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Exploring GitLab Pages (FREE)
This document is a user guide to explore the options and settings GitLab Pages offers.
To familiarize yourself with GitLab Pages first:
- Read an introduction to GitLab Pages.
- Learn how to get started with Pages.
- Learn how to enable GitLab Pages across your GitLab instance on the administrator documentation.
GitLab Pages requirements
In brief, this is what you need to upload your website in GitLab Pages:
- Domain of the instance: domain name that is used for GitLab Pages (ask your administrator).
- GitLab CI/CD: a
.gitlab-ci.yml
file with a specific job namedpages
in the root directory of your repository. - A directory called
public
in your site's repository containing the content to be published. - GitLab Runner enabled for the project.
GitLab Pages on GitLab.com
If you are using GitLab Pages on GitLab.com to host your website, then:
- The domain name for GitLab Pages on GitLab.com is
gitlab.io
. - Custom domains and TLS support are enabled.
- Shared runners are enabled by default, provided for free and can be used to build your website. If you want you can still bring your own runner.
Example projects
Visit the GitLab Pages group for a complete list of example projects. Contributions are very welcome.
Custom error codes Pages
You can provide your own 403 and 404 error pages by creating the 403.html
and
404.html
files respectively in the root directory of the public/
directory
that are included in the artifacts. Usually this is the root directory of
your project, but that may differ depending on your static generator
configuration.
If the case of 404.html
, there are different scenarios. For example:
- If you use project Pages (served under
/projectname/
) and try to access/projectname/non/existing_file
, GitLab Pages tries to serve first/projectname/404.html
, and then/404.html
. - If you use user/group Pages (served under
/
) and try to access/non/existing_file
GitLab Pages tries to serve/404.html
. - If you use a custom domain and try to access
/non/existing_file
, GitLab Pages tries to serve only/404.html
.
Redirects in GitLab Pages
You can configure redirects for your site using a _redirects
file. To learn more, read
the redirects documentation.
GitLab Pages Access Control
To restrict access to your website, enable GitLab Pages Access Control.
Unpublishing your Pages
If you ever feel the need to purge your Pages content, you can do so by going to your project's settings through the gear icon in the top right, and then navigating to Pages. Select the Remove pages button to delete your Pages website.
Subdomains of subdomains
When using Pages under the top-level domain of a GitLab instance (*.example.io
), you can't use HTTPS with subdomains
of subdomains. If your namespace or group name contains a dot (for example, foo.bar
) the domain
https://foo.bar.example.io
does not work.
This limitation is because of the HTTP Over TLS protocol. HTTP pages work as long as you don't redirect HTTP to HTTPS.
GitLab Pages and subgroups
You must host your GitLab Pages website in a project. This project can belong to a group or subgroup. For group websites, the group must be at the top level and not a subgroup.
Specific configuration options for Pages
Learn how to set up GitLab CI/CD for specific use cases.
.gitlab-ci.yml
for plain HTML websites
Supposed your repository contained the following files:
├── index.html
├── css
│ └── main.css
└── js
└── main.js
Then the .gitlab-ci.yml
example below simply moves all files from the root
directory of the project to the public/
directory. The .public
workaround
is so cp
doesn't also copy public/
to itself in an infinite loop:
pages:
script:
- mkdir .public
- cp -r * .public
- mv .public public
artifacts:
paths:
- public
only:
- main
.gitlab-ci.yml
for a static site generator
See this document for a step-by-step guide.
.gitlab-ci.yml
for a repository where there's also actual code
Remember that GitLab Pages are by default branch/tag agnostic and their
deployment relies solely on what you specify in .gitlab-ci.yml
. You can limit
the pages
job with the only
parameter,
whenever a new commit is pushed to a branch used specifically for your
pages.
That way, you can have your project's code in the main
branch and use an
orphan branch (let's name it pages
) to host your static generator site.
You can create a new empty branch like this:
git checkout --orphan pages
The first commit made on this new branch has no parents and is the root of a
new history totally disconnected from all the other branches and commits.
Push the source files of your static generator in the pages
branch.
Below is a copy of .gitlab-ci.yml
where the most significant line is the last
one, specifying to execute everything in the pages
branch:
image: ruby:2.6
pages:
script:
- gem install jekyll
- jekyll build -d public/
artifacts:
paths:
- public
only:
- pages
See an example that has different files in the main
branch
and the source files for Jekyll are in a pages
branch which
also includes .gitlab-ci.yml
.
Serving compressed assets
Most modern browsers support downloading files in a compressed format. This speeds up downloads by reducing the size of files.
Before serving an uncompressed file, Pages checks if the same file exists with
a .br
or .gz
extension. If it does, and the browser supports receiving
compressed files, it serves that version instead of the uncompressed one.
To take advantage of this feature, the artifact you upload to the Pages should have this structure:
public/
├─┬ index.html
│ | index.html.br
│ └ index.html.gz
│
├── css/
│ └─┬ main.css
│ | main.css.br
│ └ main.css.gz
│
└── js/
└─┬ main.js
| main.js.br
└ main.js.gz
This can be achieved by including a script:
command like this in your
.gitlab-ci.yml
pages job:
pages:
# Other directives
script:
# Build the public/ directory first
- find public -type f -regex '.*\.\(htm\|html\|txt\|text\|js\|css\)$' -exec gzip -f -k {} \;
- find public -type f -regex '.*\.\(htm\|html\|txt\|text\|js\|css\)$' -exec brotli -f -k {} \;
By pre-compressing the files and including both versions in the artifact, Pages can serve requests for both compressed and uncompressed content without needing to compress files on-demand.
Resolving ambiguous URLs
GitLab Pages makes assumptions about which files to serve when receiving a request for a URL that does not include an extension.
Consider a Pages site deployed with the following files:
public/
├── index.html
├── data.html
├── info.html
├── data/
│ └── index.html
└── info/
└── details.html
Pages supports reaching each of these files through several different URLs. In
particular, it always looks for an index.html
file if the URL only
specifies the directory. If the URL references a file that doesn't exist, but
adding .html
to the URL leads to a file that does exist, it's served
instead. Here are some examples of what happens given the above Pages site:
URL path | HTTP response |
---|---|
/ |
200 OK : public/index.html |
/index.html |
200 OK : public/index.html |
/index |
200 OK : public/index.html |
/data |
302 Found : redirecting to /data/ |
/data/ |
200 OK : public/data/index.html |
/data.html |
200 OK : public/data.html |
/info |
302 Found : redirecting to /info/ |
/info/ |
404 Not Found Error Page |
/info.html |
200 OK : public/info.html |
/info/details |
200 OK : public/info/details.html |
/info/details.html |
200 OK : public/info/details.html |
Note that when public/data/index.html
exists, it takes priority over the public/data.html
file
for both the /data
and /data/
URL paths.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you download your generated pages?
Sure. All you need to do is download the artifacts archive from the job page.
Can you use GitLab Pages if your project is private?
Yes. GitLab Pages doesn't care whether you set your project's visibility level to private, internal or public.
Can you create a personal or a group website?
Yes. See the documentation about GitLab Pages domain names, URLs, and base URLs.
Do you need to create a user/group website before creating a project website?
No, you don't. You can create your project first and access it under
http(s)://namespace.example.io/projectname
.
Known issues
For a list of known issues, visit the GitLab public issue tracker.
Troubleshooting
404 error when accessing a GitLab Pages site URL
This problem most likely results from a missing index.html
file in the public directory. If after deploying a Pages site
a 404 is encountered, confirm that the public directory contains an index.html
file. If the file contains a different name
such as test.html
, the Pages site can still be accessed, but the full path would be needed. For example: https//group-name.pages.example.com/project-name/test.html
.
The contents of the public directory can be confirmed by browsing the artifacts from the latest pipeline.
Files listed under the public directory can be accessed through the Pages URL for the project.
A 404 can also be related to incorrect permissions. If Pages Access Control is enabled, and a user navigates to the Pages URL and receives a 404 response, it is possible that the user does not have permission to view the site. To fix this, verify that the user is a member of the project.
For Geo instances, 404 errors on Pages occur after promoting a secondary to a primary. Find more details in the Pages administration documentation
Cannot play media content on Safari
Safari requires the web server to support the Range request header
in order to play your media content. For GitLab Pages to serve
HTTP Range requests, you should use the following two variables in your .gitlab-ci.yml
file:
pages:
stage: deploy
variables:
FF_USE_FASTZIP: "true"
ARTIFACT_COMPRESSION_LEVEL: "fastest"
script:
- echo "Deploying pages"
artifacts:
paths:
- public
The FF_USE_FASTZIP
variable enables the feature flag which is needed for ARTIFACT_COMPRESSION_LEVEL
.