- Single instance database replication
- Multi-node database replication
- Troubleshooting
Geo database replication
This document describes the minimal required steps to replicate your primary GitLab database to a secondary site’s database. You may have to change some values, based on attributes including your database’s setup and size.
Ensure the secondary site is running the same version of GitLab Enterprise Edition as the primary site. Confirm you have added a license for a Premium or Ultimate subscription to your primary site.
Be sure to read and review all of these steps before you execute them in your testing or production environments.
Single instance database replication
A single instance database replication is easier to set up and still provides the same Geo capabilities as a clustered alternative. It’s useful for setups running on a single machine or trying to evaluate Geo for a future clustered installation.
A single instance can be expanded to a clustered version using Patroni, which is recommended for a highly available architecture.
Follow the instructions below on how to set up PostgreSQL replication as a single instance database. Alternatively, you can look at the Multi-node database replication instructions on setting up replication with a Patroni cluster.
PostgreSQL replication
The GitLab primary site where the write operations happen connects to the primary database server. Secondary sites connect to their own database servers (which are read-only).
You should use PostgreSQL’s replication slots to ensure that the primary site retains all the data necessary for the secondary sites to recover. See below for more details.
The following guide assumes that:
- You are using the Linux package (so are using PostgreSQL 12 or later),
which includes the
pg_basebackup
tool. - You have a primary site already set up (the GitLab server you are replicating from), running PostgreSQL (or equivalent version) managed by your Linux package installation, and you have a new secondary site set up with the same versions of PostgreSQL, OS, and GitLab on all sites.
Step 1. Configure the primary site
-
SSH into your GitLab primary site and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add a unique name for your site:## ## The unique identifier for the Geo site. See ## https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/geo_sites.html#common-settings ## gitlab_rails['geo_node_name'] = '<site_name_here>'
-
Reconfigure the primary site for the change to take effect:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
Execute the command below to define the site as primary site:
gitlab-ctl set-geo-primary-node
This command uses your defined
external_url
in/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
. -
Define a password for the
gitlab
database user:Generate a MD5 hash of the desired password:
gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab # Enter password: <your_password_here> # Confirm password: <your_password_here> # fca0b89a972d69f00eb3ec98a5838484
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
:# Fill with the hash generated by `gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab` postgresql['sql_user_password'] = '<md5_hash_of_your_password>' # Every node that runs Puma or Sidekiq needs to have the database # password specified as below. If you have a high-availability setup, this # must be present in all application nodes. gitlab_rails['db_password'] = '<your_password_here>'
-
Define a password for the database replication user.
Use the username defined in
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
under thepostgresql['sql_replication_user']
setting. The default value isgitlab_replicator
. If you changed the username to something else, adapt the instructions below.Generate a MD5 hash of the desired password:
gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab_replicator # Enter password: <your_password_here> # Confirm password: <your_password_here> # 950233c0dfc2f39c64cf30457c3b7f1e
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
:# Fill with the hash generated by `gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab_replicator` postgresql['sql_replication_password'] = '<md5_hash_of_your_password>'
If you are using an external database not managed by your Linux package installation, you need to create the
gitlab_replicator
user and define a password for that user manually:--- Create a new user 'replicator' CREATE USER gitlab_replicator; --- Set/change a password and grants replication privilege ALTER USER gitlab_replicator WITH REPLICATION ENCRYPTED PASSWORD '<replication_password>';
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and set the role togeo_primary_role
(for more information, see Geo roles):## Geo Primary role roles(['geo_primary_role'])
-
Configure PostgreSQL to listen on network interfaces:
For security reasons, PostgreSQL does not listen on any network interfaces by default. However, Geo requires the secondary site to be able to connect to the primary site’s database. For this reason, you need the IP address of each site.
For external PostgreSQL instances, see additional instructions.If you are using a cloud provider, you can look up the addresses for each Geo site through your cloud provider’s management console.
To look up the address of a Geo site, SSH into the Geo site and execute:
## ## Private address ## ip route get 255.255.255.255 | awk '{print "Private address:", $NF; exit}' ## ## Public address ## echo "External address: $(curl --silent "ipinfo.io/ip")"
In most cases, the following addresses are used to configure GitLab Geo:
Configuration Address postgresql['listen_address']
Primary site’s public or VPC private address. postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses']
Primary and Secondary sites’ public or VPC private addresses. If you are using Google Cloud Platform, SoftLayer, or any other vendor that provides a virtual private cloud (VPC), we recommend using the primary and secondary sites’ “private” or “internal” addresses for
postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses']
andpostgresql['listen_address']
.The
listen_address
option opens PostgreSQL up to network connections with the interface corresponding to the given address. See the PostgreSQL documentation for more details.If you need to use0.0.0.0
or*
as thelisten_address
, you also must add127.0.0.1/32
to thepostgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses']
setting, to allow Rails to connect through127.0.0.1
. For more information, see issue 5258.Depending on your network configuration, the suggested addresses may be incorrect. If your primary site and secondary sites connect over a local area network, or a virtual network connecting availability zones like Amazon’s VPC or Google’s VPC, you should use the secondary site’s private address for
postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses']
.Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following, replacing the IP addresses with addresses appropriate to your network configuration:## ## Primary address ## - replace '<primary_node_ip>' with the public or VPC address of your Geo primary node ## postgresql['listen_address'] = '<primary_site_ip>' ## # Allow PostgreSQL client authentication from the primary and secondary IPs. These IPs may be # public or VPC addresses in CIDR format, for example ['198.51.100.1/32', '198.51.100.2/32'] ## postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses'] = ['<primary_site_ip>/32', '<secondary_site_ip>/32'] ## ## Replication settings ## # postgresql['max_replication_slots'] = 1 # Set this to be the number of Geo secondary nodes if you have more than one # postgresql['max_wal_senders'] = 10 # postgresql['wal_keep_segments'] = 10
-
Disable automatic database migrations temporarily until PostgreSQL is restarted and listening on the private address. Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and change the configuration to false:## Disable automatic database migrations gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false
-
Optional: If you want to add another secondary site, the relevant setting would look like:
postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses'] = ['<primary_site_ip>/32', '<secondary_site_ip>/32', '<another_secondary_site_ip>/32']
You may also want to edit the
wal_keep_segments
andmax_wal_senders
to match your database replication requirements. Consult the PostgreSQL - Replication documentation for more information. -
Save the file and reconfigure GitLab for the database listen changes and the replication slot changes to be applied:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
Restart PostgreSQL for its changes to take effect:
gitlab-ctl restart postgresql
-
Re-enable migrations now that PostgreSQL is restarted and listening on the private address.
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and change the configuration totrue
:gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = true
Save the file and reconfigure GitLab:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
Now that the PostgreSQL server is set up to accept remote connections, run
netstat -plnt | grep 5432
to ensure that PostgreSQL is listening on port5432
to the primary site’s private address. -
A certificate was automatically generated when GitLab was reconfigured. This is used automatically to protect your PostgreSQL traffic from eavesdroppers. To protect against active (“man-in-the-middle”) attackers, the secondary site needs a copy of the certificate. Make a copy of the PostgreSQL
server.crt
file on the primary site by running this command:cat ~gitlab-psql/data/server.crt
Copy the output to the clipboard or into a local file. You need it when setting up the secondary site! The certificate is not sensitive data.
However, this certificate is created with a generic
PostgreSQL
Common Name. For this, you must use theverify-ca
mode when replicating the database, otherwise, the hostname mismatch causes errors. -
Optional. Generate your own SSL certificate and manually configure SSL for PostgreSQL, instead of using the generated certificate.
You need at least the SSL certificate and key. Set the
postgresql['ssl_cert_file']
andpostgresql['ssl_key_file']
values to their full paths, as per the Database SSL docs.This allows you to use the
verify-full
SSL mode when replicating the database and get the extra benefit of verifying the full hostname in the CN.You can use this certificate (that you have also set in
postgresql['ssl_cert_file']
) instead of the certificate from the point above going forward. This allows you to useverify-full
without replication errors if the CN matches.
Step 2. Configure the secondary server
-
SSH into your GitLab secondary site and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Stop application server and Sidekiq
gitlab-ctl stop puma gitlab-ctl stop sidekiq
This step is important so you don’t try to execute anything before the site is fully configured. -
Check TCP connectivity to the primary site’s PostgreSQL server:
gitlab-rake gitlab:tcp_check[<primary_site_ip>,5432]
If this step fails, you may be using the wrong IP address, or a firewall may be preventing access to the site. Check the IP address, paying close attention to the difference between public and private addresses. Ensure that, if a firewall is present, the secondary site is permitted to connect to the primary site on port 5432. -
Create a file
server.crt
in the secondary site, with the content you got on the last step of the primary site’s setup:editor server.crt
-
Set up PostgreSQL TLS verification on the secondary site:
Install the
server.crt
file:install \ -D \ -o gitlab-psql \ -g gitlab-psql \ -m 0400 \ -T server.crt ~gitlab-psql/.postgresql/root.crt
PostgreSQL now only recognizes that exact certificate when verifying TLS connections. The certificate can only be replicated by someone with access to the private key, which is only present on the primary site.
-
Test that the
gitlab-psql
user can connect to the primary site’s database (the default database name isgitlabhq_production
on a Linux package installation):sudo \ -u gitlab-psql /opt/gitlab/embedded/bin/psql \ --list \ -U gitlab_replicator \ -d "dbname=gitlabhq_production sslmode=verify-ca" \ -W \ -h <primary_site_ip>
If you are using manually generated certificates and want to usesslmode=verify-full
to benefit from the full hostname verification, replaceverify-ca
withverify-full
when running the command.When prompted, enter the plaintext password you set in the first step for the
gitlab_replicator
user. If all worked correctly, you should see the list of the primary site’s databases.A failure to connect here indicates that the TLS configuration is incorrect. Ensure that the contents of
~gitlab-psql/data/server.crt
on the primary site match the contents of~gitlab-psql/.postgresql/root.crt
on the secondary site. -
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and set the role togeo_secondary_role
(for more information, see Geo roles):## ## Geo Secondary role ## - configure dependent flags automatically to enable Geo ## roles(['geo_secondary_role'])
-
Configure PostgreSQL:
This step is similar to how you configured the primary instance. You must enable this, even if using a single node.
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following, replacing the IP addresses with addresses appropriate to your network configuration:## ## Secondary address ## - replace '<secondary_site_ip>' with the public or VPC address of your Geo secondary site ## postgresql['listen_address'] = '<secondary_site_ip>' postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses'] = ['<secondary_site_ip>/32'] ## ## Database credentials password (defined previously in primary site) ## - replicate same values here as defined in primary site ## postgresql['sql_replication_password'] = '<md5_hash_of_your_password>' postgresql['sql_user_password'] = '<md5_hash_of_your_password>' gitlab_rails['db_password'] = '<your_password_here>'
For external PostgreSQL instances, see additional instructions. If you bring a former primary site back online to serve as a secondary site, then you also must remove
roles(['geo_primary_role'])
orgeo_primary_role['enable'] = true
. -
Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
Restart PostgreSQL for the IP change to take effect:
gitlab-ctl restart postgresql
Step 3. Initiate the replication process
Below is a script that connects the database on the secondary site to the database on the primary site. This script replicates the database and creates the needed files for streaming replication.
The directories used are the defaults that are set up in a Linux package installation. If you have changed any defaults, configure the script accordingly (replacing any directories and paths).
pg_basebackup
.-
SSH into your GitLab secondary site and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Choose a database-friendly name to use for your secondary site to use as the replication slot name. For example, if your domain is
secondary.geo.example.com
, usesecondary_example
as the slot name as shown in the commands below. -
Execute the command below to start a backup/restore and begin the replication
Each Geo secondary site must have its own unique replication slot name. Using the same slot name between two secondaries breaks PostgreSQL replication.Replication slot names must only contain lowercase letters, numbers, and the underscore character.When prompted, enter the plaintext password you set up for the
gitlab_replicator
user in the first step.gitlab-ctl replicate-geo-database \ --slot-name=<secondary_site_name> \ --host=<primary_site_ip> \ --sslmode=verify-ca
If you have generated custom PostgreSQL certificates, you need to use--sslmode=verify-full
(or omit thesslmode
line entirely), to benefit from the extra validation of the full host name in the certificate CN / SAN for additional security. Otherwise, using the automatically created certificate withverify-full
fails, as it has a genericPostgreSQL
CN which doesn’t match the--host
value in this command.This command also takes a number of additional options. You can use
--help
to list them all, but here are some tips:- If PostgreSQL is listening on a non-standard port, add
--port=
. - If your database is too large to be transferred in 30 minutes, you need
to increase the timeout. For example, use
--backup-timeout=3600
if you expect the initial replication to take under an hour. - Pass
--sslmode=disable
to skip PostgreSQL TLS authentication altogether (for example, you know the network path is secure, or you are using a site-to-site VPN). It is not safe over the public Internet! - You can read more details about each
sslmode
in the PostgreSQL documentation. The instructions above are carefully written to ensure protection against both passive eavesdroppers and active “man-in-the-middle” attackers. - Change the
--slot-name
to the name of the replication slot to be used on the primary database. The script attempts to create the replication slot automatically if it does not exist. - If you’re repurposing an old site into a Geo secondary site, you must
add
--force
to the command line. - When not in a production machine, you can disable the backup step (if you
are certain this is what you want) by adding
--skip-backup
. - If you are using PgBouncer, you need to target the database host directly.
- If you are using Patroni on your primary site, you must target the current leader host.
- If you are using a load balancer proxy (for example HAProxy) and it is targeting the Patroni leader for the primary, you should target the load balancer proxy instead.
- If PostgreSQL is listening on a non-standard port, add
The replication process is now complete.
PgBouncer support (optional)
PgBouncer may be used with GitLab Geo to pool PostgreSQL connections, which can improve performance even when using in a single instance installation.
You should use PgBouncer if you use GitLab in a highly available configuration with a cluster of nodes supporting a Geo primary site and two other clusters of nodes supporting a Geo secondary site. You need two PgBouncer nodes: one for the main database and the other for the tracking database. For more information, see the relevant documentation.
Changing the replication password
To change the password for the replication user when using PostgreSQL instances managed by a Linux package installation:
On the GitLab Geo primary site:
-
The default value for the replication user is
gitlab_replicator
, but if you’ve set a custom replication user in your/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
under thepostgresql['sql_replication_user']
setting, ensure you adapt the following instructions for your own user.Generate an MD5 hash of the desired password:
sudo gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab_replicator # Enter password: <your_password_here> # Confirm password: <your_password_here> # 950233c0dfc2f39c64cf30457c3b7f1e
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
:# Fill with the hash generated by `gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab_replicator` postgresql['sql_replication_password'] = '<md5_hash_of_your_password>'
-
Save the file and reconfigure GitLab to change the replication user’s password in PostgreSQL:
sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
Restart PostgreSQL for the replication password change to take effect:
sudo gitlab-ctl restart postgresql
Until the password is updated on any secondary sites, the PostgreSQL log on the secondaries report the following error message:
FATAL: could not connect to the primary server: FATAL: password authentication failed for user "gitlab_replicator"
On all GitLab Geo secondary sites:
-
The first step isn’t necessary from a configuration perspective, because the hashed
'sql_replication_password'
is not used on the GitLab Geo secondary sites. However in the event that secondary site needs to be promoted to the GitLab Geo primary, make sure to match the'sql_replication_password'
in the secondary site configuration.Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
:# Fill with the hash generated by `gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab_replicator` on the Geo primary postgresql['sql_replication_password'] = '<md5_hash_of_your_password>'
-
During the initial replication setup, the
gitlab-ctl replicate-geo-database
command writes the plaintext password for the replication user account to two locations:-
gitlab-geo.conf
: Used by the PostgreSQL replication process, written to the PostgreSQL data directory, by default at/var/opt/gitlab/postgresql/data/gitlab-geo.conf
. -
.pgpass
: Used by thegitlab-psql
user, located by default at/var/opt/gitlab/postgresql/.pgpass
.
Update the plaintext password in both of these files, and restart PostgreSQL:
sudo gitlab-ctl restart postgresql
-
Multi-node database replication
In GitLab 14.0, Patroni replaced repmgr
as the supported
highly available PostgreSQL solution.
Migrating from repmgr to Patroni
- Before migrating, you should ensure there is no replication lag between the primary and secondary sites and that replication is paused. In GitLab 13.2 and later, you can pause and resume replication with
gitlab-ctl geo-replication-pause
andgitlab-ctl geo-replication-resume
on a Geo secondary database node. - Follow the instructions to migrate repmgr to Patroni. When configuring Patroni on each primary site database node, add
patroni['replication_slots'] = { '<slot_name>' => 'physical' }
togitlab.rb
where<slot_name>
is the name of the replication slot for your secondary site. This ensures that Patroni recognizes the replication slot as permanent and doesn’t drop it upon restarting. - If database replication to the secondary site was paused before migration, resume replication after Patroni is confirmed as working on the primary site.
Migrating a single PostgreSQL node to Patroni
Before the introduction of Patroni, Geo had no support for Linux package installations for HA setups on the secondary site.
With Patroni, this support is now possible. To migrate the existing PostgreSQL to Patroni:
- Make sure you have a Consul cluster setup on the secondary (similar to how you set it up on the primary site).
- Configure a permanent replication slot.
- Configure the internal load balancer.
- Configure a PgBouncer node
- Configure a Standby Cluster on that single node machine.
You end up with a Standby Cluster with a single node. That allows you to add additional Patroni nodes by following the same instructions above.
Patroni support
Patroni is the official replication management solution for Geo. Patroni can be used to build a highly available cluster on the primary and a secondary Geo site. Using Patroni on a secondary site is optional and you don’t have to use the same number of nodes on each Geo site.
For instructions on how to set up Patroni on the primary site, see the relevant documentation.
Configuring Patroni cluster for a Geo secondary site
In a Geo secondary site, the main PostgreSQL database is a read-only replica of the primary site’s PostgreSQL database.
If you are using repmgr
on your Geo primary site, see these instructions
for migrating from repmgr
to Patroni.
A production-ready and secure setup requires at least:
- 3 Consul nodes (primary and secondary sites)
- 2 Patroni nodes (primary and secondary sites)
- 1 PgBouncer node (primary and secondary sites)
- 1 internal load-balancer (primary site only)
The internal load balancer provides a single endpoint for connecting to the Patroni cluster’s leader whenever a new leader is elected. The load balancer is required for enabling cascading replication from the secondary sites.
Be sure to use password credentials and other database best practices.
Step 1. Configure Patroni permanent replication slot on the primary site
To set up database replication with Patroni on a secondary site, you must configure a permanent replication slot on the primary site’s Patroni cluster, and ensure password authentication is used.
On each node running a Patroni instance on the primary site starting on the Patroni Leader instance:
-
SSH into your Patroni instance and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following:roles(['patroni_role']) consul['services'] = %w(postgresql) consul['configuration'] = { retry_join: %w[CONSUL_PRIMARY1_IP CONSUL_PRIMARY2_IP CONSUL_PRIMARY3_IP] } # You need one entry for each secondary, with a unique name following PostgreSQL slot_name constraints: # # Configuration syntax is: 'unique_slotname' => { 'type' => 'physical' }, # We don't support setting a permanent replication slot for logical replication type patroni['replication_slots'] = { 'geo_secondary' => { 'type' => 'physical' } } patroni['use_pg_rewind'] = true patroni['postgresql']['max_wal_senders'] = 8 # Use double of the amount of patroni/reserved slots (3 patronis + 1 reserved slot for a Geo secondary). patroni['postgresql']['max_replication_slots'] = 8 # Use double of the amount of patroni/reserved slots (3 patronis + 1 reserved slot for a Geo secondary). patroni['username'] = 'PATRONI_API_USERNAME' patroni['password'] = 'PATRONI_API_PASSWORD' patroni['replication_password'] = 'PLAIN_TEXT_POSTGRESQL_REPLICATION_PASSWORD' # Add all patroni nodes to the allowlist patroni['allowlist'] = %w[ 127.0.0.1/32 PATRONI_PRIMARY1_IP/32 PATRONI_PRIMARY2_IP/32 PATRONI_PRIMARY3_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY1_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY2_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY3_IP/32 ] # We list all secondary instances as they can all become a Standby Leader postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses'] = %w[ PATRONI_PRIMARY1_IP/32 PATRONI_PRIMARY2_IP/32 PATRONI_PRIMARY3_IP/32 PATRONI_PRIMARY_PGBOUNCER/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY1_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY2_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY3_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY_PGBOUNCER/32 ] postgresql['pgbouncer_user_password'] = 'PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['sql_replication_password'] = 'POSTGRESQL_REPLICATION_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['sql_user_password'] = 'POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['listen_address'] = '0.0.0.0' # You can use a public or VPC address here instead
-
Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
Step 2. Configure the internal load balancer on the primary site
To avoid reconfiguring the Standby Leader on the secondary site whenever a new Leader is elected on the primary site, you should set up a TCP internal load balancer. This load balancer provides a single endpoint for connecting to the Patroni cluster’s Leader.
Linux packages do not include a Load Balancer. Here’s how you could do it with HAProxy.
The following IPs and names are used as an example:
-
10.6.0.21
: Patroni 1 (patroni1.internal
) -
10.6.0.22
: Patroni 2 (patroni2.internal
) -
10.6.0.23
: Patroni 3 (patroni3.internal
)
global
log /dev/log local0
log localhost local1 notice
log stdout format raw local0
defaults
log global
default-server inter 3s fall 3 rise 2 on-marked-down shutdown-sessions
frontend internal-postgresql-tcp-in
bind *:5000
mode tcp
option tcplog
default_backend postgresql
backend postgresql
option httpchk
http-check expect status 200
server patroni1.internal 10.6.0.21:5432 maxconn 100 check port 8008
server patroni2.internal 10.6.0.22:5432 maxconn 100 check port 8008
server patroni3.internal 10.6.0.23:5432 maxconn 100 check port 8008
For further guidance, refer to the documentation for your preferred load balancer.
Step 3. Configure PgBouncer nodes on the secondary site
A production-ready and highly available configuration requires at least three Consul nodes and a minimum of one PgBouncer node. However, it is recommended to have one PgBouncer node per database node. An internal load balancer (TCP) is required when there is more than one PgBouncer service node. The internal load balancer provides a single endpoint for connecting to the PgBouncer cluster. For more information, see the relevant documentation.
On each node running a PgBouncer instance on the secondary site:
-
SSH into your PgBouncer node and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following:# Disable all components except Pgbouncer and Consul agent roles(['pgbouncer_role']) # PgBouncer configuration pgbouncer['admin_users'] = %w(pgbouncer gitlab-consul) pgbouncer['users'] = { 'gitlab-consul': { # Generate it with: `gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 gitlab-consul` password: 'GITLAB_CONSUL_PASSWORD_HASH' }, 'pgbouncer': { # Generate it with: `gitlab-ctl pg-password-md5 pgbouncer` password: 'PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD_HASH' } } # Consul configuration consul['watchers'] = %w(postgresql) consul['configuration'] = { retry_join: %w[CONSUL_SECONDARY1_IP CONSUL_SECONDARY2_IP CONSUL_SECONDARY3_IP] } consul['monitoring_service_discovery'] = true
-
Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
Create a
.pgpass
file so Consul is able to reload PgBouncer. Enter thePLAIN_TEXT_PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD
twice when asked:gitlab-ctl write-pgpass --host 127.0.0.1 --database pgbouncer --user pgbouncer --hostuser gitlab-consul
-
Reload the PgBouncer service:
gitlab-ctl hup pgbouncer
Step 4. Configure a Standby cluster on the secondary site
For each node running a Patroni instance on the secondary site:
-
SSH into your Patroni node and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following:roles(['consul_role', 'patroni_role']) consul['enable'] = true consul['configuration'] = { retry_join: %w[CONSUL_SECONDARY1_IP CONSUL_SECONDARY2_IP CONSUL_SECONDARY3_IP] } consul['services'] = %w(postgresql) postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses'] = [ 'PATRONI_SECONDARY1_IP/32', 'PATRONI_SECONDARY2_IP/32', 'PATRONI_SECONDARY3_IP/32', 'PATRONI_SECONDARY_PGBOUNCER/32', # Any other instance that needs access to the database as per documentation ] # Add patroni nodes to the allowlist patroni['allowlist'] = %w[ 127.0.0.1/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY1_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY2_IP/32 PATRONI_SECONDARY3_IP/32 ] patroni['standby_cluster']['enable'] = true patroni['standby_cluster']['host'] = 'INTERNAL_LOAD_BALANCER_PRIMARY_IP' patroni['standby_cluster']['port'] = INTERNAL_LOAD_BALANCER_PRIMARY_PORT patroni['standby_cluster']['primary_slot_name'] = 'geo_secondary' # Or the unique replication slot name you setup before patroni['username'] = 'PATRONI_API_USERNAME' patroni['password'] = 'PATRONI_API_PASSWORD' patroni['replication_password'] = 'PLAIN_TEXT_POSTGRESQL_REPLICATION_PASSWORD' patroni['use_pg_rewind'] = true patroni['postgresql']['max_wal_senders'] = 5 # A minimum of three for one replica, plus two for each additional replica patroni['postgresql']['max_replication_slots'] = 5 # A minimum of three for one replica, plus two for each additional replica postgresql['pgbouncer_user_password'] = 'PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['sql_replication_password'] = 'POSTGRESQL_REPLICATION_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['sql_user_password'] = 'POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['listen_address'] = '0.0.0.0' # You can use a public or VPC address here instead gitlab_rails['db_password'] = 'POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD' gitlab_rails['enable'] = true gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false
-
Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect. This step is required to bootstrap PostgreSQL users and settings.
-
If this is a fresh installation of Patroni:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
If you are configuring a Patroni standby cluster on a site that previously had a working Patroni cluster:
gitlab-ctl stop patroni rm -rf /var/opt/gitlab/postgresql/data /opt/gitlab/embedded/bin/patronictl -c /var/opt/gitlab/patroni/patroni.yaml remove postgresql-ha gitlab-ctl reconfigure gitlab-ctl start patroni
-
Migrating a single tracking database node to Patroni
Before the introduction of Patroni, Geo provided no support for Linux package installations for HA setups on the secondary site.
With Patroni, it’s now possible to support HA setups. However, some restrictions in Patroni prevent the management of two different clusters on the same machine. You should set up a new Patroni cluster for the tracking database by following the same instructions above.
The secondary nodes backfill the new tracking database, and no data synchronization is required.
Configuring Patroni cluster for the tracking PostgreSQL database
Secondary sites use a separate PostgreSQL installation as a tracking database to
keep track of replication status and automatically recover from potential replication issues.
The Linux package automatically configures a tracking database when roles(['geo_secondary_role'])
is set.
If you want to run this database in a highly available configuration, don’t use the geo_secondary_role
above.
Instead, follow the instructions below.
If you want to run the Geo tracking database on a single node, see Configure the Geo tracking database on the Geo secondary site.
A production-ready and secure setup for the tracking PostgreSQL DB requires at least three Consul nodes: two Patroni nodes, and one PgBouncer node on the secondary site.
Because of issue 6587, Consul can’t track multiple services, so these must be different than the nodes used for the Standby Cluster database.
Be sure to use password credentials and other database best practices.
Step 1. Configure PgBouncer nodes on the secondary site
On each node running the PgBouncer service for the PostgreSQL tracking database:
-
SSH into your PgBouncer node and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following:# Disable all components except Pgbouncer and Consul agent roles(['pgbouncer_role']) # PgBouncer configuration pgbouncer['users'] = { 'pgbouncer': { password: 'PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD_HASH' } } pgbouncer['databases'] = { gitlabhq_geo_production: { user: 'pgbouncer', password: 'PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD_HASH' } } # Consul configuration consul['watchers'] = %w(postgresql) consul['configuration'] = { retry_join: %w[CONSUL_TRACKINGDB1_IP CONSUL_TRACKINGDB2_IP CONSUL_TRACKINGDB3_IP] } consul['monitoring_service_discovery'] = true # GitLab database settings gitlab_rails['db_database'] = 'gitlabhq_geo_production' gitlab_rails['db_username'] = 'gitlab_geo'
-
Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
Create a
.pgpass
file so Consul is able to reload PgBouncer. Enter thePLAIN_TEXT_PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD
twice when asked:gitlab-ctl write-pgpass --host 127.0.0.1 --database pgbouncer --user pgbouncer --hostuser gitlab-consul
-
Restart the PgBouncer service:
gitlab-ctl restart pgbouncer
Step 2. Configure a Patroni cluster
On each node running a Patroni instance on the secondary site for the PostgreSQL tracking database:
-
SSH into your Patroni node and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following:# Disable all components except PostgreSQL, Patroni, and Consul roles(['patroni_role']) # Consul configuration consul['services'] = %w(postgresql) consul['configuration'] = { server: true, retry_join: %w[CONSUL_TRACKINGDB1_IP CONSUL_TRACKINGDB2_IP CONSUL_TRACKINGDB3_IP] } # PostgreSQL configuration postgresql['listen_address'] = '0.0.0.0' postgresql['hot_standby'] = 'on' postgresql['wal_level'] = 'replica' postgresql['pgbouncer_user_password'] = 'PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['sql_replication_password'] = 'POSTGRESQL_REPLICATION_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['sql_user_password'] = 'POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD_HASH' postgresql['md5_auth_cidr_addresses'] = [ 'PATRONI_TRACKINGDB1_IP/32', 'PATRONI_TRACKINGDB2_IP/32', 'PATRONI_TRACKINGDB3_IP/32', 'PATRONI_TRACKINGDB_PGBOUNCER/32', # Any other instance that needs access to the database as per documentation ] # Add patroni nodes to the allowlist patroni['allowlist'] = %w[ 127.0.0.1/32 PATRONI_TRACKINGDB1_IP/32 PATRONI_TRACKINGDB2_IP/32 PATRONI_TRACKINGDB3_IP/32 ] # Patroni configuration patroni['username'] = 'PATRONI_API_USERNAME' patroni['password'] = 'PATRONI_API_PASSWORD' patroni['replication_password'] = 'PLAIN_TEXT_POSTGRESQL_REPLICATION_PASSWORD' patroni['postgresql']['max_wal_senders'] = 5 # A minimum of three for one replica, plus two for each additional replica # GitLab database settings gitlab_rails['db_database'] = 'gitlabhq_geo_production' gitlab_rails['db_username'] = 'gitlab_geo' gitlab_rails['enable'] = true # Disable automatic database migrations gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false
-
Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect. This step is required to bootstrap PostgreSQL users and settings:
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
Step 3. Configure the tracking database on the secondary sites
For each node running the gitlab-rails
, sidekiq
, and geo-logcursor
services:
-
SSH into your node and log in as root:
sudo -i
-
Edit
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
and add the following attributes. You may have other attributes set, but the following must be set.# Tracking database settings geo_secondary['db_username'] = 'gitlab_geo' geo_secondary['db_password'] = 'PLAIN_TEXT_PGBOUNCER_PASSWORD' geo_secondary['db_database'] = 'gitlabhq_geo_production' geo_secondary['db_host'] = 'PATRONI_TRACKINGDB_PGBOUNCER_IP' geo_secondary['db_port'] = 6432 geo_secondary['auto_migrate'] = false # Disable the tracking database service geo_postgresql['enable'] = false
-
Reconfigure GitLab for the changes to take effect.
gitlab-ctl reconfigure
-
Run the tracking database migrations:
gitlab-rake db:migrate:geo
Troubleshooting
Read the troubleshooting document.