Praefect

NOTE: Note: Praefect is an experimental service, and for testing purposes only at this time.

Praefect is an optional reverse-proxy for Gitaly to manage a cluster of Gitaly nodes for high availability through replication. If a Gitaly node becomes unavailable, it will be possible to fail over to a warm Gitaly replica.

The first minimal version will support:

Follow the HA Gitaly epic for updates and roadmap.

Omnibus

Architecture

The most common architecture for Praefect is simplified in the diagram below:

graph TB
  GitLab --> Praefect;
  Praefect --- PostgreSQL;
  Praefect --> Gitaly1;
  Praefect --> Gitaly2;
  Praefect --> Gitaly3;

Where GitLab is the collection of clients that can request Git operations. The Praefect node has three storage nodes attached. Praefect itself doesn't store data, but connects to three Gitaly nodes, Gitaly-1, Gitaly-2, and Gitaly-3.

In order to keep track of replication state, Praefect relies on a PostgreSQL database. This database is a single point of failure so you should use a highly available PostgreSQL server for this. GitLab itself needs a HA PostgreSQL server too, so you could optionally co-locate the Praefect SQL database on the PostgreSQL server you use for the rest of GitLab.

Praefect may be enabled on its own node or can be run on the GitLab server. In the example below we will use a separate server, but the optimal configuration for Praefect is still being determined.

Praefect will handle all Gitaly RPC requests to its child nodes. However, the child nodes will still need to communicate with the GitLab server via its internal API for authentication purposes.

Setup

In this setup guide we will start by configuring Praefect, then its child Gitaly nodes, and lastly the GitLab server configuration.

Secrets

We need to manage the following secrets and make them match across hosts:

  1. GITLAB_SHELL_SECRET_TOKEN: this is used by Git hooks to make callback HTTP API requests to GitLab when accepting a Git push. This secret is shared with GitLab Shell for legacy reasons.
  2. PRAEFECT_EXTERNAL_TOKEN: repositories hosted on your Praefect cluster can only be accessed by Gitaly clients that carry this token.
  3. PRAEFECT_INTERNAL_TOKEN: this token is used for replication traffic inside your Praefect cluster. This is distinct from PRAEFECT_EXTERNAL_TOKEN because Gitaly clients must not be able to access internal nodes of the Praefect cluster directly; that could lead to data loss.
  4. PRAEFECT_SQL_PASSWORD: this password is used by Praefect to connect to PostgreSQL.

Network addresses

  1. POSTGRESQL_SERVER: the host name or IP address of your PostgreSQL server

PostgreSQL

To set up a Praefect cluster you need a highly available PostgreSQL server. You need PostgreSQL 9.6 or newer. Praefect needs to have a SQL user with the right to create databases.

In the instructions below we assume you have administrative access to your PostgreSQL server via psql. Depending on your environment, you may also be able to do this via the web interface of your cloud platform, or via your configuration management system, etc.

Below we assume that you have administrative access as the postgres user. First open a psql session as the postgres user:

psql -h POSTGRESQL_SERVER -U postgres -d template1

Once you are connected, run the following command. Replace PRAEFECT_SQL_PASSWORD with the actual (random) password you generated for the praefect SQL user:

CREATE ROLE praefect WITH LOGIN CREATEDB PASSWORD 'PRAEFECT_SQL_PASSWORD';
\q # exit psql

Now connect as the praefect user to create the database. This has the side effect of verifying that you have access:

psql -h POSTGRESQL_SERVER -U praefect -d template1

Once you have connected as the praefect user, run:

CREATE DATABASE praefect_production WITH ENCODING=UTF8;
\q # quit psql

Praefect

On the Praefect node we disable all other services, including Gitaly. We list each Gitaly node that will be connected to Praefect as members of the praefect hash in praefect['virtual_storages'].

In the example below, the Gitaly nodes are named gitaly-N. Note that one node is designated as primary by setting the primary to true.

# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb on praefect server

# Avoid running unnecessary services on the Gitaly server
postgresql['enable'] = false
redis['enable'] = false
nginx['enable'] = false
prometheus['enable'] = false
grafana['enable'] = false
unicorn['enable'] = false
sidekiq['enable'] = false
gitlab_workhorse['enable'] = false
gitaly['enable'] = false

# Prevent database connections during 'gitlab-ctl reconfigure'
gitlab_rails['rake_cache_clear'] = false
gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false

praefect['enable'] = true

# Make Praefect accept connections on all network interfaces. You must use
# firewalls to restrict access to this address/port.
praefect['listen_addr'] = '0.0.0.0:2305'

# Replace PRAEFECT_EXTERNAL_TOKEN with a real secret
praefect['auth_token'] = 'PRAEFECT_EXTERNAL_TOKEN'

# Replace each instance of PRAEFECT_INTERNAL_TOKEN below with a real
# secret, distinct from PRAEFECT_EXTERNAL_TOKEN.
# Name of storage hash must match storage name in git_data_dirs on GitLab server.
praefect['virtual_storages'] = {
  'praefect' => {
    'gitaly-1' => {
      'address' => 'tcp://gitaly-1.internal:8075',
      'token'   => 'PRAEFECT_INTERNAL_TOKEN',
      'primary' => true
    },
    'gitaly-2' => {
      'address' => 'tcp://gitaly-2.internal:8075',
      'token'   => 'PRAEFECT_INTERNAL_TOKEN'
    },
    'gitaly-3' => {
      'address' => 'tcp://gitaly-3.internal:8075',
      'token'   => 'PRAEFECT_INTERNAL_TOKEN'
    }
  }
}

praefect['database_host'] = 'POSTGRESQL_SERVER'
praefect['database_port'] = 5432
praefect['database_user'] = 'praefect'
praefect['database_password'] = 'PRAEFECT_SQL_PASSWORD'
praefect['database_dbname'] = 'praefect_production'

# Uncomment the line below if you do not want to use an encrypted
# connection to PostgreSQL
# praefect['database_sslmode'] = 'disable'

# Uncomment and modify these lines if you are using a TLS client
# certificate to connect to PostgreSQL
# praefect['database_sslcert'] = '/path/to/client-cert'
# praefect['database_sslkey'] = '/path/to/client-key'

# Uncomment and modify this line if your PostgreSQL server uses a custom
# CA
# praefect['database_sslrootcert'] = '/path/to/rootcert'

Save the file and reconfigure Praefect.

After you reconfigure, verify that Praefect can reach PostgreSQL:

sudo -u git /opt/gitlab/embedded/bin/praefect -config /var/opt/gitlab/praefect/config.toml sql-ping

If the check fails, make sure you have followed the steps correctly. If you edit /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb, remember to run sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure again before trying the sql-ping command.

Gitaly

Next we will configure each Gitaly server assigned to Praefect. Configuration for these is the same as a normal standalone Gitaly server, except that we use storage names and auth tokens from Praefect instead of GitLab.

Below is an example configuration for gitaly-1, the only difference for the other Gitaly nodes is the storage name under git_data_dirs.

Note that gitaly['auth_token'] matches the token value listed under praefect['virtual_storages'] on the Praefect node.

# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb on gitaly node inside praefect cluster

# Avoid running unnecessary services on the Gitaly server
postgresql['enable'] = false
redis['enable'] = false
nginx['enable'] = false
prometheus['enable'] = false
grafana['enable'] = false
unicorn['enable'] = false
sidekiq['enable'] = false
gitlab_workhorse['enable'] = false
prometheus_monitoring['enable'] = false

# Prevent database connections during 'gitlab-ctl reconfigure'
gitlab_rails['rake_cache_clear'] = false
gitlab_rails['auto_migrate'] = false

# Replace GITLAB_SHELL_SECRET_TOKEN below with real secret
gitlab_shell['secret_token'] = 'GITLAB_SHELL_SECRET_TOKEN'

# Configure the gitlab-shell API callback URL. Without this, `git push` will
# fail. This can be your 'front door' GitLab URL or an internal load
# balancer.
gitlab_rails['internal_api_url'] = 'https://gitlab.example.com'

# Replace PRAEFECT_INTERNAL_TOKEN below with a real secret.
gitaly['auth_token'] = 'PRAEFECT_INTERNAL_TOKEN'

# Make Gitaly accept connections on all network interfaces. You must use
# firewalls to restrict access to this address/port.
# Comment out following line if you only want to support TLS connections
gitaly['listen_addr'] = "0.0.0.0:8075"

git_data_dirs({
  "gitaly-1" => {
    "path" => "/var/opt/gitlab/git-data"
  }
})

For more information on Gitaly server configuration, see our Gitaly documentation.

GitLab

When Praefect is running, it should be exposed as a storage to GitLab. This is done through setting the git_data_dirs. Assuming the default storage is present, there should be two storages available to GitLab:

# /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb on gitlab server

# Replace PRAEFECT_EXTERNAL_TOKEN below with real secret.
git_data_dirs({
  "default" => {
    "path" => "/var/opt/gitlab/git-data"
  },
  "praefect" => {
    "gitaly_address" => "tcp://praefect.internal:2305",
    "gitaly_token" => 'PRAEFECT_EXTERNAL_TOKEN'
  }
})

# Replace GITLAB_SHELL_SECRET_TOKEN below with real secret
gitlab_shell['secret_token'] = 'GITLAB_SHELL_SECRET_TOKEN'

Note that the storage name used is the same as the praefect['virtual_storage_name'] set on the Praefect node.

Save your changes and reconfigure GitLab.

Run gitlab-rake gitlab:gitaly:check to confirm that GitLab can reach Praefect.

Testing Praefect

To test Praefect, first set it as the default storage node for new projects using Admin Area > Settings > Repository > Repository storage. Next, create a new project and check the "Initialize repository with a README" box.

If you receive an error, check /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/production.log.

Here are common errors and potential causes: