BigW Consortium Gitlab

Commit a39adfb4 by Lee Matos

clarify DB/Redis HA docs

parent e7b6f39f
......@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ If you use a cloud-managed service, or provide your own PostgreSQL:
steps on the download page.
1. Create/edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` and use the following configuration.
Be sure to change the `external_url` to match your eventual GitLab front-end
URL.
URL. If there is a directive listed below that you do not see in the configuration, be sure to add it.
```ruby
external_url 'https://gitlab.example.com'
......@@ -39,6 +39,8 @@ If you use a cloud-managed service, or provide your own PostgreSQL:
unicorn['enable'] = false
sidekiq['enable'] = false
redis['enable'] = false
prometheus['enable'] = false
gitaly['enable'] = false
gitlab_workhorse['enable'] = false
mailroom['enable'] = false
......
......@@ -42,10 +42,10 @@ instances run in different machines. If you fail to provision the machines in
that specific way, any issue with the shared environment can bring your entire
setup down.
It is OK to run a Sentinel along with a master or slave Redis instance.
No more than one Sentinel in the same machine though.
It is OK to run a Sentinel alongside of a master or slave Redis instance.
There should be no more than one Sentinel on the same machine though.
You also need to take in consideration the underlying network topology,
You also need to take into consideration the underlying network topology,
making sure you have redundant connectivity between Redis / Sentinel and
GitLab instances, otherwise the networks will become a single point of
failure.
......@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ the Omnibus GitLab package in `5` **independent** machines, both with
### Redis setup overview
You must have at least `3` Redis servers: `1` Master, `2` Slaves, and they
need to be each in a independent machine (see explanation above).
need to each be on independent machines (see explanation above).
You can have additional Redis nodes, that will help survive a situation
where more nodes goes down. Whenever there is only `2` nodes online, a failover
......@@ -232,7 +232,7 @@ Pick the one that suits your needs.
This is the section where we install and setup the new Redis instances.
>**Notes:**
- We assume that you install GitLab and all HA components from scratch. If you
- We assume that you have installed GitLab and all HA components from scratch. If you
already have it installed and running, read how to
[switch from a single-machine installation to Redis HA](#switching-from-an-existing-single-machine-installation-to-redis-ha).
- Redis nodes (both master and slaves) will need the same password defined in
......@@ -245,10 +245,9 @@ The prerequisites for a HA Redis setup are the following:
1. Provision the minimum required number of instances as specified in the
[recommended setup](#recommended-setup) section.
1. **Do NOT** install Redis or Redis Sentinel in the same machines your
GitLab application is running on. You can however opt in to install Redis
and Sentinel in the same machine (each in independent ones is recommended
though).
1. We **Do not** recommend installing Redis or Redis Sentinel in the same machines your
GitLab application is running on as this weakens your HA configuration. You can however opt in to install Redis
and Sentinel in the same machine.
1. All Redis nodes must be able to talk to each other and accept incoming
connections over Redis (`6379`) and Sentinel (`26379`) ports (unless you
change the default ones).
......
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