GitLab only offers the Community Edition for Raspbery Pi, this Docker image is based on that one; in addition, only stable builds are containerized.
- This image provides default settings for it to work properly on ARM devices, which do not have a lot of RAM, you can review these settings here or use your own settings as explained in Configure GitLab. As a side note, although is not advised, you may still need to add a bit of SWAP (2GB recommended) to your device or have at least 2GB RAM, this can be achieved by using a USB Drive you have gathering dust somewhere; DO NOT USE THE SD CARD FOR THIS TASK.
- This image does not apply sysctl parameters (see wrapper file), because it has been causing problems when starting in Docker Swarm, you can read the reddit discussion about that. Get to the Sysctl tunning topic in order to know how to apply this on the host running GitLab.
Docker installation is required, see the official installation docs.
Run the image:
docker run -d \
--hostname gitlab.example.com \
-p 443:443 -p 80:80 -p 22:22 \
--name gitlab \
--restart always \
-v /srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab \
kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
This will download and start a GitLab CE container and publish ports needed to
access SSH, HTTP and HTTPS. All GitLab data will be stored as subdirectories of
/srv/gitlab/
. The container will automatically restart
after a system reboot.
You can now login to the web interface as explained in After starting a container.
If you are on SELinux then run this instead:
docker run -d \
--hostname gitlab.example.com \
-p 443:443 -p 80:80 -p 22:22 \
--name gitlab \
--restart always \
-v /srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab:Z \
-v /srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab:Z \
-v /srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab:Z \
kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
This will ensure that the Docker process has enough permissions to create the config files in the mounted volumes.
The GitLab container uses host mounted volumes to store persistent data:
Local location | Container location | Usage |
---|---|---|
/srv/gitlab/data |
/var/opt/gitlab |
For storing application data |
/srv/gitlab/logs |
/var/log/gitlab |
For storing logs |
/srv/gitlab/config |
/etc/gitlab |
For storing the GitLab configuration files |
You can fine tune these directories to meet your requirements.
This container uses the official Omnibus GitLab package, so all configuration
is done in the unique configuration file /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
.
To access GitLab's configuration file, you can start a shell session in the context of a running container. This will allow you to browse all directories and use your favorite text editor:
docker exec -it gitlab /bin/bash
You can also just edit /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
:
docker exec -it gitlab vi /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
Once you open /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
make sure to set the external_url
to
point to a valid URL.
To receive e-mails from GitLab you have to configure the SMTP settings because the GitLab Docker image doesn't have an SMTP server installed.
You may also be interested in Enabling HTTPS.
After you make all the changes you want, you will need to restart the container in order to reconfigure GitLab:
docker restart gitlab
Note: GitLab will reconfigure itself whenever the container starts.
For more options about configuring GitLab please check the Omnibus GitLab documentation.
You can pre-configure the GitLab Docker image by adding the environment
variable GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG
to docker run command. This variable can
contain any gitlab.rb
setting and will be evaluated before loading the
container's gitlab.rb
file. That way you can easily configure GitLab's
external URL, make any database configuration or any other option from the
Omnibus GitLab template.
Note: The settings contained in GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG
will not be written to the gitlab.rb
configuration file, they're evaluated on load.
Here's an example that sets the external URL and enables LFS while starting the container:
docker run -d \
--hostname gitlab.example.com \
--env GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG="external_url 'http://my.domain.com/'; gitlab_rails['lfs_enabled'] = true;" \
-p 443:443 -p 80:80 -p 22:22 \
--name gitlab \
--restart always \
-v /srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab \
kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
Note that every time you execute a docker run
command, you need to provide
the GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG
option. The content of GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG
is
not preserved between subsequent runs.
There are also a limited number of environment variables to configure GitLab. They are documented in the environment variables section of the GitLab documentation.
After starting a container you can visit http://localhost/ or http://192.168.59.103 if you use boot2docker. It might take a while before the Docker container starts to respond to queries.
The very first time you visit GitLab, you will be asked to set up the admin
password. After you change it, you can login with username root
and the
password you set up.
To upgrade GitLab to a new version you have to:
-
Stop the running container:
docker stop gitlab
-
Remove existing container:
docker rm gitlab
-
Pull the new image:
docker pull kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
-
Create the container once again with previously specified options:
docker run -d \ --hostname gitlab.example.com \ -p 443:443 -p 80:80 -p 22:22 \ --name gitlab \ --restart always \ -v /srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab \ -v /srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab \ -v /srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab \ kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
On the first run, GitLab will reconfigure and update itself.
We provide tagged versions of GitLab Docker images.
To see all available tags check:
To use a specific tagged version, replace kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
with
the GitLab version you want to run, for example kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest:10.3.3
.
You can make Docker to use your IP address and forward all traffic to the
GitLab CE container by modifying the -p
flag.
To expose GitLab CE on IP 1.1.1.1:
docker run -d \
--hostname gitlab.example.com \
-p 1.1.1.1:443:443 \
-p 1.1.1.1:80:80 \
-p 1.1.1.1:22:22 \
--name gitlab \
--restart always \
-v /srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab \
kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
You can then access your GitLab instance at http://1.1.1.1/
and https://1.1.1.1/
.
GitLab will occupy by default the following ports inside the container:
80
(HTTP)443
(if you configure HTTPS)8080
(used by Unicorn)22
(used by the SSH daemon)
Note: The format for publishing ports is
hostPort:containerPort
. Read more in Docker's documentation about exposing incoming ports.
Warning: Do NOT use port
8080
otherwise there will be conflicts. This port is already used by Unicorn that runs internally in the container.
If you want to use a different port than 80
(HTTP) or 443
(HTTPS) for the
container, you need to add a separate -p
directive to the docker run
command.
For example, to expose the web interface on port 8929
, and the SSH service on
port 2289
, use the following docker run
command:
docker run -d \
--hostname gitlab.example.com \
-p 8929:80 -p 2289:22 \
--name gitlab \
--restart always \
-v /srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab \
-v /srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab \
kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest
You then need to appropriately configure gitlab.rb
:
-
Set
external_url
:# For HTTP external_url "http://gitlab.example.com:8929" or # For HTTPS (notice the https) external_url "https://gitlab.example.com:8929"
For more information see the NGINX documentation.
-
Set
gitlab_shell_ssh_port
:gitlab_rails['gitlab_shell_ssh_port'] = 2289
Following the above example you will be able to reach GitLab from your
web browser under <hostIP>:8929
and push using SSH under the port 2289
.
A docker-compose.yml
example that uses different ports can be found in the
docker-compose section.
Read container logs:
docker logs gitlab
Enter running container:
docker exec -it gitlab /bin/bash
From within the container you can administer the GitLab container as you would normally administer an Omnibus installation
With Docker compose you can easily configure, install, and upgrade your Docker-based GitLab installation.
-
Install Docker Compose
-
Create a
docker-compose.yml
file (or download an example):web: image: 'kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest' restart: always hostname: 'gitlab.example.com' environment: GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG: | external_url 'https://gitlab.example.com' # Add any other gitlab.rb configuration here, each on its own line ports: - '80:80' - '443:443' - '22:22' volumes: - '/srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab' - '/srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab' - '/srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab'
-
Make sure you are in the same directory as
docker-compose.yml
and rundocker-compose up -d
to start GitLab
Read "Pre-configure Docker container" to see
how the GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG
variable works.
Below is another docker-compose.yml
example with GitLab running on a custom
HTTP and SSH port. Notice how the GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG
variables match the
ports
section:
web:
image: 'kilabyte/gitlab-pi:latest'
restart: always
hostname: 'gitlab.example.com'
environment:
GITLAB_OMNIBUS_CONFIG: |
external_url 'http://gitlab.example.com:9090'
gitlab_rails['gitlab_shell_ssh_port'] = 2224
ports:
- '9090:9090'
- '2224:22'
volumes:
- '/srv/gitlab/config:/etc/gitlab'
- '/srv/gitlab/logs:/var/log/gitlab'
- '/srv/gitlab/data:/var/opt/gitlab'
This is the same as using -p 9090:9090 -p 2224:22
.
Provided you installed GitLab using docker-compose,
all you have to do is run docker-compose pull
and docker-compose up -d
to
download a new release and upgrade your GitLab instance.
The GitLab Docker images can also be deployed to various container scheduling platforms.
- Kubernetes using the GitLab Helm Charts.
- Docker Cloud using the docker-compose config.
Running the image on a Raspbery Pi 3 or any other ARM board might require some sysctl
values in order for it to run properly and have a good performance.
All you need to is add the following at the end of /etc/sysctl.conf
:
kernel.sem = 250 32000 32 262
kernel.shmall = 1048575
kernel.shmmax = 4294967295
net.core.somaxconn = 1024
It can be done with nano
or vim
(e.g. sudo nano /etc/sysctl.conf
).
Once that is done, these values need to loaded to the system, you can do so by running cat /etc/sysctl.conf /etc/sysctl.d/*.conf | sudo sysctl -e -p -
and the host will be ready to run the GitLab docker image.
When updating the Docker image you may encounter an issue where all paths
display the infamous 500 page. If this occurs, try to run
docker restart gitlab
to restart the container and rectify the issue.
When updating from older GitLab Docker images you might encounter permission problems. This happens due to a fact that users in previous images were not preserved correctly. There's script that fixes permissions for all files.
To fix your container, simply execute update-permissions
and restart the
container afterwards:
docker exec gitlab update-permissions
docker restart gitlab
If you are using file ACLs on the docker host, the docker
1 group requires full access to the volumes in order for GitLab to work.
$ getfacl /srv/gitlab
# file: /srv/gitlab
# owner: XXXX
# group: XXXX
user::rwx
group::rwx
group:docker:rwx
mask::rwx
default:user::rwx
default:group::rwx
default:group:docker:rwx
default:mask::rwx
default:other::r-x
If these are not correct, set them with:
$ sudo setfacl -mR default:group:docker:rwx /srv/gitlab
If your problem is not listed here please see getting help for the support channels.
These docker images are not officially supported by GitLab Inc. still efforts are made to keep them up to date.
Footnotes
-
docker
is the default group, if you've changed this, update your commands accordingly. ↩