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https://github.com/funkypenguin/geek-cookbook/
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99 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
99 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
# Gitlab Runner
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Some features of GitLab require a "[runner](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/)" (_in the sense of a "gopher" or a "minion"_). A runner "registers" itself with a GitLab instance, and is given tasks to run. Tasks include running Continuous Integration (CI) builds, and building container images.
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While a runner isn't strictly required to use GitLab, if you want to do CI, you'll need at least one. There are many ways to deploy a runner - this recipe focuses on the docker container model.
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## Ingredients
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!!! summary "Ingredients"
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Existing:
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1. [X] [Docker swarm cluster](/ha-docker-swarm/design/) with [persistent shared storage](/ha-docker-swarm/shared-storage-ceph.md)
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2. [X] [Traefik](/ha-docker-swarm/traefik) configured per design
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3. [X] DNS entry for the hostname you intend to use, pointed to your [keepalived](/ha-docker-swarm/keepalived/) IP
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4. [X] [GitLab](/recipes/gitlab) installation (see previous recipe)
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## Preparation
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### Setup data locations
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We'll need several directories to bind-mount into our runner containers, so create them in `/var/data/gitlab`:
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```
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cd /var/data
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mkdir gitlab
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cd gitlab
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mkdir -p {runners/1,runners/2}
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```
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### Setup Docker Swarm
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Create a docker swarm config file in docker-compose syntax (v3), something like this:
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--8<-- "premix-cta.md"
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```yaml
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version: '3'
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services:
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thing1:
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image: gitlab/gitlab-runner
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volumes:
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- /var/data/gitlab/runners/1:/etc/gitlab-runner
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networks:
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- internal
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thing2:
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image: gitlab/gitlab-runner
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volumes:
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- /var/data/gitlab/runners/2:/etc/gitlab-runner
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networks:
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- internal
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networks:
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internal:
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driver: overlay
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ipam:
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config:
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- subnet: 172.16.23.0/24
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```
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### Configure runners
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From your GitLab UI, you can retrieve a "token" necessary to register a new runner. To register the runner, you can either create config.toml in each runner's bind-mounted folder (example below), or just `docker exec` into each runner container and execute `gitlab-runner register` to interactively generate config.toml.
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Sample runner config.toml:
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```
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concurrent = 1
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check_interval = 0
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[[runners]]
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name = "myrunner1"
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url = "https://gitlab.example.com"
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token = "<long string here>"
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executor = "docker"
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[runners.docker]
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tls_verify = false
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image = "ruby:2.1"
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privileged = false
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disable_cache = false
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volumes = ["/cache"]
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shm_size = 0
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[runners.cache]
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```
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## Serving
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### Launch runners
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Launch the mail server stack by running `docker stack deploy gitlab-runner -c <path -to-docker-compose.yml>`
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Log into your new instance at https://**YOUR-FQDN**, with user "root" and the password you specified in gitlab.env.
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[^1]: You'll note that I setup 2 runners. One is locked to a single project (_this cookbook build_), and the other is a shared runner. I wanted to ensure that one runner was always available to run CI for this project, even if I'd tied up another runner on something heavy-duty, like a container build. Customize this to your use case.
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[^2]: Originally I deployed runners in the same stack as GitLab, but I found that they would frequently fail to start properly when I launched the stack. I think that this was because the runners started so quickly (_and GitLab starts **sooo** slowly!_), that they always started up reporting that the GitLab instance was invalid or unavailable. I had issues with CI builds stuck permanently in a "pending" state, which were only resolved by restarting the runner. Having the runners deployed in a separate stack to GitLab avoids this problem.
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--8<-- "recipe-footer.md" |