8.3 KiB
Platform requirements:
The project is designed for the Linux operating system.
It may work on FreeBSD and Mac OS, but we don't test our application for these systems and can't guarantee stability and full functionality.
We officially support (recent versions of) these Linux distributions:
- Ubuntu Linux
- Debian/GNU Linux
It should work on:
- Fedora
- CentOs
- RedHat
You might have some luck using these, but no guarantees:
- MacOS X
- FreeBSD
Gitlab does not run on Windows and we have no plans of making Gitlab compatible.
This installation guide created for Debian/Ubuntu and properly tested.
The installation consists of 6 steps:
- Install packages / dependencies
- Install ruby
- Install gitolite
- Install and configure Gitlab.
- Start the web front-end
- Start a Resque worker (for background processing)
IMPORTANT
Please make sure you have followed all the steps below before posting to the mailinglist with installation and configuration questions.
Only create a Github Issue if you want a specific part of this installation guide updated.
Also read the Read this before you submit an issue wiki page.
First 3 steps can be easily skipped with simply install script:
# Install curl and sudo apt-get install curl sudo # 3 steps in 1 command :) curl https://raw.github.com/gitlabhq/gitlabhq/master/doc/debian_ubuntu.sh | sh
Now you can go to step 4"
1. Install packages
Keep in mind that sudo
is not installed for debian by default. You should install it with as root: apt-get update && apt-get upgrade && apt-get install sudo
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
sudo apt-get install -y wget curl gcc checkinstall libxml2-dev libxslt-dev sqlite3 libsqlite3-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libreadline6-dev libc6-dev libssl-dev libmysql++-dev make build-essential zlib1g-dev libicu-dev redis-server openssh-server git-core python-dev python-pip libyaml-dev postfix
# If you want to use MySQL:
sudo apt-get install -y mysql-server mysql-client libmysqlclient-dev
2. Install ruby
wget http://ftp.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/1.9/ruby-1.9.2-p290.tar.gz
tar xzfv ruby-1.9.2-p290.tar.gz
cd ruby-1.9.2-p290
./configure
make
sudo make install
3. Install gitolite
Create user for git:
sudo adduser \
--system \
--shell /bin/sh \
--gecos 'git version control' \
--group \
--disabled-password \
--home /home/git \
git
Create user for gitlab:
# ubuntu/debian
sudo adduser --disabled-login --gecos 'gitlab system' gitlab
Add your user to git group:
sudo usermod -a -G git gitlab
Generate key:
sudo -H -u gitlab ssh-keygen -q -N '' -t rsa -f /home/gitlab/.ssh/id_rsa
Get gitolite source code:
cd /home/git
sudo -H -u git git clone git://github.com/gitlabhq/gitolite /home/git/gitolite
Setup:
sudo -u git sh -c 'echo -e "PATH=\$PATH:/home/git/bin\nexport PATH" >> /home/git/.profile'
sudo -u git -H sh -c "PATH=/home/git/bin:$PATH; /home/git/gitolite/src/gl-system-install"
sudo cp /home/gitlab/.ssh/id_rsa.pub /home/git/gitlab.pub
sudo chmod 0444 /home/git/gitlab.pub
sudo -u git -H sed -i 's/0077/0007/g' /home/git/share/gitolite/conf/example.gitolite.rc
sudo -u git -H sh -c "PATH=/home/git/bin:$PATH; gl-setup -q /home/git/gitlab.pub"
Permissions:
sudo chmod -R g+rwX /home/git/repositories/
sudo chown -R git:git /home/git/repositories/
CHECK: Logout & login again to apply git group to your user
# clone admin repo to add localhost to known_hosts
# & be sure your user has access to gitolite
sudo -u gitlab -H git clone git@localhost:gitolite-admin.git /tmp/gitolite-admin
# if succeed you can remove it
sudo rm -rf /tmp/gitolite-admin
IMPORTANT! If you cant clone gitolite-admin
repository - DONT PROCEED INSTALLATION
4. Install gitlab and configuration. Check status configuration.
sudo gem install charlock_holmes --version '0.6.8'
sudo pip install pygments
sudo gem install bundler
cd /home/gitlab
sudo -H -u gitlab git clone -b stable git://github.com/gitlabhq/gitlabhq.git gitlab
cd gitlab
sudo -u gitlab mkdir tmp
# Rename config files
sudo -u gitlab cp config/gitlab.yml.example config/gitlab.yml
Select db you want to use
# SQLite
sudo -u gitlab cp config/database.yml.sqlite config/database.yml
# Or
# Mysql
# Install MySQL as directed in Step #1
# Login to MySQL
$ mysql -u root -p
# Create the gitlabhq production database
mysql> CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `gitlabhq_production` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET `utf8` COLLATE `utf8_unicode_ci`;
# Create the MySQL User change $password to a real password
mysql> CREATE USER 'gitlab'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '$password';
# Grant proper permissions to the MySQL User
mysql> GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP, INDEX, ALTER ON `gitlabhq_production`.* TO 'gitlab'@'localhost';
# Exit MySQL Server and copy the example config, make sure to update username/password in config/database.yml
sudo -u gitlab cp config/database.yml.example config/database.yml
Install gems
sudo -u gitlab -H bundle install --without development test --deployment
Setup DB
sudo -u gitlab bundle exec rake gitlab:app:setup RAILS_ENV=production
Setup gitlab hooks
sudo cp ./lib/hooks/post-receive /home/git/share/gitolite/hooks/common/post-receive
sudo chown git:git /home/git/share/gitolite/hooks/common/post-receive
Checking status:
sudo -u gitlab bundle exec rake gitlab:app:status RAILS_ENV=production
# OUTPUT EXAMPLE
Starting diagnostic
config/database.yml............exists
config/gitlab.yml............exists
/home/git/repositories/............exists
/home/git/repositories/ is writable?............YES
remote: Counting objects: 603, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (466/466), done.
remote: Total 603 (delta 174), reused 0 (delta 0)
Receiving objects: 100% (603/603), 53.29 KiB, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (174/174), done.
Can clone gitolite-admin?............YES
UMASK for .gitolite.rc is 0007? ............YES
/home/git/share/gitolite/hooks/common/post-receive exists? ............YES
If you got all YES - congrats! You can go to next step.
5. Server up
Application can be started with next command:
# For test purposes
sudo -u gitlab bundle exec rails s -e production
# As daemon
sudo -u gitlab bundle exec rails s -e production -d
You can login via web using admin generated with setup:
admin@local.host
5iveL!fe
6. Run resque process (for processing queue).
# Manually
sudo -u gitlab bundle exec rake environment resque:work QUEUE=* RAILS_ENV=production BACKGROUND=yes
# Gitlab start script
sudo -u gitlab ./resque.sh
# if you run this as root /home/gitlab/gitlab/tmp/pids/resque_worker.pid will be owned by root
# causing the resque worker not to start via init script on next boot/service restart
**Ok - we have a working application now. ** **But keep going - there are some thing that should be done **
Nginx && Unicorn
Install Nginx
sudo apt-get install nginx
Unicorn
cd /home/gitlab/gitlab
sudo -u gitlab cp config/unicorn.rb.orig config/unicorn.rb
sudo -u gitlab bundle exec unicorn_rails -c config/unicorn.rb -E production -D
Add gitlab to nginx sites & change with your host specific settings
sudo cp /home/gitlab/gitlab/lib/support/nginx-gitlab /etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab
sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/gitlab /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/gitlab
# Change **YOUR_SERVER_IP** and **YOUR_SERVER_FQDN**
# to the IP address and fully-qualified domain name
# of the host serving GitLab.
sudo vim /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/gitlab
Restart nginx:
/etc/init.d/nginx restart
Create init script in /etc/init.d/gitlab:
cp /home/gitlab/gitlab/lib/support/init-gitlab /etc/init.d/gitlab
Adding permission:
sudo chmod +x /etc/init.d/gitlab
Gitlab autostart:
sudo update-rc.d gitlab defaults
Now you can start/restart/stop gitlab like:
sudo /etc/init.d/gitlab restart