268 lines
9 KiB
Markdown
268 lines
9 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: reference, dev
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stage: Plan
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group: Knowledge
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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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description: "GitLab's development guidelines for GitLab Pages"
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---
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# Contribute to GitLab Pages development
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Learn how to configure GitLab Pages so you can help develop the feature.
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## Configuring GitLab Pages hostname
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GitLab Pages needs a hostname or domain, as each different GitLab Pages site is accessed through a
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subdomain. You can set the GitLab Pages hostname:
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- [Without wildcard, editing your hosts file](#without-wildcard-editing-your-hosts-file).
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- [With DNS wildcard alternatives](#with-dns-wildcard-alternatives).
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### Without wildcard, editing your hosts file
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As `/etc/hosts` don't support wildcard hostnames, you must configure one entry
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for GitLab Pages, and then one entry for each page site:
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```plaintext
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127.0.0.1 gdk.test # If you're using GDK
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127.0.0.1 pages.gdk.test # Pages host
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# Any namespace/group/user needs to be added
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# as a subdomain to the pages host. This is because
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# /etc/hosts doesn't accept wildcards
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127.0.0.1 root.pages.gdk.test # for the root pages
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```
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### With DNS wildcard alternatives
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If instead of editing your `/etc/hosts` you'd prefer to use a DNS wildcard, you can use:
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- [`nip.io`](https://nip.io)
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- [`dnsmasq`](https://wiki.debian.org/dnsmasq)
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## Configuring GitLab Pages without GDK
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Create a `gitlab-pages.conf` in the root of the GitLab Pages site, like:
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```toml
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# Default port is 3010, but you can use any other
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listen-http=:3010
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# Your local GitLab Pages domain
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pages-domain=pages.gdk.test
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# Directory where the pages are stored
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pages-root=shared/pages
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# Show more information in the logs
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log-verbose=true
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```
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To see more options you can check
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[`internal/config/flags.go`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages/blob/master/internal/config/flags.go)
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or run `gitlab-pages --help`.
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### Running GitLab Pages manually
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For any changes in the code, you must run `make` to build the app. It's best to just always run
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it before you start the app. It's quick to build so don't worry!
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```shell
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make && ./gitlab-pages -config=gitlab-pages.conf
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```
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## Configuring GitLab Pages with GDK
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In the following steps, `$GDK_ROOT` is the directory where you cloned GDK.
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1. Set up the [GDK hostname](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit/-/blob/main/doc/howto/local_network.md).
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1. Add a [GitLab Pages hostname](#configuring-gitlab-pages-hostname) to the `gdk.yml`:
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```yaml
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gitlab_pages:
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enabled: true # enable GitLab Pages to be managed by gdk
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port: 3010 # default port is 3010
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host: pages.gdk.test # the GitLab Pages domain
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auto_update: true # if gdk must update GitLab Pages git
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verbose: true # show more information in the logs
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```
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### Running GitLab Pages with GDK
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After these configurations are set, GDK manages a GitLab Pages process, giving you access to
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it with commands like:
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- Start: `gdk start gitlab-pages`
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- Stop: `gdk stop gitlab-pages`
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- Restart: `gdk restart gitlab-pages`
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- Tail logs: `gdk tail gitlab-pages`
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### Running GitLab Pages manually
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You can also build and start the app independently of GDK processes management.
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For any changes in the code, you must run `make` to build the app. It's best to just always run
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it before you start the app. It's quick to build so don't worry!
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```shell
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make && ./gitlab-pages -config=gitlab-pages.conf
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```
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#### Building GitLab Pages in FIPS mode
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```shell
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FIPS_MODE=1 make && ./gitlab-pages -config=gitlab-pages.conf
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```
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### Creating GitLab Pages site
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To build a GitLab Pages site locally you must
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[configure `gitlab-runner`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit/-/blob/main/doc/howto/runner.md).
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For more information, refer to the [user manual](../../user/project/pages/index.md).
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### Enabling access control
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GitLab Pages support private sites. Private sites can be accessed only by users
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who have access to your GitLab project.
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GitLab Pages access control is disabled by default. To enable it:
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1. Enable the GitLab Pages access control in GitLab itself. You can do this in two ways:
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- If you're not using GDK, edit `gitlab.yml`:
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```yaml
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# gitlab/config/gitlab.yml
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pages:
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access_control: true
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```
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- If you're using GDK, edit `gdk.yml`:
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```yaml
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# $GDK_ROOT/gdk.yml
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gitlab_pages:
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enabled: true
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access_control: true
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```
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1. Restart GitLab (if running through the GDK, run `gdk restart`). Running
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`gdk reconfigure` overwrites the value of `access_control` in `config/gitlab.yml`.
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1. In your local GitLab instance, in the browser go to `http://gdk.test:3000/admin/applications`.
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1. Create an [Instance-wide OAuth application](../../integration/oauth_provider.md#create-an-instance-wide-application)
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with the `api` scope.
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1. Set the value of your `redirect-uri` to the `pages-domain` authorization endpoint
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(for example, `http://pages.gdk.test:3010/auth`).
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The `redirect-uri` must not contain any GitLab Pages site domain.
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1. Add the auth client configuration:
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- With GDK, in `gdk.yml`:
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```yaml
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gitlab_pages:
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enabled: true
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access_control: true
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auth_client_id: $CLIENT_ID # the OAuth application id created in http://gdk.test:3000/admin/applications
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auth_client_secret: $CLIENT_SECRET # the OAuth application secret created in http://gdk.test:3000/admin/applications
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```
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GDK generates random `auth_secret` and builds the `auth_redirect_uri` based on GitLab Pages
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host configuration.
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- Without GDK, in `gitlab-pages.conf`:
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```conf
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## the following are only needed if you want to test auth for private projects
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auth-client-id=$CLIENT_ID # the OAuth application id created in http://gdk.test:3000/admin/applications
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auth-client-secret=$CLIENT_SECRET # the OAuth application secret created in http://gdk.test:3000/admin/applications
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auth-secret=$SOME_RANDOM_STRING # should be at least 32 bytes long
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auth-redirect-uri=http://pages.gdk.test:3010/auth # the authentication callback url for GitLab Pages
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```
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1. If running Pages inside the GDK, you can use GDK `protected_config_files` section under `gdk` in
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your `gdk.yml` to avoid getting `gitlab-pages.conf` configuration rewritten:
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```yaml
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gdk:
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protected_config_files:
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- 'gitlab-pages/gitlab-pages.conf'
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```
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### Enabling object storage
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GitLab Pages support using object storage for storing artifacts, but object storage
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is disabled by default. You can enable it in the GDK:
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1. Edit `gdk.yml` to enable the object storage in GitLab itself:
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```yaml
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# $GDK_ROOT/gdk.yml
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object_store:
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enabled: true
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```
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1. Reconfigure and restart GitLab by running the commands `gdk reconfigure` and `gdk restart`.
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For more information, refer to the [GDK documentation](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit/-/blob/main/doc/configuration.md#object-storage-configuration).
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## Linting
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```shell
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# Run the linter locally
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make lint
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# Run linter and fix issues (if supported by the linter)
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make format
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```
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## Testing
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To run tests, you can use these commands:
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```shell
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# This will run all of the tests in the codebase
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make test
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# Run a specfic test file
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go test ./internal/serving/disk/
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# Run a specific test in a file
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go test ./internal/serving/disk/ -run TestDisk_ServeFileHTTP
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# Run all unit tests except acceptance_test.go
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go test ./... -short
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# Run acceptance_test.go only
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make acceptance
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# Run specific acceptance tests
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# We add `make` here because acceptance tests use the last binary that was compiled,
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# so we want to have the latest changes in the build that is tested
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make && go test ./ -run TestRedirect
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```
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## Contributing
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### Feature flags
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WARNING:
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All newly-introduced feature flags should be [disabled by default](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product-development-flow/feature-flag-lifecycle/#feature-flags-in-gitlab-development).
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Consider adding a [feature flag](../feature_flags/index.md) for any non-trivial changes.
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Feature flags can make the release and rollback of these changes easier, avoiding
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incidents and downtime. To add a new feature flag to GitLab Pages:
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1. Create the feature flag in
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[`internal/feature/feature.go`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages/-/blob/master/internal/feature/feature.go),
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which must be **off** by default.
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1. Create an issue to track the feature flag using the `Feature flag` template.
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1. Add the `~"feature flag"` label to any merge requests that handle feature flags.
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For GitLab Pages, the feature flags are controlled by environment variables at a global level.
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A deployment at the service level is required to change the state of a feature flag.
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Example of a merge request enabling a GitLab Pages feature flag:
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[Enforce GitLab Pages rate limits](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/gl-infra/k8s-workloads/gitlab-com/-/merge_requests/1500)
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## Related topics
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- [Feature flags in the development of GitLab](../feature_flags/index.md)
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