better job at this because it also keeps the HTTP PUT requests to object storage outside Puma.
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This strategy is only suitable for small file uploads, as it is subject to Puma's 60 second request timeout.
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### Background upload
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WARNING:
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This strategy is deprecated in GitLab 14.9 and later, and is scheduled to [be removed in GitLab 15.0](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/26600).
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With background uploads enabled:
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1. Files are uploaded as if they were to reside in local storage.
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1. When Rails saves the upload metadata and the transaction completes, a Sidekiq job is scheduled.
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1. The Sidekiq job transfers the file to the object store bucket.
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- If the job completes, the upload record is updated to reflect the file's new location.
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- If the job fails or gets lost, the upload stays in local storage and has the lifecycle of a normal local storage upload.
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As Rails and Sidekiq must cooperate to move the file to its final destination, it requires shared
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storage and as such is unsuitable for CNG installations. We do not use background upload in GitLab SaaS.
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As background upload is an extension of local storage, it benefits from the same [Workhorse assistance](#workhorse-assisted-uploads) to
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keep costly I/O work out of Ruby and Rails.
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### Direct upload
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Direct upload is the recommended way to move large files into object storage in CNG installations like GitLab SaaS.
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With direct upload enabled, Workhorse:
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1. Authorizes the request with Rails.
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1. Establishes a connection with the object store itself to transfer the file to a temporary location.
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1. When the transfer is complete, Workhorse finalizes the request with Rails. Rails issues an object store copy operation to put the file in its final location.
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1. Completes the upload by deleting the temporary file in object storage.
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This strategy is a different form of [Workhorse assistance](#workhorse-assisted-uploads). It does not rely on shared storage that is accessible by both Workhorse and Puma.
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Of all existing upload strategies, direct upload is best able to handle large (gigabyte) uploads. However, because Puma still does an object storage copy operation, which takes time proportional to the size of the upload, there remains a possibility of hitting Puma timeouts.
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## Workhorse assisted uploads
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Most uploads receive assistance from Workhorse in some way.
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- Often, Workhorse buffers the upload to a temporary file. Workhorse adds metadata to the request to tell
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Puma the name and location of the temporary file. This requires shared temporary storage between Workhorse and Puma.
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All GitLab installations (including CNG) have this shared temporary storage.
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- Workhorse sometimes pre-processes the file. For example, for CI artifact uploads, Workhorse creates a separate index
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of the contents of the ZIP file. By doing this in Workhorse we bypass the Puma request timeout.
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Compared to Sidekiq background processing, this has the advantage that the user does not see an intermediate state
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where GitLab accepts the file but has not yet processed it.
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- With direct upload, Workhorse can both pre-process the file and upload it to object storage.
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Uploading a large file to object storage takes time; by doing this in Workhorse we avoid the Puma request timeout.
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