455 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
455 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: howto
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---
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# Migrate GitLab CI to GitLab CE or EE
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Beginning with version 8.0 of GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise
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Edition (EE), GitLab CI is no longer its own application, but is instead built
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into the CE and EE applications.
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This guide will detail the process of migrating your CI installation and data
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into your GitLab CE or EE installation. **You can only migrate CI data from
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GitLab CI 8.0 to GitLab 8.0; migrating between other versions (e.g.7.14 to 8.1)
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is not possible.**
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We recommend that you read through the entire migration process in this
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document before beginning.
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## Overview
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In this document we assume you have a GitLab server and a GitLab CI server. It
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does not matter if these are the same machine.
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The migration consists of three parts: updating GitLab and GitLab CI, moving
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data, and redirecting traffic.
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Please note that CI builds triggered on your GitLab server in the time between
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updating to 8.0 and finishing the migration will be lost. Your GitLab server
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can be online for most of the procedure; the only GitLab downtime (if any) is
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during the upgrade to 8.0. Your CI service will be offline from the moment you
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upgrade to 8.0 until you finish the migration procedure.
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## Before upgrading
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If you have GitLab CI installed using omnibus-gitlab packages but **you don't want to migrate your existing data**:
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```bash
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mv /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds.$(date +%s)
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```
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run `sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure` and you can reach CI at `gitlab.example.com/ci`.
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If you want to migrate your existing data, continue reading.
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### 0. Updating Omnibus from versions prior to 7.13
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If you are updating from older versions you should first update to 7.14 and then to 8.0.
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Otherwise it's pretty likely that you will encounter problems described in the [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting).
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### 1. Verify that backups work
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Make sure that the backup script on both servers can connect to the database.
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```
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# On your CI server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo chown gitlab-ci:gitlab-ci /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds
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sudo gitlab-ci-rake backup:create
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# Source
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cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
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sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec rake backup:create RAILS_ENV=production
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```
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Also check on your GitLab server.
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```
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# On your GitLab server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:backup:create SKIP=repositories,uploads
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# Source
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cd /home/git/gitlab
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sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:backup:create RAILS_ENV=production SKIP=repositories,uploads
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```
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If this fails you need to fix it before upgrading to 8.0. Also see
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<https://about.gitlab.com/get-help/>
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### 2. Check source and target database types
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Check what databases you use on your GitLab server and your CI server.
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Look for the 'adapter:' line. If your CI server and your GitLab server use
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the same database adapter no special care is needed. If your CI server uses
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MySQL and your GitLab server uses PostgreSQL you need to pass a special option
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during the 'Moving data' part. **If your CI server uses PostgreSQL and your
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GitLab server uses MySQL you cannot migrate your CI data to GitLab 8.0.**
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```
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# On your CI server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo gitlab-ci-rake env:info
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# Source
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cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
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sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec rake env:info RAILS_ENV=production
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```
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```
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# On your GitLab server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:env:info
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# Source
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cd /home/git/gitlab
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sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:env:info RAILS_ENV=production
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```
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### 3. Storage planning
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Decide where to store CI build traces on GitLab server. GitLab CI uses
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files on disk to store CI build traces. The default path for these build
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traces is `/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds` (Omnibus) or
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`/home/git/gitlab/builds` (Source). If you are storing your repository data in
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a special location, or if you are using NFS, you should make sure that you
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store build traces on the same storage as your Git repositories.
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## I. Upgrading
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From this point on, GitLab CI will be unavailable for your end users.
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### 1. Upgrade GitLab to 8.0
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First upgrade your GitLab server to version 8.0:
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<https://about.gitlab.com/update/>
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### 2. Disable CI on the GitLab server during the migration
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After you update, go to the admin panel and temporarily disable CI. As
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an administrator, go to **Admin Area** -> **Settings**, and under
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**Continuous Integration** uncheck **Disable to prevent CI usage until rake
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ci:migrate is run (8.0 only)**.
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### 3. CI settings are now in GitLab
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If you want to use custom CI settings (e.g. change where builds are
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stored), please update `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` (Omnibus) or
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`/home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml` (Source).
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### 4. Upgrade GitLab CI to 8.0
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Now upgrade GitLab CI to version 8.0. If you are using Omnibus packages,
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this may have already happened when you upgraded GitLab to 8.0.
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### 5. Disable GitLab CI on the CI server
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Disable GitLab CI after upgrading to 8.0.
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```
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# On your CI server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo gitlab-ctl stop ci-unicorn
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sudo gitlab-ctl stop ci-sidekiq
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# Source
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sudo service gitlab_ci stop
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cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
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sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec whenever --clear-crontab RAILS_ENV=production
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```
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## II. Moving data
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### 1. Database encryption key
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Move the database encryption key from your CI server to your GitLab
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server. The command below will show you what you need to copy-paste to your
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GitLab server. On Omnibus GitLab servers you will have to add a line to
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`/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`. On GitLab servers installed from source you will have
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to replace the contents of `/home/git/gitlab/config/secrets.yml`.
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```
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# On your CI server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo gitlab-ci-rake backup:show_secrets
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# Source
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cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
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sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec rake backup:show_secrets RAILS_ENV=production
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```
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### 2. SQL data and build traces
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Create your final CI data export. If you are converting from MySQL to
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PostgreSQL, add `MYSQL_TO_POSTGRESQL=1` to the end of the rake command. When
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the command finishes it will print the path to your data export archive; you
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will need this file later.
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```
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# On your CI server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo chown gitlab-ci:gitlab-ci /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds
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sudo gitlab-ci-rake backup:create
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# Source
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cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
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sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec rake backup:create RAILS_ENV=production
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```
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### 3. Copy data to the GitLab server
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If you were running GitLab and GitLab CI on the same server you can skip this
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step.
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Copy your CI data archive to your GitLab server. There are many ways to do
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this, below we use SSH agent forwarding and 'scp', which will be easy and fast
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for most setups. You can also copy the data archive first from the CI server to
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your laptop and then from your laptop to the GitLab server.
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```
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# Start from your laptop
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ssh -A ci_admin@ci_server.example
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# Now on the CI server
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scp /path/to/12345_gitlab_ci_backup.tar gitlab_admin@gitlab_server.example:~
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```
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### 4. Move data to the GitLab backups folder
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Make the CI data archive discoverable for GitLab. We assume below that you
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store backups in the default path, adjust the command if necessary.
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```
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# On your GitLab server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo mv /path/to/12345_gitlab_ci_backup.tar /var/opt/gitlab/backups/
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# Source
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sudo mv /path/to/12345_gitlab_ci_backup.tar /home/git/gitlab/tmp/backups/
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```
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### 5. Import the CI data into GitLab.
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This step will delete any existing CI data on your GitLab server. There should
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be no CI data yet because you turned CI on the GitLab server off earlier.
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```
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# On your GitLab server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo chown git:git /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds
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sudo gitlab-rake ci:migrate
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# Source
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cd /home/git/gitlab
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sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake ci:migrate RAILS_ENV=production
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```
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### 6. Restart GitLab
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```
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# On your GitLab server:
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# Omnibus
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sudo gitlab-ctl hup unicorn
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sudo gitlab-ctl restart sidekiq
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# Source
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sudo service gitlab reload
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```
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## III. Redirecting traffic
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If you were running GitLab CI with Omnibus packages and you were using the
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internal NGINX configuration your CI service should now be available both at
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`ci.example.com` (the old address) and `gitlab.example.com/ci`. **You are done!**
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If you installed GitLab CI from source we now need to configure a redirect in
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NGINX so that existing CI runners can keep using the old CI server address, and
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so that existing links to your CI server keep working.
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### 1. Update Nginx configuration
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To ensure that your existing CI runners are able to communicate with the
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migrated installation, and that existing build triggers still work, you'll need
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to update your Nginx configuration to redirect requests for the old locations to
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the new ones.
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Edit `/etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab_ci` and paste:
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```nginx
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# GITLAB CI
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server {
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listen 80 default_server; # e.g., listen 192.168.1.1:80;
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server_name YOUR_CI_SERVER_FQDN; # e.g., server_name source.example.com;
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access_log /var/log/nginx/gitlab_ci_access.log;
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error_log /var/log/nginx/gitlab_ci_error.log;
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# expose API to fix runners
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location /api {
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proxy_read_timeout 300;
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proxy_connect_timeout 300;
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proxy_redirect off;
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proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
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# You need to specify your DNS servers that are able to resolve YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN
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resolver 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4;
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proxy_pass $scheme://YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN/ci$request_uri;
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}
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# redirect all other CI requests
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location / {
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return 301 $scheme://YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN/ci$request_uri;
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}
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# adjust this to match the largest build log your runners might submit,
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# set to 0 to disable limit
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client_max_body_size 10m;
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}
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```
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Make sure you substitute these placeholder values with your real ones:
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1. `YOUR_CI_SERVER_FQDN`: The existing public-facing address of your GitLab CI
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install (e.g., `ci.gitlab.com`).
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1. `YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN`: The current public-facing address of your GitLab
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CE (or EE) install (e.g., `gitlab.com`).
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**Make sure not to remove the `/ci$request_uri` part. This is required to
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properly forward the requests.**
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You should also make sure that you can:
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1. `curl https://YOUR_GITLAB_SERVER_FQDN/` from your previous GitLab CI server.
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1. `curl https://YOUR_CI_SERVER_FQDN/` from your GitLab CE (or EE) server.
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### 2. Check Nginx configuration
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```sh
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sudo nginx -t
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```
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### 3. Restart Nginx
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```sh
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sudo /etc/init.d/nginx restart
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```
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### Restore from backup
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If something went wrong and you need to restore a backup, consult the [Backup
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restoration](../raketasks/backup_restore.md) guide.
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## Troubleshooting
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### show:secrets problem (Omnibus-only)
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If you see errors like this:
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```
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Missing `secret_key_base` or `db_key_base` for 'production' environment. The secrets will be generated and stored in `config/secrets.yml`
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rake aborted!
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Errno::EACCES: Permission denied @ rb_sysopen - config/secrets.yml
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```
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This can happen if you are updating from versions prior to 7.13 straight to 8.0.
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The fix for this is to update to Omnibus 7.14 first and then update it to 8.0.
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### Permission denied when accessing /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds
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To fix that issue you have to change builds/ folder permission before doing final backup:
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```
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sudo chown -R gitlab-ci:gitlab-ci /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds
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```
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Then before executing `ci:migrate` you need to fix builds folder permission:
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```
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sudo chown git:git /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-ci/builds
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```
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### Problems when importing CI database to GitLab
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If you were migrating CI database from MySQL to PostgreSQL manually you can see errors during import about missing sequences:
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```sql
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ALTER SEQUENCE
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ERROR: relation "ci_builds_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_commits_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_events_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_jobs_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_projects_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_runner_projects_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_runners_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_services_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_taggings_id_seq" does not exist
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ERROR: relation "ci_tags_id_seq" does not exist
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CREATE TABLE
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```
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To fix that you need to apply this SQL statement before doing final backup:
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Omnibus GitLab installations:
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```sql
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gitlab-ci-rails dbconsole <<EOF
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-- ALTER TABLES - DROP DEFAULTS
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_application_settings ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_builds ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_commits ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_events ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_jobs ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_projects ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_runner_projects ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_runners ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_services ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_taggings ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_tags ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_trigger_requests ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_triggers ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_variables ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_web_hooks ALTER COLUMN id DROP DEFAULT;
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-- ALTER SEQUENCES
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_application_settings_id_seq OWNED BY ci_application_settings.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_builds_id_seq OWNED BY ci_builds.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_commits_id_seq OWNED BY ci_commits.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_events_id_seq OWNED BY ci_events.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_jobs_id_seq OWNED BY ci_jobs.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_projects_id_seq OWNED BY ci_projects.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_runner_projects_id_seq OWNED BY ci_runner_projects.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_runners_id_seq OWNED BY ci_runners.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_services_id_seq OWNED BY ci_services.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_taggings_id_seq OWNED BY ci_taggings.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_tags_id_seq OWNED BY ci_tags.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_trigger_requests_id_seq OWNED BY ci_trigger_requests.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_triggers_id_seq OWNED BY ci_triggers.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_variables_id_seq OWNED BY ci_variables.id;
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ALTER SEQUENCE ci_web_hooks_id_seq OWNED BY ci_web_hooks.id;
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-- ALTER TABLES - RE-APPLY DEFAULTS
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_application_settings ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_application_settings_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_builds ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_builds_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_commits ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_commits_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_events ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_events_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_jobs ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_jobs_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_projects ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_projects_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_runner_projects ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_runner_projects_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_runners ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_runners_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_services ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_services_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_taggings ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_taggings_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_tags ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_tags_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_trigger_requests ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_trigger_requests_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_triggers ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_triggers_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_variables ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_variables_id_seq'::regclass);
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ALTER TABLE ONLY ci_web_hooks ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('ci_web_hooks_id_seq'::regclass);
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EOF
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```
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Source installations:
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```
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cd /home/gitlab_ci/gitlab-ci
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sudo -u gitlab_ci -H bundle exec rails dbconsole production <<EOF
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... COPY SQL STATEMENTS FROM ABOVE ...
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EOF
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```
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