- Offloads uploading to GitLab Workhorse
- Use /authorize request for fast uploading
- Added backup recipes for artifacts
- Support download acceleration using X-Sendfile
Before this change NGINX would convert a chunked HTTP POST (e.g.
git push) into a HTTP 1.0 single large POST. This creates an
unnecessary delay, and it creates unnecessary memory pressure on
gitlab-git-http-server.
For the response ('proxy_buffering') I am less sure that NGINX 's
buffering behavior is harmful, but it still makes more sense to me
not to interfere with gitlab-git-http-server (and the Golang net/http
server).
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-git-http-server
This change introduces the GITLAB_GRACK_AUTH_ONLY environment
variable. When set, Grack requests to GitLab will only respond with
the user's GL_ID (if the request is OK) or an error. This allows
gitlab-git-http-server to use the main GitLab application as an
authentication and authorization backend.
If we like how this works we should drop the GITLAB_GRACK_AUTH_ONLY
variable at some point in the future.
Close#178 Nginx conf default_host documentation
This closes#178
We're just making it clear that some nginx installs such as by default on recent Ubuntu's, the /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default file will conflict the listen line of the gitlab nginx conf's due to the default_server directive.
changed installation.md to identify the issue to a user
added notes to both nginx configs for gitlab and gitlab-ssl
[ci-skip
See merge request !225
Some users disabled "git" user's shell after finished installation, this
will lead to "This account is currently not available" and could not
run /etc/init.d/gitlab, this dirty trick fix it.
Signed-off-by: Drunkard Zhang <gongfan193@gmail.com>
This will ensure nginx starts up without the following errors messages:
nginx: [emerg] bind() to [::]:443 failed (98: Address already in use)
nginx: [emerg] bind() to [::]:443 failed (98: Address already in use)
nginx: [emerg] bind() to [::]:443 failed (98: Address already in use)
nginx: [emerg] bind() to [::]:443 failed (98: Address already in use)
nginx: [emerg] bind() to [::]:443 failed (98: Address already in use)
nginx: [emerg] still could not bind()
Googling for them leads you to this site:
https://chrisjean.com/2014/02/10/fix-nginx-emerg-bind-to-80-failed-98-address-already-in-use/
The current configuration sample files only enable IPv4 by default, making the
server inaccesible for many remote hosts (and an increasing amount every day).
Enable IPv4 and IPv6 by default. Older servers with no external IPv6
connectivity will not fail since they'll have a local-link IPv6 address to bind
to anyway.