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authorEvan Read <eread@gitlab.com>2019-07-19 01:47:40 +0000
committerEvan Read <eread@gitlab.com>2019-07-19 01:47:40 +0000
commitc3cbc40dcd992cfb76006c85cdc04ef674dd6d70 (patch)
treee695831d2dd07233acfc23edf1cd40c7be44b581
parentc61c3b68c0d425c23bff48c3ab0eb0b1d8670141 (diff)
parent0923fbf75be44770b8ce01321cd304662e15d5d5 (diff)
downloadgitlab-ce-c3cbc40dcd992cfb76006c85cdc04ef674dd6d70.tar.gz
Merge branch 'docs/cleanup-gitaly' into 'master'
Clean up the Gitaly docs Closes #64396 See merge request gitlab-org/gitlab-ce!30584
-rw-r--r--doc/administration/gitaly/index.md670
1 files changed, 359 insertions, 311 deletions
diff --git a/doc/administration/gitaly/index.md b/doc/administration/gitaly/index.md
index 4407facfca9..0ef88a26ab9 100644
--- a/doc/administration/gitaly/index.md
+++ b/doc/administration/gitaly/index.md
@@ -2,45 +2,35 @@
[Gitaly](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly) is the service that
provides high-level RPC access to Git repositories. Without it, no other
-components can read or write Git data.
+components can read or write Git data. GitLab components that access Git
+repositories (gitlab-rails, gitlab-shell, gitlab-workhorse, etc.) act as clients
+to Gitaly. End users do not have direct access to Gitaly.
-GitLab components that access Git repositories (gitlab-rails,
-gitlab-shell, gitlab-workhorse) act as clients to Gitaly. End users do
-not have direct access to Gitaly.
+In the rest of this page, Gitaly server is referred to the standalone node that
+only runs Gitaly, and Gitaly client to the GitLab Rails node that runs all other
+processes except Gitaly.
## Configuring Gitaly
The Gitaly service itself is configured via a TOML configuration file.
-This file is documented [in the gitaly
+This file is documented [in the Gitaly
repository](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly/blob/master/doc/configuration/README.md).
-To change a Gitaly setting in Omnibus you can use
-`gitaly['my_setting']` in `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`. Changes will be applied
-when you run `gitlab-ctl reconfigure`.
+In case you want to change some of its settings:
-```ruby
-gitaly['prometheus_listen_addr'] = 'localhost:9236'
-```
-
-To change a Gitaly setting in installations from source you can edit
-`/home/git/gitaly/config.toml`. Changes will be applied when you run
-`service gitlab restart`.
+**For Omnibus GitLab**
-```toml
-prometheus_listen_addr = "localhost:9236"
-```
+1. Edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` and add or change the [Gitaly settings](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab/blob/1dd07197c7e5ae23626aad5a4a070a800b670380/files/gitlab-config-template/gitlab.rb.template#L1622-1676).
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
-## Client-side GRPC logs
+**For installations from source**
-Gitaly uses the [gRPC](https://grpc.io/) RPC framework. The Ruby gRPC
-client has its own log file which may contain useful information when
-you are seeing Gitaly errors. You can control the log level of the
-gRPC client with the `GRPC_LOG_LEVEL` environment variable. The
-default level is `WARN`.
+1. Edit `/home/git/gitaly/config.toml` and add or change the [Gitaly settings](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly/blob/master/config.toml.example).
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
## Running Gitaly on its own server
-> This is an optional way to deploy Gitaly which can benefit GitLab
+This is an optional way to deploy Gitaly which can benefit GitLab
installations that are larger than a single machine. Most
installations will be better served with the default configuration
used by Omnibus and the GitLab source installation guide.
@@ -53,76 +43,78 @@ But since 11.8 the indexer uses Gitaly for data access as well. NFS can still
be leveraged for redudancy on block level of the Git data. But only has to
be mounted on the Gitaly server.
-NOTE: **Note:** While Gitaly can be used as a replacement for NFS, we do not recommend
-using EFS as it may impact GitLab's performance. Please review the [relevant documentation](../high_availability/nfs.md#avoid-using-awss-elastic-file-system-efs)
+NOTE: **Note:** While Gitaly can be used as a replacement for NFS, it's not recommended
+to use EFS as it may impact GitLab's performance. Review the [relevant documentation](../high_availability/nfs.md#avoid-using-awss-elastic-file-system-efs)
for more details.
### Network architecture
-- gitlab-rails shards repositories into "repository storages"
-- `gitlab-rails/config/gitlab.yml` contains a map from storage names to
- (Gitaly address, Gitaly token) pairs
-- the `storage name` -\> `(Gitaly address, Gitaly token)` map in
- `gitlab.yml` is the single source of truth for the Gitaly network
- topology
-- a (Gitaly address, Gitaly token) corresponds to a Gitaly server
-- a Gitaly server hosts one or more storages
-- Gitaly addresses must be specified in such a way that they resolve
- correctly for ALL Gitaly clients
-- Gitaly clients are: unicorn, sidekiq, gitlab-workhorse,
- gitlab-shell, Elasticsearch Indexer, and Gitaly itself
-- special case: a Gitaly server must be able to make RPC calls **to
- itself** via its own (Gitaly address, Gitaly token) pair as
- specified in `gitlab-rails/config/gitlab.yml`
-- Gitaly servers must not be exposed to the public internet
-
-Gitaly network traffic is unencrypted by default, but supports
-[TLS](#tls-support). Authentication is done through a static token.
-
-NOTE: **Note:** Gitaly network traffic is unencrypted so we recommend a firewall to
-restrict access to your Gitaly server.
+The following list depicts what the network architecture of Gitaly is:
+
+- GitLab Rails shards repositories into [repository storages](../repository_storage_paths.md).
+- `/config/gitlab.yml` contains a map from storage names to
+ `(Gitaly address, Gitaly token)` pairs.
+- the `storage name` -\> `(Gitaly address, Gitaly token)` map in
+ `/config/gitlab.yml` is the single source of truth for the Gitaly network
+ topology.
+- A `(Gitaly address, Gitaly token)` corresponds to a Gitaly server.
+- A Gitaly server hosts one or more storages.
+- Gitaly addresses must be specified in such a way that they resolve
+ correctly for ALL Gitaly clients.
+- Gitaly clients are: Unicorn, Sidekiq, gitlab-workhorse,
+ gitlab-shell, Elasticsearch Indexer, and Gitaly itself.
+- A Gitaly server must be able to make RPC calls **to itself** via its own
+ `(Gitaly address, Gitaly token)` pair as specified in `/config/gitlab.yml`.
+- Gitaly servers must not be exposed to the public internet as Gitaly's network
+ traffic is unencrypted by default. The use of firewall is highly recommended
+ to restrict access to the Gitaly server. Another option is to
+ [use TLS](#tls-support).
+- Authentication is done through a static token which is shared among the Gitaly
+ and GitLab Rails nodes.
Below we describe how to configure a Gitaly server at address
`gitaly.internal:8075` with secret token `abc123secret`. We assume
your GitLab installation has two repository storages, `default` and
`storage1`.
-### Installation
+### 1. Installation
-First install Gitaly using either Omnibus or from source.
+First install Gitaly using either Omnibus GitLab or install it from source:
-Omnibus: [Download/install](https://about.gitlab.com/install/) the Omnibus GitLab
-package you want using **steps 1 and 2** from the GitLab downloads page but
-**_do not_** provide the `EXTERNAL_URL=` value.
+- For Omnibus GitLab: [Download/install](https://about.gitlab.com/install/) the Omnibus GitLab
+ package you want using **steps 1 and 2** from the GitLab downloads page but
+ **_do not_** provide the `EXTERNAL_URL=` value.
+- From source: [Install Gitaly](../../install/installation.md#install-gitaly).
-Source: [Install Gitaly](../../install/installation.md#install-gitaly)
+### 2. Client side token configuration
-### Client side token configuration
+Configure a token on the instance that runs the GitLab Rails application.
-Configure a token on the client side.
+**For Omnibus GitLab**
-Omnibus installations:
+1. On the client node(s), edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
-```ruby
-# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
-gitlab_rails['gitaly_token'] = 'abc123secret'
-```
+ ```ruby
+ gitlab_rails['gitaly_token'] = 'abc123secret'
+ ```
-Source installations:
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
-```yaml
-# /home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml
-gitlab:
- gitaly:
- token: 'abc123secret'
-```
+**For installations from source**
+
+1. On the client node(s), edit `/home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml`:
+
+ ```yaml
+ gitlab:
+ gitaly:
+ token: 'abc123secret'
+ ```
-You need to reconfigure (Omnibus) or restart (source) for these
-changes to be picked up.
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
-### Gitaly server configuration
+### 3. Gitaly server configuration
-Next, on the Gitaly server, we need to configure storage paths, enable
+Next, on the Gitaly server, you need to configure storage paths, enable
the network listener and configure the token.
NOTE: **Note:** if you want to reduce the risk of downtime when you enable
@@ -137,88 +129,99 @@ the Gitaly server. The easiest way to accomplish this is to copy `/etc/gitlab/gi
from an existing GitLab server to the Gitaly server. Without this shared secret,
Git operations in GitLab will result in an API error.
-NOTE: **Note:** In most or all cases the storage paths below end in `/repositories` which is
-different than `path` in `git_data_dirs` of Omnibus installations. Check the
-directory layout on your Gitaly server to be sure.
-
-Omnibus installations:
-
-<!--
-updates to following example must also be made at
-https://gitlab.com/charts/gitlab/blob/master/doc/advanced/external-gitaly/external-omnibus-gitaly.md#configure-omnibus-gitlab
--->
-
-```ruby
-# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
-
-# Avoid running unnecessary services on the Gitaly server
-postgresql['enable'] = false
-redis['enable'] = false
-nginx['enable'] = false
-prometheus['enable'] = false
-unicorn['enable'] = false
-sidekiq['enable'] = false
-gitlab_workhorse['enable'] = false
-
-# Prevent database connections during 'gitlab-ctl reconfigure'
-gitlab_rails['rake_cache_clear'] = false
-gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false
-
-# Configure the gitlab-shell API callback URL. Without this, `git push` will
-# fail. This can be your 'front door' GitLab URL or an internal load
-# balancer.
-# Don't forget to copy `/etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json` from web server to Gitaly server.
-gitlab_rails['internal_api_url'] = 'https://gitlab.example.com'
-
-# Make Gitaly accept connections on all network interfaces. You must use
-# firewalls to restrict access to this address/port.
-gitaly['listen_addr'] = "0.0.0.0:8075"
-gitaly['auth_token'] = 'abc123secret'
-
-gitaly['storage'] = [
- { 'name' => 'default', 'path' => '/mnt/gitlab/default/repositories' },
- { 'name' => 'storage1', 'path' => '/mnt/gitlab/storage1/repositories' },
-]
-
-# To use TLS for Gitaly you need to add
-gitaly['tls_listen_addr'] = "0.0.0.0:9999"
-gitaly['certificate_path'] = "path/to/cert.pem"
-gitaly['key_path'] = "path/to/key.pem"
-```
+NOTE: **Note:**
+In most or all cases, the storage paths below end in `/repositories` which is
+not that case with `path` in `git_data_dirs` of Omnibus GitLab installations.
+Check the directory layout on your Gitaly server to be sure.
-Source installations:
+**For Omnibus GitLab**
-```toml
-# /home/git/gitaly/config.toml
-listen_addr = '0.0.0.0:8075'
-tls_listen_addr = '0.0.0.0:9999'
+1. Edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
-[tls]
-certificate_path = /path/to/cert.pem
-key_path = /path/to/key.pem
+ <!--
+ updates to following example must also be made at
+ https://gitlab.com/charts/gitlab/blob/master/doc/advanced/external-gitaly/external-omnibus-gitaly.md#configure-omnibus-gitlab
+ -->
-[auth]
-token = 'abc123secret'
+ ```ruby
+ # /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
-[[storage]]
-name = 'default'
-path = '/mnt/gitlab/default/repositories'
+ # Avoid running unnecessary services on the Gitaly server
+ postgresql['enable'] = false
+ redis['enable'] = false
+ nginx['enable'] = false
+ prometheus['enable'] = false
+ unicorn['enable'] = false
+ sidekiq['enable'] = false
+ gitlab_workhorse['enable'] = false
-[[storage]]
-name = 'storage1'
-path = '/mnt/gitlab/storage1/repositories'
-```
+ # Prevent database connections during 'gitlab-ctl reconfigure'
+ gitlab_rails['rake_cache_clear'] = false
+ gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false
+
+ # Configure the gitlab-shell API callback URL. Without this, `git push` will
+ # fail. This can be your 'front door' GitLab URL or an internal load
+ # balancer.
+ # Don't forget to copy `/etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json` from web server to Gitaly server.
+ gitlab_rails['internal_api_url'] = 'https://gitlab.example.com'
-Again, reconfigure (Omnibus) or restart (source).
+ # Make Gitaly accept connections on all network interfaces. You must use
+ # firewalls to restrict access to this address/port.
+ gitaly['listen_addr'] = "0.0.0.0:8075"
+ gitaly['auth_token'] = 'abc123secret'
-### Converting clients to use the Gitaly server
+ gitaly['storage'] = [
+ { 'name' => 'default' },
+ { 'name' => 'storage1' },
+ ]
-Now as the final step update the client machines to switch from using
-their local Gitaly service to the new Gitaly server you just
-configured. This is a risky step because if there is any sort of
-network, firewall, or name resolution problem preventing your GitLab
-server from reaching the Gitaly server then all Gitaly requests will
-fail.
+ # To use TLS for Gitaly you need to add
+ gitaly['tls_listen_addr'] = "0.0.0.0:9999"
+ gitaly['certificate_path'] = "path/to/cert.pem"
+ gitaly['key_path'] = "path/to/key.pem"
+ ```
+
+ NOTE: **Note:**
+ In some cases, you'll have to set `path` for `gitaly['storage']` in the
+ format `'path' => '/mnt/gitlab/<storage name>/repositories'`.
+
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
+
+**For installations from source**
+
+1. On the client node(s), edit `/home/git/gitaly/config.toml`:
+
+ ```toml
+ listen_addr = '0.0.0.0:8075'
+ tls_listen_addr = '0.0.0.0:9999'
+
+ [tls]
+ certificate_path = /path/to/cert.pem
+ key_path = /path/to/key.pem
+
+ [auth]
+ token = 'abc123secret'
+
+ [[storage]]
+ name = 'default'
+
+ [[storage]]
+ name = 'storage1'
+ ```
+
+ NOTE: **Note:**
+ In some cases, you'll have to set `path` for each `[[storage]]` in the
+ format `path = '/mnt/gitlab/<storage name>/repositories'`.
+
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
+
+### 4. Converting clients to use the Gitaly server
+
+As the final step, you need to update the client machines to switch from using
+their local Gitaly service to the new Gitaly server you just configured. This
+is a risky step because if there is any sort of network, firewall, or name
+resolution problem preventing your GitLab server from reaching the Gitaly server,
+then all Gitaly requests will fail.
Additionally, you need to
[disable Rugged if previously manually enabled](../high_availability/nfs.md#improving-nfs-performance-with-gitlab).
@@ -227,41 +230,93 @@ We assume that your Gitaly server can be reached at
`gitaly.internal:8075` from your GitLab server, and that Gitaly can read and
write to `/mnt/gitlab/default` and `/mnt/gitlab/storage1` respectively.
-Omnibus installations:
+**For Omnibus GitLab**
-```ruby
-# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
-git_data_dirs({
- 'default' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tcp://gitaly.internal:8075' },
- 'storage1' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tcp://gitaly.internal:8075' },
-})
+1. Edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
-gitlab_rails['gitaly_token'] = 'abc123secret'
-```
+ ```ruby
+ git_data_dirs({
+ 'default' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tcp://gitaly.internal:8075' },
+ 'storage1' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tcp://gitaly.internal:8075' },
+ })
-Source installations:
-
-```yaml
-# /home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml
-gitlab:
- repositories:
- storages:
- default:
- path: /mnt/gitlab/default/repositories
- gitaly_address: tcp://gitaly.internal:8075
- storage1:
- path: /mnt/gitlab/storage1/repositories
- gitaly_address: tcp://gitaly.internal:8075
-
- gitaly:
- token: 'abc123secret'
-```
+ gitlab_rails['gitaly_token'] = 'abc123secret'
+ ```
-Now reconfigure (Omnibus) or restart (source). When you tail the
-Gitaly logs on your Gitaly server (`sudo gitlab-ctl tail gitaly` or
-`tail -f /home/git/gitlab/log/gitaly.log`) you should see requests
-coming in. One sure way to trigger a Gitaly request is to clone a
-repository from your GitLab server over HTTP.
+ NOTE: **Note:**
+ In some cases, you'll have to set `path` for each `git_data_dirs` in the
+ format `'path' => '/mnt/gitlab/<storage name>'`.
+
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
+1. Tail the logs to see the requests:
+
+ ```sh
+ sudo gitlab-ctl tail gitaly
+ ```
+
+**For installations from source**
+
+1. Edit `/home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml`:
+
+ ```yaml
+ gitlab:
+ repositories:
+ storages:
+ default:
+ gitaly_address: tcp://gitaly.internal:8075
+ storage1:
+ gitaly_address: tcp://gitaly.internal:8075
+
+ gitaly:
+ token: 'abc123secret'
+ ```
+
+ NOTE: **Note:**
+ In some cases, you'll have to set `path` for each of the `storages` in the
+ format `path: /mnt/gitlab/<storage name>/repositories`.
+
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
+1. Tail the logs to see the requests:
+
+ ```sh
+ tail -f /home/git/gitlab/log/gitaly.log
+ ```
+
+When you tail the Gitaly logs on your Gitaly server you should see requests
+coming in. One sure way to trigger a Gitaly request is to clone a repository
+from your GitLab server over HTTP.
+
+### Disabling the Gitaly service in a cluster environment
+
+If you are running Gitaly [as a remote
+service](#running-gitaly-on-its-own-server) you may want to disable
+the local Gitaly service that runs on your GitLab server by default.
+Disabling Gitaly only makes sense when you run GitLab in a custom
+cluster configuration, where different services run on different
+machines. Disabling Gitaly on all machines in the cluster is not a
+valid configuration.
+
+To disable Gitaly on a client node:
+
+**For Omnibus GitLab**
+
+1. Edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
+
+ ```ruby
+ gitaly['enable'] = false
+ ```
+
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
+
+**For installations from source**
+
+1. Edit `/etc/default/gitlab`:
+
+ ```shell
+ gitaly_enabled=false
+ ```
+
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
## TLS support
@@ -271,168 +326,128 @@ Gitaly supports TLS encryption. To be able to communicate
with a Gitaly instance that listens for secure connections you will need to use `tls://` url
scheme in the `gitaly_address` of the corresponding storage entry in the GitLab configuration.
-The admin needs to bring their own certificate as we do not provide that automatically.
-The certificate to be used needs to be installed on all Gitaly nodes and on all client nodes that communicate with it following procedures described in [GitLab custom certificate configuration](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/ssl.html#install-custom-public-certificates).
+You will need to bring your own certificates as this isn't provided automatically.
+The certificate to be used needs to be installed on all Gitaly nodes and on all
+client nodes that communicate with it following the procedure described in
+[GitLab custom certificate configuration](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/ssl.html#install-custom-public-certificates).
-Note that it is possible to configure Gitaly servers with both an
+NOTE: **Note:**
+It is possible to configure Gitaly servers with both an
unencrypted listening address `listen_addr` and an encrypted listening
address `tls_listen_addr` at the same time. This allows you to do a
gradual transition from unencrypted to encrypted traffic, if necessary.
-To observe what type of connections are actually being used in a
-production environment you can use the following Prometheus query:
-
-```
-sum(rate(gitaly_connections_total[5m])) by (type)
-```
+To configure Gitaly with TLS:
-### Example TLS configuration
+**For Omnibus GitLab**
-### Omnibus installations:
+1. On the client nodes, edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
-#### On client nodes:
+ ```ruby
+ git_data_dirs({
+ 'default' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tls://gitaly.internal:9999' },
+ 'storage1' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tls://gitaly.internal:9999' },
+ })
-```ruby
-# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
-git_data_dirs({
- 'default' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tls://gitaly.internal:9999' },
- 'storage1' => { 'gitaly_address' => 'tls://gitaly.internal:9999' },
-})
+ gitlab_rails['gitaly_token'] = 'abc123secret'
+ ```
-gitlab_rails['gitaly_token'] = 'abc123secret'
-```
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
+1. On the Gitaly server nodes, edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
-#### On Gitaly server nodes:
+ ```ruby
+ gitaly['tls_listen_addr'] = "0.0.0.0:9999"
+ gitaly['certificate_path'] = "path/to/cert.pem"
+ gitaly['key_path'] = "path/to/key.pem"
+ ```
-```ruby
-gitaly['tls_listen_addr'] = "0.0.0.0:9999"
-gitaly['certificate_path'] = "path/to/cert.pem"
-gitaly['key_path'] = "path/to/key.pem"
-```
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
-### Source installations:
+**For installations from source**
-#### On client nodes:
+1. On the client nodes, edit `/home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml`:
-```yaml
-# /home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml
-gitlab:
- repositories:
- storages:
- default:
- path: /mnt/gitlab/default/repositories
- gitaly_address: tls://gitaly.internal:9999
- storage1:
- path: /mnt/gitlab/storage1/repositories
- gitaly_address: tls://gitaly.internal:9999
+ ```yaml
+ gitlab:
+ repositories:
+ storages:
+ default:
+ gitaly_address: tls://gitaly.internal:9999
+ storage1:
+ gitaly_address: tls://gitaly.internal:9999
- gitaly:
- token: 'abc123secret'
-```
+ gitaly:
+ token: 'abc123secret'
+ ```
-#### On Gitaly server nodes:
+ NOTE: **Note:**
+ In some cases, you'll have to set `path` for each of the `storages` in the
+ format `path: /mnt/gitlab/<storage name>/repositories`.
-```toml
-# /home/git/gitaly/config.toml
-tls_listen_addr = '0.0.0.0:9999'
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
+1. On the Gitaly server nodes, edit `/home/git/gitaly/config.toml`:
-[tls]
-certificate_path = '/path/to/cert.pem'
-key_path = '/path/to/key.pem'
-```
+ ```toml
+ tls_listen_addr = '0.0.0.0:9999'
-## Gitaly-ruby
+ [tls]
+ certificate_path = '/path/to/cert.pem'
+ key_path = '/path/to/key.pem'
+ ```
-Gitaly was developed to replace Ruby application code in gitlab-ce/ee.
-In order to save time and/or avoid the risk of rewriting existing
-application logic, in some cases we chose to copy some application code
-from gitlab-ce into Gitaly almost as-is. To be able to run that code, we
-made gitaly-ruby, which is a sidecar process for the main Gitaly Go
-process. Some examples of things that are implemented in gitaly-ruby are
-RPC's that deal with wiki's, and RPC's that create commits on behalf of
-a user, such as merge commits.
-
-### Number of gitaly-ruby workers
-
-Gitaly-ruby has much less capacity than Gitaly itself. If your Gitaly
-server has to handle a lot of request, the default setting of having
-just 1 active gitaly-ruby sidecar might not be enough. If you see
-ResourceExhausted errors from Gitaly it's very likely that you have not
-enough gitaly-ruby capacity.
-
-You can increase the number of gitaly-ruby processes on your Gitaly
-server with the following settings.
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
-Omnibus:
+To observe what type of connections are actually being used in a
+production environment you can use the following Prometheus query:
-```ruby
-# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
-# Default is 2 workers. The minimum is 2; 1 worker is always reserved as
-# a passive stand-by.
-gitaly['ruby_num_workers'] = 4
```
-
-Source:
-
-```toml
-# /home/git/gitaly/config.toml
-[gitaly-ruby]
-num_workers = 4
+sum(rate(gitaly_connections_total[5m])) by (type)
```
-### Observing gitaly-ruby traffic
-
-Gitaly-ruby is a somewhat hidden, internal implementation detail of
-Gitaly. There is not that much visibility into what goes on inside
-gitaly-ruby processes.
+## `gitaly-ruby`
-If you have Prometheus set up to scrape your Gitaly process, you can see
-request rates and error codes for individual RPC's in gitaly-ruby by
-querying `grpc_client_handled_total`. Strictly speaking this metric does
-not differentiate between gitaly-ruby and other RPC's, but in practice
-(as of GitLab 11.9), all gRPC calls made by Gitaly itself are internal
-calls from the main Gitaly process to one of its gitaly-ruby sidecars.
+Gitaly was developed to replace the Ruby application code in GitLab.
+In order to save time and/or avoid the risk of rewriting existing
+application logic, in some cases we chose to copy some application code
+from GitLab into Gitaly almost as-is. To be able to run that code,
+`gitaly-ruby` was created, which is a "sidecar" process for the main Gitaly Go
+process. Some examples of things that are implemented in `gitaly-ruby` are
+RPCs that deal with wikis, and RPCs that create commits on behalf of
+a user, such as merge commits.
-Assuming your `grpc_client_handled_total` counter only observes Gitaly,
-the following query shows you RPC's are (most likely) internally
-implemented as calls to gitaly-ruby.
+### Number of `gitaly-ruby` workers
-```
-sum(rate(grpc_client_handled_total[5m])) by (grpc_method) > 0
-```
+`gitaly-ruby` has much less capacity than Gitaly itself. If your Gitaly
+server has to handle a lot of requests, the default setting of having
+just one active `gitaly-ruby` sidecar might not be enough. If you see
+`ResourceExhausted` errors from Gitaly, it's very likely that you have not
+enough `gitaly-ruby` capacity.
-## Disabling or enabling the Gitaly service in a cluster environment
+You can increase the number of `gitaly-ruby` processes on your Gitaly
+server with the following settings.
-If you are running Gitaly [as a remote
-service](#running-gitaly-on-its-own-server) you may want to disable
-the local Gitaly service that runs on your GitLab server by default.
+**For Omnibus GitLab**
-> 'Disabling Gitaly' only makes sense when you run GitLab in a custom
-cluster configuration, where different services run on different
-machines. Disabling Gitaly on all machines in the cluster is not a
-valid configuration.
+1. Edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
-If you are setting up a GitLab cluster where Gitaly does not need to
-run on all machines, you can disable the Gitaly service in your
-Omnibus installation, add the following line to `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb`:
+ ```ruby
+ # Default is 2 workers. The minimum is 2; 1 worker is always reserved as
+ # a passive stand-by.
+ gitaly['ruby_num_workers'] = 4
+ ```
-```ruby
-gitaly['enable'] = false
-```
+1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure).
-When you run `gitlab-ctl reconfigure` the Gitaly service will be
-disabled.
+**For installations from source**
-To disable the Gitaly service in a GitLab cluster where you installed
-GitLab from source, add the following to `/etc/default/gitlab` on the
-machine where you want to disable Gitaly.
+1. Edit `/home/git/gitaly/config.toml`:
-```shell
-gitaly_enabled=false
-```
+ ```toml
+ [gitaly-ruby]
+ num_workers = 4
+ ```
-When you run `service gitlab restart` Gitaly will be disabled on this
-particular machine.
+1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source).
## Eliminating NFS altogether
@@ -440,19 +455,23 @@ If you are planning to use Gitaly without NFS for your storage needs
and want to eliminate NFS from your environment altogether, there are
a few things that you need to do:
- 1. Make sure the [`git` user home directory](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/configuration.html#moving-the-home-directory-for-a-user) is on local disk.
- 1. Configure [database lookup of SSH keys](../operations/fast_ssh_key_lookup.md)
- to eliminate the need for a shared authorized_keys file.
- 1. Configure [object storage for job artifacts](../job_artifacts.md#using-object-storage)
- including [live tracing](../job_traces.md#new-live-trace-architecture).
- 1. Configure [object storage for LFS objects](../../workflow/lfs/lfs_administration.md#storing-lfs-objects-in-remote-object-storage).
- 1. Configure [object storage for uploads](../uploads.md#using-object-storage-core-only).
-
-NOTE: **Note:** One current feature of GitLab still requires a shared directory (NFS): [GitLab Pages](../../user/project/pages/index.md).
+1. Make sure the [`git` user home directory](https://docs.gitlab.com/omnibus/settings/configuration.html#moving-the-home-directory-for-a-user) is on local disk.
+1. Configure [database lookup of SSH keys](../operations/fast_ssh_key_lookup.md)
+ to eliminate the need for a shared authorized_keys file.
+1. Configure [object storage for job artifacts](../job_artifacts.md#using-object-storage)
+ including [live tracing](../job_traces.md#new-live-trace-architecture).
+1. Configure [object storage for LFS objects](../../workflow/lfs/lfs_administration.md#storing-lfs-objects-in-remote-object-storage).
+1. Configure [object storage for uploads](../uploads.md#using-object-storage-core-only).
+
+NOTE: **Note:**
+One current feature of GitLab that still requires a shared directory (NFS) is
+[GitLab Pages](../../user/project/pages/index.md).
There is [work in progress](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages/issues/196)
to eliminate the need for NFS to support GitLab Pages.
-## Troubleshooting Gitaly in production
+## Troubleshooting
+
+### `gitaly-debug`
Since GitLab 11.6, Gitaly comes with a command-line tool called
`gitaly-debug` that can be run on a Gitaly server to aid in
@@ -462,3 +481,32 @@ Git clone speed for a specific repository on the server.
For an up to date list of sub-commands see [the gitaly-debug
README](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly/blob/master/cmd/gitaly-debug/README.md).
+
+### Client side GRPC logs
+
+Gitaly uses the [gRPC](https://grpc.io/) RPC framework. The Ruby gRPC
+client has its own log file which may contain useful information when
+you are seeing Gitaly errors. You can control the log level of the
+gRPC client with the `GRPC_LOG_LEVEL` environment variable. The
+default level is `WARN`.
+
+### Observing `gitaly-ruby` traffic
+
+[`gitaly-ruby`](#gitaly-ruby) is an internal implementation detail of Gitaly,
+so, there's not that much visibility into what goes on inside
+`gitaly-ruby` processes.
+
+If you have Prometheus set up to scrape your Gitaly process, you can see
+request rates and error codes for individual RPCs in `gitaly-ruby` by
+querying `grpc_client_handled_total`. Strictly speaking, this metric does
+not differentiate between `gitaly-ruby` and other RPCs, but in practice
+(as of GitLab 11.9), all gRPC calls made by Gitaly itself are internal
+calls from the main Gitaly process to one of its `gitaly-ruby` sidecars.
+
+Assuming your `grpc_client_handled_total` counter only observes Gitaly,
+the following query shows you RPCs are (most likely) internally
+implemented as calls to `gitaly-ruby`:
+
+```
+sum(rate(grpc_client_handled_total[5m])) by (grpc_method) > 0
+```