GitLab Pages administration

Tier: Free, Premium, Ultimate
Offering: Self-managed

GitLab Pages allows for hosting of static sites. It must be configured by an administrator. Separate user documentation is available.

note
This guide is for Linux package installations. If you have a self-compiled GitLab installation, see GitLab Pages administration for self-compiled installations.

The GitLab Pages daemon

GitLab Pages makes use of the GitLab Pages daemon, a basic HTTP server written in Go that can listen on an external IP address and provide support for custom domains and custom certificates. It supports dynamic certificates through Server Name Indication (SNI) and exposes pages using HTTP2 by default. You are encouraged to read its README to fully understand how it works.

In the case of custom domains (but not wildcard domains), the Pages daemon needs to listen on ports 80 and/or 443. For that reason, there is some flexibility in the way which you can set it up:

  • Run the Pages daemon in the same server as GitLab, listening on a secondary IP.
  • Run the Pages daemon in a separate server. In that case, the Pages path must also be present in the server that the Pages daemon is installed, so you must share it through the network.
  • Run the Pages daemon in the same server as GitLab, listening on the same IP but on different ports. In that case, you must proxy the traffic with a load balancer. If you choose that route, you should use TCP load balancing for HTTPS. If you use TLS-termination (HTTPS-load balancing), the pages can’t be served with user-provided certificates. For HTTP it’s OK to use HTTP or TCP load balancing.

In this document, we proceed assuming the first option. If you are not supporting custom domains a secondary IP is not needed.

Prerequisites

Before proceeding with the Pages configuration, you must:

  1. Have a domain for Pages that is not a subdomain of your GitLab instance domain.

    GitLab domain Pages domain Does it work?
    example.com example.io Yes
    example.com pages.example.com No
    gitlab.example.com pages.example.com Yes
  2. Configure a wildcard DNS record.
  3. Optional. Have a wildcard certificate for that domain if you decide to serve Pages under HTTPS.
  4. Optional but recommended. Enable instance runners so that your users don’t have to bring their own.
  5. For custom domains, have a secondary IP.
note
If your GitLab instance and the Pages daemon are deployed in a private network or behind a firewall, your GitLab Pages websites are only accessible to devices/users that have access to the private network.

Add the domain to the Public Suffix List

The Public Suffix List is used by browsers to decide how to treat subdomains. If your GitLab instance allows members of the public to create GitLab Pages sites, it also allows those users to create subdomains on the pages domain (example.io). Adding the domain to the Public Suffix List prevents browsers from accepting supercookies, among other things.

Follow these instructions to submit your GitLab Pages subdomain. For instance, if your domain is example.io, you should request that example.io is added to the Public Suffix List. GitLab.com added gitlab.io in 2016.

DNS configuration

GitLab Pages expect to run on their own virtual host. In your DNS server/provider add a wildcard DNS A record pointing to the host that GitLab runs. For example, an entry would look like this:

*.example.io. 1800 IN A    192.0.2.1
*.example.io. 1800 IN AAAA 2001:db8::1

Where example.io is the domain GitLab Pages is served from, 192.0.2.1 is the IPv4 address of your GitLab instance, and 2001:db8::1 is the IPv6 address. If you don’t have IPv6, you can omit the AAAA record.

For namespace in URL path, without wildcard DNS

Status: Beta
History
On self-managed GitLab, by default this feature is available. On GitLab.com and GitLab Dedicated, this feature is not available. This feature is not ready for production use.

Prerequisites:

  • Your instance must use the Linux package installation method.
  • Your installation must use the default auth_redirect_uri.

If you need support for namespace in the URL path to remove the requirement for wildcard DNS:

  1. Enable the GitLab Pages flag for this feature by adding gitlab_pages["namespace_in_path"] = true to /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb.
  2. In your DNS provider, add entries for example.io and projects.example.io. In both lines, replace example.io with your domain name, and 192.0.0.0 with the IPv4 version of your IP address. The entries look like this:

    example.io          1800 IN A    192.0.0.0
    projects.example.io 1800 IN A    192.0.0.0
    
  3. Optional. If your GitLab instance has an IPv6 address, add entries for it. In both lines, replace example.io with your domain name, and 2001:db8::1 with the IPv6 version of your IP address. The entries look like this:

    example.io          1800 IN AAAA 2001:db8::1
    projects.example.io 1800 IN AAAA 2001:db8::1
    

This example contains the following:

  • example.io: The domain GitLab Pages is served from.
  • projects.example.io: An additional subdomain for GitLab Pages default authentication flow.

DNS configuration for custom domains

If support for custom domains is needed, all subdomains of the Pages root domain should point to the secondary IP (which is dedicated for the Pages daemon). Without this configuration, users can’t use CNAME records to point their custom domains to their GitLab Pages.

For example, an entry could look like this:

example.com   1800 IN A    192.0.2.1
*.example.io. 1800 IN A    192.0.2.2

This example contains the following:

  • example.com: The GitLab domain.
  • example.io: The domain GitLab Pages is served from.
  • 192.0.2.1: The primary IP of your GitLab instance.
  • 192.0.2.2: The secondary IP, which is dedicated to GitLab Pages. It must be different than the primary IP.
note
You should not use the GitLab domain to serve user pages. For more information see the security section.

Configuration

Depending on your needs, you can set up GitLab Pages in 4 different ways.

The following examples are listed from the easiest setup to the most advanced one. The absolute minimum requirement is to set up the wildcard DNS because that is needed in all configurations.

Wildcard domains

Prerequisites:


URL scheme: http://<namespace>.example.io/<project_slug>

The following is the minimum setup that you can use Pages with. It is the base for all other setups as described below. NGINX proxies all requests to the daemon. The Pages daemon doesn’t listen to the outside world.

  1. Set the external URL for GitLab Pages in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    external_url "http://example.com" # external_url here is only for reference
    pages_external_url 'http://example.io' # Important: not a subdomain of external_url, so cannot be http://pages.example.com
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Watch the video tutorial for this configuration.

Pages domain without wildcard DNS

Status: Beta
History
On self-managed GitLab, by default this feature is available. On GitLab.com and GitLab Dedicated, this feature is not available. This feature is not ready for production use.

This configuration is the minimum setup for GitLab Pages. It is the base for all other configurations. In this configuration, NGINX proxies all requests to the daemon, because the GitLab Pages daemon doesn’t listen to the outside world.

Prerequisites:

  • Your instance must use the Linux package installation method.
  • You have configured DNS setup without a wildcard.
  1. In /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb, set the external URL for GitLab Pages, and enable the feature flag:

    # External_url here is only for reference
    external_url "http://example.com"
    pages_external_url 'http://example.io'
    
    pages_nginx['enable'] = true
    
    # Set this flag to enable this feature
    gitlab_pages["namespace_in_path"] = true
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

NGINX uses the custom proxy header X-Gitlab-Namespace-In-Path to send the namespace to the GitLab Pages daemon.

The resulting URL scheme is http://example.io/<namespace>/<project_slug>.

Wildcard domains with TLS support

Prerequisites:


URL scheme: https://<namespace>.example.io/<project_slug>

NGINX proxies all requests to the daemon. Pages daemon doesn’t listen to the outside world.

  1. Place the wildcard TLS certificate for *.example.io and the key inside /etc/gitlab/ssl.
  2. In /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb specify the following configuration:

    external_url "https://example.com" # external_url here is only for reference
    pages_external_url 'https://example.io' # Important: not a subdomain of external_url, so cannot be https://pages.example.com
    
    pages_nginx['redirect_http_to_https'] = true
    
  3. If you haven’t named your certificate and key example.io.crt and example.io.key, you must also add the full paths as shown below:

    pages_nginx['ssl_certificate'] = "/etc/gitlab/ssl/pages-nginx.crt"
    pages_nginx['ssl_certificate_key'] = "/etc/gitlab/ssl/pages-nginx.key"
    
  4. Reconfigure GitLab.
  5. If you’re using Pages Access Control, update the redirect URI in the GitLab Pages System OAuth application to use the HTTPS protocol.
caution
Multiple wildcards for one instance is not supported. Only one wildcard per instance can be assigned.
caution
GitLab Pages does not update the OAuth application if changes are made to the redirect URI. Before you reconfigure, remove the gitlab_pages section from /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json, then run gitlab-ctl reconfigure. For more information, read GitLab Pages does not regenerate OAuth.

Pages domain with TLS support, without wildcard DNS

Status: Beta
History
On self-managed GitLab, by default this feature is available. On GitLab.com and GitLab Dedicated, this feature is not available. This feature is not ready for production use.

Prerequisites:

  • Your instance must use the Linux package installation method.
  • You have configured DNS setup without a wildcard.
  • You have a single TLS certificate that covers your domain (like example.io) and the projects.* version of your domain, like projects.example.io.

In this configuration, NGINX proxies all requests to the daemon. The GitLab Pages daemon doesn’t listen to the outside world:

  1. Add your TLS certificate and key as mentioned in the prerequisites into /etc/gitlab/ssl.
  2. In /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb, set the external URL for GitLab Pages, and enable the feature flag:

    # The external_url field is here only for reference.
    external_url "https://example.com"
    pages_external_url 'https://example.io'
    
    pages_nginx['enable'] = true
    pages_nginx['redirect_http_to_https'] = true
    
    # Set this flag to enable this feature
    gitlab_pages["namespace_in_path"] = true
    
  3. If your TLS certificate and key don’t match the name of your domain, like example.io.crt and example.io.key, add the full paths for the certificate and key files to /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    pages_nginx['ssl_certificate'] = "/etc/gitlab/ssl/pages-nginx.crt"
    pages_nginx['ssl_certificate_key'] = "/etc/gitlab/ssl/pages-nginx.key"
    
  4. Reconfigure GitLab.

    caution
    GitLab Pages does not update the OAuth application if changes are made to the redirect URI. Before you reconfigure, remove the gitlab_pages section from /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json, then run gitlab-ctl reconfigure. For more information, see GitLab Pages does not regenerate OAuth.
  5. If you’re using Pages Access Control, update the redirect URI in the GitLab Pages System OAuth application to use the HTTPS protocol.

NGINX uses the custom proxy header X-Gitlab-Namespace-In-Path to send the namespace to the GitLab Pages daemon.

The resulting URL scheme is https://example.io/<namespace>/<project_slug>.

Wildcard domains with TLS-terminating Load Balancer

Prerequisites:


URL scheme: https://<namespace>.example.io/<project_slug>

This setup is primarily intended to be used when installing a GitLab POC on Amazon Web Services. This includes a TLS-terminating classic load balancer that listens for HTTPS connections, manages TLS certificates, and forwards HTTP traffic to the instance.

  1. In /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb specify the following configuration:

    external_url "https://example.com" # external_url here is only for reference
    pages_external_url 'https://example.io' # Important: not a subdomain of external_url, so cannot be https://pages.example.com
    
    pages_nginx['enable'] = true
    pages_nginx['listen_port'] = 80
    pages_nginx['listen_https'] = false
    pages_nginx['redirect_http_to_https'] = true
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Global settings

Below is a table of all configuration settings known to Pages in a Linux package installation, and what they do. These options can be adjusted in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb, and take effect after you reconfigure GitLab. Most of these settings don’t have to be configured manually unless you need more granular control over how the Pages daemon runs and serves content in your environment.

Setting Description
pages_external_url The URL where GitLab Pages is accessible, including protocol (HTTP / HTTPS). If https:// is used, additional configuration is required. See Wildcard domains with TLS support and Custom domains with TLS support for details.
gitlab_pages[]  
access_control Whether to enable access control.
api_secret_key Full path to file with secret key used to authenticate with the GitLab API. Auto-generated when left unset.
artifacts_server Enable viewing artifacts in GitLab Pages.
artifacts_server_timeout Timeout (in seconds) for a proxied request to the artifacts server.
artifacts_server_url API URL to proxy artifact requests to. Defaults to GitLab external URL + /api/v4, for example https://gitlab.com/api/v4. When running a separate Pages server, this URL must point to the main GitLab server’s API.
auth_redirect_uri Callback URL for authenticating with GitLab. Defaults to project’s subdomain of pages_external_url + /auth.
auth_secret Secret key for signing authentication requests. Leave blank to pull automatically from GitLab during OAuth registration.
dir Working directory for configuration and secrets files.
enable Enable or disable GitLab Pages on the current system.
external_http Configure Pages to bind to one or more secondary IP addresses, serving HTTP requests. Multiple addresses can be given as an array, along with exact ports, for example ['1.2.3.4', '1.2.3.5:8063']. Sets value for listen_http.
external_https Configure Pages to bind to one or more secondary IP addresses, serving HTTPS requests. Multiple addresses can be given as an array, along with exact ports, for example ['1.2.3.4', '1.2.3.5:8063']. Sets value for listen_https.
server_shutdown_timeout GitLab Pages server shutdown timeout in seconds (default: 30s).
gitlab_client_http_timeout GitLab API HTTP client connection timeout in seconds (default: 10s).
gitlab_client_jwt_expiry JWT Token expiry time in seconds (default: 30s).
gitlab_cache_expiry The maximum time a domain’s configuration is stored in the cache (default: 600s).
gitlab_cache_refresh The interval at which a domain’s configuration is set to be due to refresh (default: 60s).
gitlab_cache_cleanup The interval at which expired items are removed from the cache (default: 60s).
gitlab_retrieval_timeout The maximum time to wait for a response from the GitLab API per request (default: 30s).
gitlab_retrieval_interval The interval to wait before retrying to resolve a domain’s configuration via the GitLab API (default: 1s).
gitlab_retrieval_retries The maximum number of times to retry to resolve a domain’s configuration via the API (default: 3).
domain_config_source This parameter was removed in 14.0, on earlier versions it can be used to enable and test API domain configuration source
gitlab_id The OAuth application public ID. Leave blank to automatically fill when Pages authenticates with GitLab.
gitlab_secret The OAuth application secret. Leave blank to automatically fill when Pages authenticates with GitLab.
auth_scope The OAuth application scope to use for authentication. Must match GitLab Pages OAuth application settings. Leave blank to use api scope by default.
auth_timeout GitLab application client timeout for authentication in seconds (default: 5s). A value of 0 means no timeout.
auth_cookie_session_timeout Authentication cookie session timeout in seconds (default: 10m). A value of 0 means the cookie is deleted after the browser session ends.
gitlab_server Server to use for authentication when access control is enabled; defaults to GitLab external_url.
headers Specify any additional http headers that should be sent to the client with each response. Multiple headers can be given as an array, header and value as one string, for example ['my-header: myvalue', 'my-other-header: my-other-value']
enable_disk Allows the GitLab Pages daemon to serve content from disk. Shall be disabled if shared disk storage isn’t available.
insecure_ciphers Use default list of cipher suites, may contain insecure ones like 3DES and RC4.
internal_gitlab_server Internal GitLab server address used exclusively for API requests. Useful if you want to send that traffic over an internal load balancer. Defaults to GitLab external_url.
listen_proxy The addresses to listen on for reverse-proxy requests. Pages binds to these addresses’ network sockets and receives incoming requests from them. Sets the value of proxy_pass in $nginx-dir/conf/gitlab-pages.conf.
log_directory Absolute path to a log directory.
log_format The log output format: text or json.
log_verbose Verbose logging, true/false.
namespace_in_path (Experimental) Enable or disable namespace in the URL path. This requires pages_nginx[enable] = true. Sets rewrite configuration in NGINX to support without wildcard DNS setup. Default: false
propagate_correlation_id Set to true (false by default) to re-use existing Correlation ID from the incoming request header X-Request-ID if present. If a reverse proxy sets this header, the value is propagated in the request chain.
max_connections Limit on the number of concurrent connections to the HTTP, HTTPS or proxy listeners.
max_uri_length The maximum length of URIs accepted by GitLab Pages. Set to 0 for unlimited length. Introduced in GitLab 14.5.
metrics_address The address to listen on for metrics requests.
redirect_http Redirect pages from HTTP to HTTPS, true/false.
redirects_max_config_size The maximum size of the _redirects file, in bytes (default: 65536).
redirects_max_path_segments The maximum number of path segments allowed in _redirects rules URLs (default: 25).
redirects_max_rule_count The maximum number of rules allowed in _redirects (default: 1000).
sentry_dsn The address for sending Sentry crash reporting to.
sentry_enabled Enable reporting and logging with Sentry, true/false.
sentry_environment The environment for Sentry crash reporting.
status_uri The URL path for a status page, for example, /@status.
tls_max_version Specifies the maximum TLS version (“tls1.2” or “tls1.3”).
tls_min_version Specifies the minimum TLS version (“tls1.2” or “tls1.3”).
use_http2 Enable HTTP2 support.
gitlab_pages['env'][]  
http_proxy Configure GitLab Pages to use an HTTP Proxy to mediate traffic between Pages and GitLab. Sets an environment variable http_proxy when starting Pages daemon.
gitlab_rails[]  
pages_domain_verification_cron_worker Schedule for verifying custom GitLab Pages domains.
pages_domain_ssl_renewal_cron_worker Schedule for obtaining and renewing SSL certificates through Let’s Encrypt for GitLab Pages domains.
pages_domain_removal_cron_worker Schedule for removing unverified custom GitLab Pages domains.
pages_path The directory on disk where pages are stored, defaults to GITLAB-RAILS/shared/pages.
pages_nginx[]  
enable Include a virtual host server{} block for Pages inside NGINX. Needed for NGINX to proxy traffic back to the Pages daemon. Set to false if the Pages daemon should directly receive all requests, for example, when using custom domains.
FF_CONFIGURABLE_ROOT_DIR Feature flag to customize the default folder (enabled by default).
FF_ENABLE_PLACEHOLDERS Feature flag for rewrites (enabled by default). See Rewrites for more information.
use_legacy_storage Temporarily-introduced parameter allowing to use legacy domain configuration source and storage. Removed in 14.3.
rate_limit_source_ip Rate limit per source IP in number of requests per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
rate_limit_source_ip_burst Rate limit per source IP maximum burst allowed per second.
rate_limit_domain Rate limit per domain in number of requests per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
rate_limit_domain_burst Rate limit per domain maximum burst allowed per second.
rate_limit_tls_source_ip Rate limit per source IP in number of TLS connections per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
rate_limit_tls_source_ip_burst Rate limit per source IP maximum TLS connections burst allowed per second.
rate_limit_tls_domain Rate limit per domain in number of TLS connections per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
rate_limit_tls_domain_burst Rate limit per domain maximum TLS connections burst allowed per second.
server_read_timeout Maximum duration to read the request headers and body. For no timeout, set to 0 or a negative value. Default: 5s
server_read_header_timeout Maximum duration to read the request headers. For no timeout, set to 0 or a negative value. Default: 1s
server_write_timeout Maximum duration to write all files in the response. Larger files require more time. For no timeout, set to 0 or a negative value. Default: 0
server_keep_alive The Keep-Alive period for network connections accepted by this listener. If 0, Keep-Alive is enabled if supported by the protocol and operating system. If negative, Keep-Alive is disabled. Default: 15s

Advanced configuration

In addition to the wildcard domains, you can also have the option to configure GitLab Pages to work with custom domains. Again, there are two options here: support custom domains with and without TLS certificates. The easiest setup is that without TLS certificates. In either case, you need a secondary IP. If you have IPv6 as well as IPv4 addresses, you can use them both.

Custom domains

Prerequisites:


URL scheme: http://<namespace>.example.io/<project_slug> and http://custom-domain.com

In that case, the Pages daemon is running, NGINX still proxies requests to the daemon but the daemon is also able to receive requests from the outside world. Custom domains are supported, but no TLS.

  1. In /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb specify the following configuration:

    external_url "http://example.com" # external_url here is only for reference
    pages_external_url 'http://example.io' # Important: not a subdomain of external_url, so cannot be http://pages.example.com
    nginx['listen_addresses'] = ['192.0.2.1'] # The primary IP of the GitLab instance
    pages_nginx['enable'] = false
    gitlab_pages['external_http'] = ['192.0.2.2:80', '[2001:db8::2]:80'] # The secondary IPs for the GitLab Pages daemon
    

    If you don’t have IPv6, you can omit the IPv6 address.

  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Custom domains with TLS support

Prerequisites:


URL scheme: https://<namespace>.example.io/<project_slug> and https://custom-domain.com

In that case, the Pages daemon is running, NGINX still proxies requests to the daemon but the daemon is also able to receive requests from the outside world. Custom domains and TLS are supported.

  1. Place the wildcard LTS certificate for *.example.io and the key inside /etc/gitlab/ssl.
  2. In /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb specify the following configuration:

    external_url "https://example.com" # external_url here is only for reference
    pages_external_url 'https://example.io' # Important: not a subdomain of external_url, so cannot be https://pages.example.com
    nginx['listen_addresses'] = ['192.0.2.1'] # The primary IP of the GitLab instance
    pages_nginx['enable'] = false
    gitlab_pages['external_http'] = ['192.0.2.2:80', '[2001:db8::2]:80'] # The secondary IPs for the GitLab Pages daemon
    gitlab_pages['external_https'] = ['192.0.2.2:443', '[2001:db8::2]:443'] # The secondary IPs for the GitLab Pages daemon
    # Redirect pages from HTTP to HTTPS
    gitlab_pages['redirect_http'] = true
    

    If you don’t have IPv6, you can omit the IPv6 address.

  3. If you haven’t named your certificate example.io.crt and your key example.io.key, then you need to also add the full paths as shown below:

    gitlab_pages['cert'] = "/etc/gitlab/ssl/example.io.crt"
    gitlab_pages['cert_key'] = "/etc/gitlab/ssl/example.io.key"
    
  4. Reconfigure GitLab.
  5. If you’re using Pages Access Control, update the redirect URI in the GitLab Pages System OAuth application to use the HTTPS protocol.

Custom domain verification

To prevent malicious users from hijacking domains that don’t belong to them, GitLab supports custom domain verification. When adding a custom domain, users are required to prove they own it by adding a GitLab-controlled verification code to the DNS records for that domain.

caution
Disabling domain verification is unsafe and can lead to various vulnerabilities. If you do disable it, either ensure that the Pages root domain itself does not point to the secondary IP or add the root domain as custom domain to a project; otherwise, any user can add this domain as a custom domain to their project.

If your user base is private or otherwise trusted, you can disable the verification requirement:

  1. On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
  2. Select Settings > Preferences.
  3. Expand Pages.
  4. Clear the Require users to prove ownership of custom domains checkbox. This setting is enabled by default.

Let’s Encrypt integration

History

GitLab Pages’ Let’s Encrypt integration allows users to add Let’s Encrypt SSL certificates for GitLab Pages sites served under a custom domain.

To enable it:

  1. Choose an email address on which you want to receive notifications about expiring domains.
  2. On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
  3. Select Settings > Preferences.
  4. Expand Pages.
  5. Enter the email address for receiving notifications and accept Let’s Encrypt’s Terms of Service.
  6. Select Save changes.

Access control

GitLab Pages access control can be configured per-project, and allows access to a Pages site to be controlled based on a user’s membership to that project.

Access control works by registering the Pages daemon as an OAuth application with GitLab. Whenever a request to access a private Pages site is made by an unauthenticated user, the Pages daemon redirects the user to GitLab. If authentication is successful, the user is redirected back to Pages with a token, which is persisted in a cookie. The cookies are signed with a secret key, so tampering can be detected.

Each request to view a resource in a private site is authenticated by Pages using that token. For each request it receives, it makes a request to the GitLab API to check that the user is authorized to read that site.

Pages access control is disabled by default. To enable it:

  1. Enable it in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['access_control'] = true
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.
  3. Users can now configure it in their projects’ settings.
note
For this setting to be effective with multi-node setups, it has to be applied to all the App nodes and Sidekiq nodes.

Using Pages with reduced authentication scope

History

By default, the Pages daemon uses the api scope to authenticate. You can configure this. For example, this reduces the scope to read_api in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

gitlab_pages['auth_scope'] = 'read_api'

The scope to use for authentication must match the GitLab Pages OAuth application settings. Users of pre-existing applications must modify the GitLab Pages OAuth application. Follow these steps to do this:

  1. Enable access control.
  2. On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
  3. Select Applications.
  4. Expand GitLab Pages.
  5. Clear the api scope’s checkbox and select the desired scope’s checkbox (for example, read_api).
  6. Select Save changes.

Disable public access to all Pages sites

History

You can enforce Access Control for all GitLab Pages websites hosted on your GitLab instance. By doing so, only authenticated users have access to them. This setting overrides Access Control set by users in individual projects.

This can be helpful to restrict information published with Pages websites to the users of your instance only. To do that:

  1. On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
  2. Select Settings > Preferences.
  3. Expand Pages.
  4. Select the Disable public access to Pages sites checkbox.
  5. Select Save changes.
note
You must enable Access Control first for the setting to show in the Admin Area.

Running behind a proxy

Like the rest of GitLab, Pages can be used in those environments where external internet connectivity is gated by a proxy. To use a proxy for GitLab Pages:

  1. Configure in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['env']['http_proxy'] = 'http://example:8080'
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect.

Using a custom Certificate Authority (CA)

When using certificates issued by a custom CA, Access Control and the online view of HTML job artifacts fails to work if the custom CA is not recognized.

This usually results in this error: Post /oauth/token: x509: certificate signed by unknown authority.

For Linux package installations, this is fixed by installing a custom CA.

For self-compiled installations, this can be fixed by installing the custom Certificate Authority (CA) in the system certificate store.

ZIP serving and cache configuration

History
caution
These instructions deal with some advanced settings of your GitLab instance. The recommended default values are set inside GitLab Pages. You should change these settings only if absolutely necessary. Use extreme caution.

GitLab Pages can serve content from ZIP archives through object storage (an issue exists for supporting disk storage as well). It uses an in-memory cache to increase the performance when serving content from a ZIP archive. You can modify the cache behavior by changing the following configuration flags.

Setting Description
zip_cache_expiration The cache expiration interval of ZIP archives. Must be greater than zero to avoid serving stale content. Default is 60s.
zip_cache_cleanup The interval at which archives are cleaned from memory if they have already expired. Default is 30s.
zip_cache_refresh The time interval in which an archive is extended in memory if accessed before zip_cache_expiration. This works together with zip_cache_expiration to determine if an archive is extended in memory. See the example below for important details. Default is 30s.
zip_open_timeout The maximum time allowed to open a ZIP archive. Increase this time for big archives or slow network connections, as doing so may affect the latency of serving Pages. Default is 30 s.
zip_http_client_timeout The maximum time for the ZIP HTTP client. Default is 30m.

ZIP cache refresh example

Archives are refreshed in the cache (extending the time they are held in memory) if they’re accessed before zip_cache_expiration, and the time left before expiring is less than or equal to zip_cache_refresh. For example, if archive.zip is accessed at time 0s, it expires in 60s (the default for zip_cache_expiration). In the example below, if the archive is opened again after 15s it is not refreshed because the time left for expiry (45s) is greater than zip_cache_refresh (default 30s). However, if the archive is accessed again after 45s (from the first time it was opened) it’s refreshed. This extends the time the archive remains in memory from 45s + zip_cache_expiration (60s), for a total of 105s.

After an archive reaches zip_cache_expiration, it’s marked as expired and removed on the next zip_cache_cleanup interval.

ZIP cache configuration

HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) support

HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) can be enabled through the gitlab_pages['headers'] configuration option. HSTS informs browsers that the website they are visiting should always provide its content over HTTPS to ensure that attackers cannot force subsequent connections to happen unencrypted. It can also improve loading speed of pages as it prevents browsers from attempting to connect over an unencrypted HTTP channel before being redirected to HTTPS.

gitlab_pages['headers'] = ['Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=63072000']

Pages project redirects limits

History

GitLab Pages comes with a set of default limits for the _redirects file to minimize the impact on performance. You can configure these limits if you’d like to increase or decrease the limits.

gitlab_pages['redirects_max_config_size'] = 131072
gitlab_pages['redirects_max_path_segments'] = 50
gitlab_pages['redirects_max_rule_count'] = 2000

Use environment variables

You can pass an environment variable to the Pages daemon (for example, to enable or disable a feature flag).

To disable the configurable directory feature:

  1. Edit /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['env'] = {
      'FF_CONFIGURABLE_ROOT_DIR' => "false"
    }
    
  2. Save the file and reconfigure GitLab:

    sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure
    

Activate verbose logging for daemon

Follow the steps below to configure verbose logging of GitLab Pages daemon.

  1. By default the daemon only logs with INFO level. If you wish to make it log events with level DEBUG you must configure this in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['log_verbose'] = true
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Propagating the correlation ID

History

Setting the propagate_correlation_id to true allows installations behind a reverse proxy to generate and set a correlation ID to requests sent to GitLab Pages. When a reverse proxy sets the header value X-Request-ID, the value propagates in the request chain. Users can find the correlation ID in the logs.

To enable the propagation of the correlation ID:

  1. Set the parameter to true in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['propagate_correlation_id'] = true
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Change storage path

Follow the steps below to change the default path where GitLab Pages’ contents are stored.

  1. Pages are stored by default in /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/pages. If you wish to store them in another location you must set it up in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_rails['pages_path'] = "/mnt/storage/pages"
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Configure listener for reverse proxy requests

Follow the steps below to configure the proxy listener of GitLab Pages.

  1. By default the listener is configured to listen for requests on localhost:8090.

    If you wish to disable it you must configure this in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['listen_proxy'] = nil
    

    If you wish to make it listen on a different port you must configure this also in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['listen_proxy'] = "localhost:10080"
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Set global maximum size of each GitLab Pages site

Tier: Free, Premium, Ultimate
Offering: Self-managed

Prerequisites:

  • You must have administrator access to the instance.

To set the global maximum pages size for a project:

  1. On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
  2. Select Settings > Preferences.
  3. Expand Pages.
  4. In Maximum size of pages, enter a value. The default is 100.
  5. Select Save changes.

Set maximum size of each GitLab Pages site in a group

Tier: Premium, Ultimate
Offering: Self-managed

Prerequisites:

  • You must have administrator access to the instance.

To set the maximum size of each GitLab Pages site in a group, overriding the inherited setting:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
  2. Select Settings > General.
  3. Expand Pages.
  4. Enter a value under Maximum size in MB.
  5. Select Save changes.

Set maximum size of GitLab Pages site in a project

Tier: Premium, Ultimate
Offering: Self-managed

Prerequisites:

  • You must have administrator access to the instance.

To set the maximum size of GitLab Pages site in a project, overriding the inherited setting:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. Select Deploy > Pages.
  3. In Maximum size of pages, enter the size in MB.
  4. Select Save changes.

Set maximum number of GitLab Pages custom domains for a project

Prerequisites:

  • You must have administrator access to the instance.

To set the maximum number of GitLab Pages custom domains for a project:

  1. On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
  2. Select Settings > Preferences.
  3. Expand Pages.
  4. Enter a value for Maximum number of custom domains per project. Use 0 for unlimited domains.
  5. Select Save changes.

Set maximum number of files per GitLab Pages website

The total number of file entries (including directories and symlinks) is limited to 200,000 per GitLab Pages website.

You can update the limit in your self-managed instance using the GitLab Rails console.

For more information, see GitLab application limits.

Running GitLab Pages on a separate server

You can run the GitLab Pages daemon on a separate server to decrease the load on your main application server. This configuration does not support mutual TLS (mTLS). See the corresponding feature proposal for more information.

To configure GitLab Pages on a separate server:

caution
The following procedure includes steps to back up and edit the gitlab-secrets.json file. This file contains secrets that control database encryption. Proceed with caution.
  1. Create a backup of the secrets file on the GitLab server:

    cp /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json.bak
    
  2. On the GitLab server, to enable Pages, add the following to /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    pages_external_url "http://<pages_server_URL>"
    
  3. Optionally, to enable access control, add the following to /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['access_control'] = true
    
  4. Set up object storage by either:
  5. Reconfigure the GitLab server for the changes to take effect. The gitlab-secrets.json file is now updated with the new configuration.

  6. Set up a new server. This becomes the Pages server.

  7. On the Pages server, install GitLab by using the Linux package and modify /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb to include:

    roles ['pages_role']
    
    pages_external_url "http://<pages_server_URL>"
    
    gitlab_pages['gitlab_server'] = 'http://<gitlab_server_IP_or_URL>'
    
    ## If access control was enabled on step 3
    gitlab_pages['access_control'] = true
    
  8. If you have custom UID/GID settings on the GitLab server, add them to the Pages server /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb as well, otherwise running a gitlab-ctl reconfigure on the GitLab server can change file ownership and cause Pages requests to fail.

  9. Create a backup of the secrets file on the Pages server:

    cp /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json.bak
    
  10. Copy the /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json file from the GitLab server to the Pages server.

    # On the GitLab server
    cp /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json /mnt/pages/gitlab-secrets.json
    
    # On the Pages server
    mv /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/pages/gitlab-secrets.json /etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json
    
  11. Reconfigure the Pages server for the changes to take effect.

  12. On the GitLab server, make the following changes to /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    pages_external_url "http://<pages_server_URL>"
    gitlab_pages['enable'] = false
    pages_nginx['enable'] = false
    
  13. Reconfigure the GitLab server for the changes to take effect.

It’s possible to run GitLab Pages on multiple servers if you wish to distribute the load. You can do this through standard load balancing practices such as configuring your DNS server to return multiple IPs for your Pages server, or configuring a load balancer to work at the IP level. If you wish to set up GitLab Pages on multiple servers, perform the above procedure for each Pages server.

Domain source configuration

When GitLab Pages daemon serves pages requests it firstly needs to identify which project should be used to serve the requested URL and how its content is stored.

Before GitLab 13.3, all pages content was extracted to the special shared directory, and each project had a special configuration file. The Pages daemon was reading these configuration files and storing their content in memory.

This approach had several disadvantages and was replaced with GitLab Pages using the internal GitLab API every time a new domain is requested. The domain information is also cached by the Pages daemon to speed up subsequent requests.

Starting from GitLab 14.0 GitLab Pages uses API by default and fails to start if it can’t connect to it. For common issues, see troubleshooting.

For more details see this blog post.

GitLab API cache configuration

History

API-based configuration uses a caching mechanism to improve performance and reliability of serving Pages. The cache behavior can be modified by changing the cache settings, however, the recommended values are set for you and should only be modified if needed. Incorrect configuration of these values may result in intermittent or persistent errors, or the Pages Daemon serving old content.

note
Expiry, interval and timeout flags use Go duration formatting. A duration string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, each with optional fraction and a unit suffix, such as 300ms, 1.5h or 2h45m. Valid time units are ns, us (or µs), ms, s, m, h.

Examples:

  • Increasing gitlab_cache_expiry allows items to exist in the cache longer. This setting might be useful if the communication between GitLab Pages and GitLab Rails is not stable.
  • Increasing gitlab_cache_refresh reduces the frequency at which GitLab Pages requests a domain’s configuration from GitLab Rails. This setting might be useful GitLab Pages generates too many requests to GitLab API and content does not change frequently.
  • Decreasing gitlab_cache_cleanup removes expired items from the cache more frequently, reducing the memory usage of your Pages node.
  • Decreasing gitlab_retrieval_timeout allows you to stop the request to GitLab Rails more quickly. Increasing it allows more time to receive a response from the API, useful in slow networking environments.
  • Decreasing gitlab_retrieval_interval makes requests to the API more frequently, only when there is an error response from the API, for example a connection timeout.
  • Decreasing gitlab_retrieval_retries reduces the number of times a domain’s configuration is tried to be resolved automatically before reporting an error.

Object storage settings

The following object storage settings are:

  • Nested under pages: and then object_store: on self-compiled installations.
  • Prefixed by pages_object_store_ on Linux package installations.
Setting Description Default
enabled Whether object storage is enabled. false
remote_directory The name of the bucket where Pages site content is stored.  
connection Various connection options described below.  
note
If you want to stop using and disconnect the NFS server, you need to explicitly disable local storage, and it’s only possible after upgrading to GitLab 13.11.

S3-compatible connection settings

In GitLab 13.2 and later, you should use the consolidated object storage settings. This section describes the earlier configuration format.

See the available connection settings for different providers.

Linux package (Omnibus)
  1. Add the following lines to /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb and replace the values with the ones you want:

    gitlab_rails['pages_object_store_enabled'] = true
    gitlab_rails['pages_object_store_remote_directory'] = "pages"
    gitlab_rails['pages_object_store_connection'] = {
      'provider' => 'AWS',
      'region' => 'eu-central-1',
      'aws_access_key_id' => 'AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID',
      'aws_secret_access_key' => 'AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY'
    }
    

    If you use AWS IAM profiles, be sure to omit the AWS access key and secret access key/value pairs:

    gitlab_rails['pages_object_store_connection'] = {
      'provider' => 'AWS',
      'region' => 'eu-central-1',
      'use_iam_profile' => true
    }
    
  2. Save the file and reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect.

  3. Migrate existing Pages deployments to object storage.

Self-compiled (source)
  1. Edit /home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml and add or amend the following lines:

    pages:
      object_store:
        enabled: true
        remote_directory: "pages" # The bucket name
        connection:
          provider: AWS # Only AWS supported at the moment
          aws_access_key_id: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
          aws_secret_access_key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
          region: eu-central-1
    
  2. Save the file and restart GitLab for the changes to take effect.

  3. Migrate existing Pages deployments to object storage.

Migrate Pages deployments to object storage

Existing Pages deployment objects (zip archives) can be stored in either:

Migrate your existing Pages deployments from local storage to object storage:

sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:pages:deployments:migrate_to_object_storage

You can track progress and verify that all Pages deployments migrated successfully using the PostgreSQL console:

  • sudo gitlab-rails dbconsole for Linux package installations running GitLab 14.1 and earlier.
  • sudo gitlab-rails dbconsole --database main for Linux package installations running 14.2 and later.
  • sudo -u git -H psql -d gitlabhq_production for self-compiled installations.

Verify objectstg below (where store=2) has count of all Pages deployments:

gitlabhq_production=# SELECT count(*) AS total, sum(case when file_store = '1' then 1 else 0 end) AS filesystem, sum(case when file_store = '2' then 1 else 0 end) AS objectstg FROM pages_deployments;

total | filesystem | objectstg
------+------------+-----------
   10 |          0 |        10

After verifying everything is working correctly, disable Pages local storage.

Rolling Pages deployments back to local storage

After the migration to object storage is performed, you can choose to move your Pages deployments back to local storage:

sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:pages:deployments:migrate_to_local

Disable Pages local storage

History

If you use object storage, you can disable local storage to avoid unnecessary disk usage/writes:

  1. Edit /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_rails['pages_local_store_enabled'] = false
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect.

Enable Pages network storage in multi-node environments

Object storage is the preferred configuration for most environments. However, if your requirements call for network storage and you want to configure Pages to run on a separate server, you should:

  1. Ensure the shared storage volume you intend to use is already mounted and available on both the primary server and your intended Pages server.
  2. Update the /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb of each node to include:

    gitlab_pages['enable_disk'] = true
    gitlab_rails['pages_path'] = "/var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/pages" # Path to your network storage
    
  3. Switch over Pages to your separate server.

After you successfully configure Pages on your separate server, only that server needs access to the shared storage volume. Consider keeping the shared storage volume mounted on your primary server, in case you must migrate back to a single-node environment.

ZIP storage

In GitLab 14.0 the underlying storage format of GitLab Pages changed from files stored directly in disk to a single ZIP archive per project.

These ZIP archives can be stored either locally on disk storage or on object storage if it is configured.

Starting from GitLab 13.5 ZIP archives are stored every time pages site is updated.

Backup

GitLab Pages are part of the regular backup, so there is no separate backup to configure.

Security

You should strongly consider running GitLab Pages under a different hostname than GitLab to prevent XSS attacks.

Rate limits

You can enforce rate limits to help minimize the risk of a Denial of Service (DoS) attack. GitLab Pages uses a token bucket algorithm to enforce rate limiting. By default, requests or TLS connections that exceed the specified limits are reported but not rejected.

GitLab Pages supports the following types of rate limiting:

  • Per source_ip. It limits how many requests or TLS connections are allowed from the single client IP address.
  • Per domain. It limits how many requests or TLS connections are allowed per domain hosted on GitLab Pages. It can be a custom domain like example.com, or group domain like group.gitlab.io.

HTTP request-based rate limits are enforced using the following:

  • rate_limit_source_ip: Set the maximum threshold in number of requests per client IP per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
  • rate_limit_source_ip_burst: Sets the maximum threshold of number of requests allowed in an initial outburst of requests per client IP. For example, when you load a web page that loads a number of resources at the same time.
  • rate_limit_domain: Set the maximum threshold in number of requests per hosted pages domain per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
  • rate_limit_domain_burst: Sets the maximum threshold of number of requests allowed in an initial outburst of requests per hosted pages domain.

TLS connection-based rate limits are enforced using the following:

  • rate_limit_tls_source_ip: Set the maximum threshold in number of TLS connections per client IP per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
  • rate_limit_tls_source_ip_burst: Sets the maximum threshold of number of TLS connections allowed in an initial outburst of TLS connections per client IP. For example, when you load a web page from different web browsers at the same time.
  • rate_limit_tls_domain: Set the maximum threshold in number of TLS connections per hosted pages domain per second. Set to 0 to disable this feature.
  • rate_limit_tls_domain_burst: Sets the maximum threshold of number of TLS connections allowed in an initial outburst of TLS connections per hosted pages domain.

An IPv6 address receives a large prefix in the 128-bit address space. The prefix is typically at least size /64. Because of the large number of possible addresses, if the client’s IP address is IPv6, the limit is applied to the IPv6 prefix with a length of 64, rather than the entire IPv6 address.

Enable HTTP requests rate limits by source-IP

History
  1. Set rate limits in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_source_ip'] = 20.0
    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_source_ip_burst'] = 600
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Enable HTTP requests rate limits by domain

History
  1. Set rate limits in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_domain'] = 1000
    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_domain_burst'] = 5000
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Enable TLS connections rate limits by source-IP

History
  1. Set rate limits in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_tls_source_ip'] = 20.0
    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_tls_source_ip_burst'] = 600
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.

Enable TLS connections rate limits by domain

History
  1. Set rate limits in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb:

    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_tls_domain'] = 1000
    gitlab_pages['rate_limit_tls_domain_burst'] = 5000
    
  2. Reconfigure GitLab.