246 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
246 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
# GitLab-Omnibus Helm Chart
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CAUTION: **Caution:**
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This chart is **deprecated**. We recommend using the [`gitlab` chart](gitlab_chart.md)
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instead. A comparison of the two charts is available in [this video](https://youtu.be/Z6jWR8Z8dv8).
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For more information on available GitLab Helm Charts, see the [charts overview](index.md#chart-overview).
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- This GitLab-Omnibus chart has been tested on Google Kubernetes Engine and Azure Container Service.
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- This work is based partially on: <https://github.com/lwolf/kubernetes-gitlab/>. GitLab would like to thank Sergey Nuzhdin for his work.
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## Introduction
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This chart provides an easy way to get started with GitLab, provisioning an
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installation with nearly all functionality enabled. SSL is automatically
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provisioned via [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/).
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This Helm chart is suited for small to medium deployments and is **deprecated**
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and replaced by the [cloud native GitLab chart](https://gitlab.com/charts/helm.gitlab.io/blob/master/README.md).
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Due to the significant architectural changes, migrating will require backing up
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data out of this instance and importing it into the new deployment.
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The deployment includes:
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- A [GitLab Omnibus](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/) Pod, including Mattermost, Container Registry, and Prometheus
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- An auto-scaling [GitLab Runner](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/) using the Kubernetes executor
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- [Redis](https://github.com/kubernetes/charts/tree/master/stable/redis)
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- [PostgreSQL](https://github.com/kubernetes/charts/tree/master/stable/postgresql)
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- [NGINX Ingress](https://github.com/kubernetes/charts/tree/master/stable/nginx-ingress)
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- Persistent Volume Claims for Data, Registry, Postgres, and Redis
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## Limitations
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[High Availability](../../administration/high_availability/README.md) and
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[Geo](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/geo/replication/index.html) are not supported.
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## Requirements
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- _At least_ 4 GB of RAM available on your cluster. 41GB of storage and 2 CPU are also required.
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- Kubernetes 1.4+ with Beta APIs enabled
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- [Persistent Volume](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/) provisioner support in the underlying infrastructure
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- A [wildcard DNS entry](#networking-prerequisites), which resolves to the external IP address
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- The `kubectl` CLI installed locally and authenticated for the cluster
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- The [Helm client](https://github.com/kubernetes/helm/blob/master/docs/quickstart.md) installed locally on your machine
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### Networking requirements
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This chart configures a GitLab server and Kubernetes cluster which can support
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dynamic [Review Apps](../../ci/review_apps/index.md), as well as services like
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the integrated [Container Registry](../../user/project/container_registry.md)
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and [Mattermost](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/gitlab-mattermost/).
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To support the GitLab services and dynamic environments, a wildcard DNS entry
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is required which resolves to the [load balancer](#load-balancer-ip) or
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[external IP](#external-ip). Configuration of the DNS entry will depend upon
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the DNS service being used.
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#### External IP (recommended)
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To provision an external IP on GCP and Azure, simply request a new address from
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the Networking section. Ensure that the region matches the region your container
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cluster is created in. It is important that the IP is not assigned at this point
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in time. It will be automatically assigned once the Helm chart is installed,
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and assigned to the Load Balancer.
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Now that an external IP address has been allocated, ensure that the wildcard
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DNS entry you would like to use resolves to this IP. Please consult the
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documentation for your DNS service for more information on creating DNS records.
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Finally, set the `baseIP` setting to this IP address when
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[deploying GitLab](#configuring-and-installing-gitlab).
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#### Load Balancer IP
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If you do not specify a `baseIP`, an IP will be assigned to the Load Balancer or
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Ingress. You can retrieve this IP by running the following command *after* deploying GitLab:
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```sh
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kubectl get svc -w --namespace nginx-ingress nginx
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```
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The IP address will be displayed in the `EXTERNAL-IP` field, and should be used
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to configure the Wildcard DNS entry. For more information on creating a wildcard
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DNS entry, consult the documentation for the DNS server you are using.
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For production deployments of GitLab, we strongly recommend using a
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[external IP](#external-ip).
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## Configuring and Installing GitLab
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For most installations, two parameters are required:
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- `baseDomain`: the [base domain](#networking-prerequisites) of the wildcard host entry. For example, `mycompany.io` if the wild card entry is `*.mycompany.io`.
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- `legoEmail`: Email address to use when requesting new SSL certificates from Let's Encrypt.
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Other common configuration options:
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- `baseIP`: the desired [external IP address](#external-ip-recommended)
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- `gitlab`: Choose the [desired edition](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing), either `ee` or `ce`. `ce` is the default.
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- `gitlabEELicense`: For Enterprise Edition, the [license](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/admin_area/license.html) can be installed directly via the Chart
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- `provider`: Optimizes the deployment for a cloud provider. The default is `gke` for [Google Kubernetes Engine](https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/), with `acs` also supported for the [Azure Container Service](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/services/container-service/).
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For additional configuration options, consult the
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[`values.yaml`](https://gitlab.com/charts/gitlab-omnibus/blob/master/values.yaml).
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### Choosing a different GitLab release version
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The version of GitLab installed is based on the `gitlab` setting (see [section](#choosing-gitlab-edition) above), and
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the value of the corresponding helm setting: `gitlabCEImage` or `gitabEEImage`.
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```yaml
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gitlab: CE
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gitlabCEImage: gitlab/gitlab-ce:9.5.2-ce.0
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gitlabEEImage: gitlab/gitlab-ee:9.5.2-ee.0
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```
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The different images can be found in the [gitlab-ce](https://hub.docker.com/r/gitlab/gitlab-ce/tags/) and [gitlab-ee](https://hub.docker.com/r/gitlab/gitlab-ee/tags/)
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repositories on Docker Hub.
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### Persistent storage
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NOTE: **Note:**
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If you are using a machine type with support for less than 4 attached disks,
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like an Azure trial, you should disable dedicated storage for Postgres and Redis.
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By default, persistent storage is enabled for GitLab and the charts it depends
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on (Redis and PostgreSQL). Components can have their claim size set from your
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`values.yaml`, along with whether to provision separate storage for Postgres and Redis.
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Basic configuration:
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```yaml
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redisImage: redis:3.2.10
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redisDedicatedStorage: true
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redisStorageSize: 5Gi
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postgresImage: postgres:9.6.3
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# If you disable postgresDedicatedStorage, you should consider bumping up gitlabRailsStorageSize
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postgresDedicatedStorage: true
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postgresStorageSize: 30Gi
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gitlabRailsStorageSize: 30Gi
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gitlabRegistryStorageSize: 30Gi
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gitlabConfigStorageSize: 1Gi
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```
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### Routing and SSL
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Ingress routing and SSL are automatically configured within this Chart. An NGINX
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ingress is provisioned and configured, and will route traffic to any service.
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SSL certificates are automatically created and configured by
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[kube-lego](https://github.com/kubernetes/charts/tree/master/stable/kube-lego).
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NOTE: **Note:**
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Let's Encrypt limits a single TLD to five certificate requests within a single
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week. This means that common DNS wildcard services like [nip.io](http://nip.io)
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and [xip.io](http://xip.io) are unlikely to work.
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## Installing GitLab using the Helm Chart
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NOTE: **Note:**
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You may see a temporary error message `SchedulerPredicates failed due to PersistentVolumeClaim is not bound`
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while storage provisions. Once the storage provisions, the pods will automatically start.
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This may take a couple minutes depending on your cloud provider. If the error persists,
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please review the [requirements sections](#requirements) to ensure you have enough RAM, CPU, and storage.
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Add the GitLab Helm repository and initialize Helm:
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```bash
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helm init
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helm repo add gitlab https://charts.gitlab.io
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```
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Once you have reviewed the [configuration settings](#configuring-and-installing-gitlab),
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you can install the chart. We recommending saving your configuration options in a
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`values.yaml` file for easier upgrades in the future:
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```bash
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helm install --name gitlab -f values.yaml gitlab/gitlab-omnibus
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```
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Or you can pass them on the command line:
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```bash
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helm install --name gitlab --set baseDomain=gitlab.io,baseIP=192.0.2.1,gitlab=ee,gitlabEELicense=$LICENSE,legoEmail=email@gitlab.com gitlab/gitlab-omnibus
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```
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## Updating GitLab using the Helm Chart
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If you are upgrading from a previous version to 0.1.35 or above, you will need to
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change the access mode values for GitLab's storage. To do this, set the following
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in `values.yaml` or on the CLI:
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```sh
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gitlabDataAccessMode=ReadWriteMany
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gitlabRegistryAccessMode=ReadWriteMany
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gitlabConfigAccessMode=ReadWriteMany
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```
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Once your GitLab Chart is installed, configuration changes and chart updates
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should be done using `helm upgrade`:
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```sh
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helm upgrade -f values.yaml gitlab gitlab/gitlab-omnibus
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```
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## Upgrading from CE to EE using the Helm Chart
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If you have installed the Community Edition using this chart, upgrading to
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Enterprise Edition is easy.
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If you are using a `values.yaml` file to specify the configuration options, edit
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the file and set `gitlab=ee`. If you would like to run a specific version of
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GitLab EE, set `gitlabEEImage` to be the desired GitLab
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[docker image](https://hub.docker.com/r/gitlab/gitlab-ee/tags/). Then you can
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use `helm upgrade` to update your GitLab instance to EE:
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```bash
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helm upgrade -f values.yaml gitlab gitlab/gitlab-omnibus
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```
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You can also upgrade and specify these options via the command line:
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```bash
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helm upgrade gitlab --set gitlab=ee,gitlabEEImage=gitlab/gitlab-ee:9.5.5-ee.0 gitlab/gitlab-omnibus
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```
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## Uninstalling GitLab using the Helm Chart
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To uninstall the GitLab Chart, run the following:
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```bash
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helm delete --purge gitlab
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```
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## Troubleshooting
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### Storage errors when updating `gitlab-omnibus` versions prior to 0.1.35
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Users upgrading `gitlab-omnibus` from a version prior to 0.1.35, may see an error
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like: `Error: UPGRADE FAILED: PersistentVolumeClaim "gitlab-gitlab-config-storage" is invalid: spec: Forbidden: field is immutable after creation`.
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This is due to a change in the access mode for GitLab storage in version 0.1.35.
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To successfully upgrade, the access mode flags must be set to `ReadWriteMany`
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as detailed in the [update section](#updating-gitlab-using-the-helm-chart).
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[kube-srv]: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#publishing-services---service-types
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[storageclass]: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#storageclasses
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