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=== Login page accessible, but root login fails after fresh install === | |||
Apparently, it can happen that no root user is created (or at least not fully created in the database) when building the system with a newly configured Gitlab service. | |||
In this case, it can help to stop the Gitlab service, drop the postgres database and reboot the system. This sequence instantiates the Gitlab root user. With that, it's possible to log in with user "root" and the password configured in "initialRootPasswordFile".<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | |||
# stop the gitlab stack | |||
systemctl stop gitlab.service | |||
# drop the database | |||
sudo -u postgres dropdb gitlab | |||
# reboot (just starting the gitlab service again seems not to be sufficient) | |||
sudo reboot | |||
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==Notes== | ==Notes== |
Revision as of 19:34, 10 December 2024
The GitLab web application offers git repository management, code reviews, issue tracking, activity feeds and wikis.
This article is an extension of the NixOS manual.
Installation
A minimal local installation of Gitlab might look like this
services.gitlab = {
enable = true;
databasePasswordFile = pkgs.writeText "dbPassword" "zgvcyfwsxzcwr85l";
initialRootPasswordFile = pkgs.writeText "rootPassword" "dakqdvp4ovhksxer";
secrets = {
secretFile = pkgs.writeText "secret" "Aig5zaic";
otpFile = pkgs.writeText "otpsecret" "Riew9mue";
dbFile = pkgs.writeText "dbsecret" "we2quaeZ";
jwsFile = pkgs.runCommand "oidcKeyBase" {} "${pkgs.openssl}/bin/openssl genrsa 2048 > $out";
};
};
services.nginx = {
enable = true;
recommendedProxySettings = true;
virtualHosts = {
localhost = {
locations."/".proxyPass = "http://unix:/run/gitlab/gitlab-workhorse.socket";
};
};
};
services.openssh.enable = true;
systemd.services.gitlab-backup.environment.BACKUP = "dump";
After applying the configuration head to http://localhost and login with username root
and the password specified in initialRootPasswordFile
.
Even though it is easy to provide the secrets in the configuration.nix
with pkgs.writeText
, keep in mind that it might not be the best method, because they get written to the world readable nix-store this way.
A safer solution is to put them somewhere in the file system with the right chmod and owner set and include them using ./<filename>
or to use a secret managment tool
Maintenance
Query info about your Gitlab instance
gitlab-rake gitlab:env:info
Check for configuration errors
gitlab-rake gitlab:check
Tips and tricks
Run Gitlab behind reverse proxy
In case your Gitlab instance is running behind a reverse proxy which does offer TLS encryption, you might need to adapt your configuration
services.gitlab = {
[...]
https = true;
port = 443;
host = "git.example.org";
};
Migrating an existing Gitlab to a Nixos installation
Make a backup on the on the old installation following the Gitlab backup guide. It is important to be on the same version and edition that you want to install on your new server.
Then install a Gitlab on the NixOS. Make sure you set the same secrets like on the old installation.
After a successful deploy:
- Stop the Gitlab service using
systemctl stop gitlab.service
. - Start Gitaly
systemctl start gitaly.service
- It gets stopped when gitlab.service stops.
- Then copy the backup *_gitlab_backup.tar to the backup folder
cp 1719619965_2024_06_29_16.11.4_gitlab_backup.tar /var/gitlab/state/backup
- Run
sudo -u gitlab gitlab-rake gitlab:backup:restore BACKUP=<name before the _gitlab_backup.tar>
.- For example
sudo -u gitlab gitlab-rake gitlab:backup:restore BACKUP=1719619965_2024_06_29_16.11.4
- For example
- You will be interactively asked what should be done.
- You will most likely be saying yes hrtr
- Start the Gitlab Service again using
systemctl start gitlab.service
.
You may need to rebuild the system for everything to properly come up.
Troubleshooting
Error 422 The change you requested was rejected on login
There might be different reasons for this error to show up after a failing login. One possible issue could be that your Gitlab instance is configured to be served with SSL encryption but running unencrypted behind a reverse proxy
services.gitlab = {
enable = true;
port = 443;
https = true;
[...]
To solve this, add following http headers to your upstream reverse proxy. In this example for the web server Caddy but it can be set for others too
caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts = {
"git.example.org".extraConfig = ''
reverse_proxy http://10.100.0.3 {
header_up X-Forwarded-Proto https
header_up X-Forwarded-Ssl on
}
'';
};
};
Login page accessible, but root login fails after fresh install
Apparently, it can happen that no root user is created (or at least not fully created in the database) when building the system with a newly configured Gitlab service.
In this case, it can help to stop the Gitlab service, drop the postgres database and reboot the system. This sequence instantiates the Gitlab root user. With that, it's possible to log in with user "root" and the password configured in "initialRootPasswordFile".
# stop the gitlab stack
systemctl stop gitlab.service
# drop the database
sudo -u postgres dropdb gitlab
# reboot (just starting the gitlab service again seems not to be sufficient)
sudo reboot
Notes
Gitlab will add a user "gitlab" to your NixOS, many tutorials online point to using git over ssh with the user "git", which in our case will not match since there is no user "git". If you configure your SSH hosts with ~/.ssh/config this should work:
Host your.selfhosted.com HostName your.selfhosted.com User gitlab IdentityFile /path/to/your/ssh/private/key # The following are optional: IdentitiesOnly yes PreferredAuthentications publickey