161 lines
7.6 KiB
Text
161 lines
7.6 KiB
Text
Debian specific changes in gitlab
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=================================
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1. Redis connection: redis-server package in debian follows upstream default
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and listens on tcp port 6379. So gitlab package in debian is configured to use
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tcp sockets. gitlab developers recommend using unix sockets. You can change to
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using unix sockets by changing the following configuration files.
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/etc/redis/redis.conf and /etc/gitlab/resque.yml
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2. wiki backend: debian package uses gollum-rugged_adapter whereas gitlab
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upstream still use gollum-grit_adapter. grit is no longer maintained and grit
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developers recommend switching to rugged. gollum-lib developers have announced
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their intention to switch to rugged_adapter by default and this is in progress.
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3. default paths: debian package has changed some default values for paths
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which you can see at /etc/gitlab/gitlab-debian.conf
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4. database: gitlab package configures postgresql database with peer
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authentication.
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5. gem versions: some gem dependency requirements are relaxed to work with
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their packaged version in debian.
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You can find the list of gems required by gitlab and their corresponding
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package versions in debian at
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http://debian.fosscommunity.in/status/?appname=gitlab&sort=satisfied
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6. vendored js files: some embedded javascript files in
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vendor/assets/javascripts are replaced by their packaged version.
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7. root directory of rails is read only (/usr/share/gitlab); following symbolic
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links are added to enable write access to gitlab app
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> config -> /etc/gitlab
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> Gemfile.lock -> /var/lib/gitlab/Gemfile.lock
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> log -> /var/log/gitlab
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> builds -> /var/log/gitlab/builds
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> tmp -> /run/gitlab
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> /run/gitlab/cache -> var/lib/gitlab/cache
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> public -> /var/lib/gitlab/public
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> shared -> /var/lib/gitlab/shared
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> db -> /var/lib/gitlab/db
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> /usr/share/gitlab/.secret -> /var/lib/gitlab/.secret
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8. ssl certificates: This package tries to use letsencrypt package to obtain
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ssl certificates, if it is installed (via Recommends). If letsencrypt is not
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required, you can copy ssl certificate and key to /etc/gitlab/ssl as gitlab.crt
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and gitlab.key. If letsencrypt option is selected, symbolic links are added for
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certificates obtained using letsencrypt to /etc/gitlab/ssl.
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9. exim compatibility issue: If you use exim as your mta, then see
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https://github.com/gitlabhq/gitlabhq/issues/4866#issuecomment-145784636
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Useful diagnostics
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==================
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Upstream documentation will instruct to run commands like the following:
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$ sudo -u gitlab -H bundle exec rake XXX RAILS_ENV=production
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Where XXX is something like "db:migrate", "gitlab:check" or "gitlab:env:info".
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In Debian, the rake command has to be called by the gitlab user from app home
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directory /usr/share/gitlab and with the environment variables from
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/etc/gitlab/gitlab-debian.conf set. So above command could be run like:
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$ runuser -u gitlab -- sh -c 'cd /usr/share/gitlab && . /etc/gitlab/gitlab-debian.conf && export DB RAILS_ENV && bundle exec rake XXX RAILS_ENV=production'
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One useful command to run in this environment is:
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$ bundle exec rake gitlab:check RAILS_ENV=production
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Which will output helpful diagnostics about the state of your system including
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how to fix possible problems. Another one is:
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$ bundle exec rake gitlab:env:info RAILS_ENV=production
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To see service status with systemd, you can use:
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$ systemctl status gitlab.service -l
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$ systemctl status gitlab-unicorn.service -l
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$ systemctl status gitlab-sidekiq.service -l
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$ systemctl status gitlab-workhorse.service -l
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$ journalctl -xn
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It is advised to attach the output of above commands to bugreports.
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Migrating from non-Debian gitlab
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================================
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0. Backup everything you don't want to loose like:
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- the postgresql database used by your gitlab instance
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- the repositories/ directory
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- the public/uploads/ directory
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- your .ssh/authorized_keys
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1. Remove the init script for your old gitlab installation, like:
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$ rm /etc/init.d/gitlab
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2. Install Debian gitlab:
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$ apt-get install gitlab
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3. Stop gitlab services:
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$ systemctl stop gitlab.service
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4. Rename your old database to gitlab_production and set the user gitlab as
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its owner and the owner of all its tables, sequences and views
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$ su - postgres
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$ psql
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# drop database gitlab_production;
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# alter database gitlabhq_production rename to gitlab_production;
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# alter database gitlab_production owner to gitlab;
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# \q
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$ for tbl in `psql -qAt -c "select tablename from pg_tables where schemaname = 'public';" gitlab_production` ; do psql -c "alter table \"$tbl\" owner to gitlab" gitlab_production ; done
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$ for tbl in `psql -qAt -c "select sequence_name from information_schema.sequences where sequence_schema = 'public';" gitlab_production` ; do psql -c "alter table \"$tbl\" owner to gitlab" gitlab_production ; done
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5. Copy your old repository directory to /var/lib/gitlab/repositories/
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6. Copy your old public/uploads/ directory to /var/lib/gitlab/public/uploads/
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7. Copy your old .ssh/authorized_keys to /var/lib/gitlab/.ssh/authorized_keys
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8. Fix your /var/lib/gitlab/.ssh/authorized_keys to contain the right path to gitlab-shell like:
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$ sed -i 's/^command="[^ ]\+gitlab-shell /command="\/usr\/share\/gitlab-shell\/bin\/gitlab-shell /' /usr/share/gitlab/.ssh/authorized_keys
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9. Fix permission:
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$ chown -R gitlab:gitlab /var/lib/gitlab/repositories/ /var/lib/gitlab/public/uploads/ /var/lib/gitlab/.ssh/authorized_keys
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$ chmod -R ug+rwX,o-rwx /var/lib/gitlab/repositories/
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$ find /var/lib/gitlab/public/uploads -type f -exec chmod 0644 {} \;
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$ find /var/lib/gitlab/public/uploads -type d -not -path /var/lib/gitlab/public/uploads -exec chmod 0700 {} \;
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10. Migrate the database:
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$ runuser -u gitlab -- sh -c 'cd /usr/share/gitlab && . /etc/gitlab/gitlab-debian.conf && export DB RAILS_ENV && bundle exec rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=production'
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11. Fix hooks:
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# su gitlab
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$ /usr/share/gitlab-shell/bin/create-hooks
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12. Start gitlab:
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$ systemctl start gitlab.service
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13. Check the installation:
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$ runuser -u gitlab -- sh -c 'cd /usr/share/gitlab && . /etc/gitlab/gitlab-debian.conf && export DB RAILS_ENV && bundle exec rake gitlab:check RAILS_ENV=production'
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Resetting admin password without web interface
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==============================================
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The steps involve dropping into rails console as gitlab user for production environment and then resetting the admin password via the user object.
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$ gitlab-rails-console
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irb(main):001:0> user = User.where(admin: true).first
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irb(main):002:0> user.password = 'secret_pass'
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irb(main):003:0> user.password_confirmation = 'secret_pass'
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irb(main):004:0> user.save!
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Activating a newly registered user
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======================================
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The steps involve dropping into rails console as gitlab user for production environment and running the following commands.
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$ gitlab-rails-console
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irb(main):001:0> user = User.find_by(email: 'useraddress@domain')
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irb(main):004:0> user.state='active'
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irb(main):005:0> user.save
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Granting an existing user admin access
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======================================
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The steps involve dropping into rails console as gitlab user for production environment and running the following commands.
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$ gitlab-rails-console
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irb(main):001:0> user = User.find_by(email: 'useraddress@domain')
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irb(main):003:0> user.admin=true
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irb(main):004:0> user.state='active'
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irb(main):005:0> user.save
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Latest information regarding supported versions
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===============================================
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Subscribe to https://wiki.debian.org/gitlab to get updates about new package
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versions in unofficial repositories.
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