stage | group | info |
---|---|---|
Systems |
Distribution |
To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments |
GitLab provides Rake tasks to check the integrity of various components. See also the check GitLab configuration Rake task.
Even though Git is very resilient and tries to prevent data integrity issues, there are times when things go wrong. The following Rake tasks intend to help GitLab administrators diagnose problem repositories so they can be fixed.
These Rake tasks use three different methods to determine the integrity of Git repositories.
- Git repository file system check (
git fsck
). This step verifies the connectivity and validity of objects in the repository. - Check for
config.lock
in the repository directory. - Check for any branch/references lock files in
refs/heads
.
The existence of config.lock
or reference locks
alone do not necessarily indicate a problem. Lock files are routinely created
and removed as Git and GitLab perform operations on the repository. They serve
to prevent data integrity issues. However, if a Git operation is interrupted these
locks may not be cleaned up properly.
The following symptoms may indicate a problem with repository integrity. If users experience these symptoms you may use the Rake tasks described below to determine exactly which repositories are causing the trouble.
- Receiving an error when trying to push code -
remote: error: cannot lock ref
- A 500 error when viewing the GitLab dashboard or when accessing a specific project.
This task loops through the project code repositories and runs the integrity check described previously. If a project uses a pool repository, that is also checked. Other types of Git repositories are not checked.
-
Linux package installations:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:git:fsck
-
Self-compiled installations:
sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:git:fsck RAILS_ENV=production
One Git repository can be compared to another by checksumming all refs of each repository. If both repositories have the same refs, and if both repositories pass an integrity check, then we can be confident that both repositories are the same.
For example, this can be used to compare a backup of a repository against the source repository.
This task loops through all repositories on the GitLab server and outputs
checksums in the format <PROJECT ID>,<CHECKSUM>
.
-
If a repository doesn't exist, the project ID is a blank checksum.
-
If a repository exists but is empty, the output checksum is
0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
. -
Projects which don't exist are skipped.
-
Linux package installations:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:git:checksum_projects
-
Self-compiled installations:
sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:git:checksum_projects RAILS_ENV=production
For example, if:
- Project with ID#2 doesn't exist, it is skipped.
- Project with ID#4 doesn't have a repository, its checksum is blank.
- Project with ID#5 has an empty repository, its checksum is
0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
.
The output would then look something like:
1,cfa3f06ba235c13df0bb28e079bcea62c5848af2
3,3f3fb58a8106230e3a6c6b48adc2712fb3b6ef87
4,
5,0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
6,6c6b48adc2712fb3b6ef87cfa3f06ba235c13df0
Optionally, specific project IDs can be checksummed by setting an environment
variable CHECKSUM_PROJECT_IDS
with a list of comma-separated integers, for example:
sudo CHECKSUM_PROJECT_IDS="1,3" gitlab-rake gitlab:git:checksum_projects
Various types of files can be uploaded to a GitLab installation by users. These integrity checks can detect missing files. Additionally, for locally stored files, checksums are generated and stored in the database upon upload, and these checks verify them against current files.
Integrity checks are supported for the following types of file:
-
CI artifacts (introduced in GitLab 10.7.0)
-
LFS objects (introduced in GitLab 10.6.0)
-
Project-level Secure Files (introduced in GitLab 16.1.0)
-
User uploads (introduced in GitLab 10.6.0)
-
Linux package installations:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:artifacts:check sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:ci_secure_files:check sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:lfs:check sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:uploads:check
-
Self-compiled installations:
sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:artifacts:check RAILS_ENV=production sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:ci_secure_files:check RAILS_ENV=production sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:lfs:check RAILS_ENV=production sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:uploads:check RAILS_ENV=production
These tasks also accept some environment variables which you can use to override certain values:
Variable | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
BATCH |
integer | Specifies the size of the batch. Defaults to 200. |
ID_FROM |
integer | Specifies the ID to start from, inclusive of the value. |
ID_TO |
integer | Specifies the ID value to end at, inclusive of the value. |
VERBOSE |
boolean | Causes failures to be listed individually, rather than being summarized. |
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:artifacts:check BATCH=100 ID_FROM=50 ID_TO=250
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:ci_secure_files:check BATCH=100 ID_FROM=50 ID_TO=250
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:lfs:check BATCH=100 ID_FROM=50 ID_TO=250
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:uploads:check BATCH=100 ID_FROM=50 ID_TO=250
Example output:
$ sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:uploads:check
Checking integrity of Uploads
- 1..1350: Failures: 0
- 1351..2743: Failures: 0
- 2745..4349: Failures: 2
- 4357..5762: Failures: 1
- 5764..7140: Failures: 2
- 7142..8651: Failures: 0
- 8653..10134: Failures: 0
- 10135..11773: Failures: 0
- 11777..13315: Failures: 0
Done!
Example verbose output:
$ sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:uploads:check VERBOSE=1
Checking integrity of Uploads
- 1..1350: Failures: 0
- 1351..2743: Failures: 0
- 2745..4349: Failures: 2
- Upload: 3573: #<Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory @ rb_sysopen - /opt/gitlab/embedded/service/gitlab-rails/public/uploads/user-foo/project-bar/7a77cc52947bfe188adeff42f890bb77/image.png>
- Upload: 3580: #<Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory @ rb_sysopen - /opt/gitlab/embedded/service/gitlab-rails/public/uploads/user-foo/project-bar/2840ba1ba3b2ecfa3478a7b161375f8a/pug.png>
- 4357..5762: Failures: 1
- Upload: 4636: #<Google::Apis::ServerError: Server error>
- 5764..7140: Failures: 2
- Upload: 5812: #<NoMethodError: undefined method `hashed_storage?' for nil:NilClass>
- Upload: 5837: #<NoMethodError: undefined method `hashed_storage?' for nil:NilClass>
- 7142..8651: Failures: 0
- 8653..10134: Failures: 0
- 10135..11773: Failures: 0
- 11777..13315: Failures: 0
Done!
The LDAP check Rake task tests the bind DN and password credentials
(if configured) and lists a sample of LDAP users. This task is also
executed as part of the gitlab:check
task, but can run independently.
See LDAP Rake Tasks - LDAP Check for details.
Introduced in GitLab 13.1.
This task runs through all possible encrypted values in the
database, verifying that they are decryptable using the current
secrets file (gitlab-secrets.json
).
Automatic resolution is not yet implemented. If you have values that cannot be decrypted, you can follow steps to reset them, see our documentation on what to do when the secrets file is lost.
This can take a very long time, depending on the size of your database, as it checks all rows in all tables.
-
Linux package installations:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:doctor:secrets
-
Self-compiled installations:
bundle exec rake gitlab:doctor:secrets RAILS_ENV=production
Example output
I, [2020-06-11T17:17:54.951815 #27148] INFO -- : Checking encrypted values in the database
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:12.677708 #27148] INFO -- : - ApplicationSetting failures: 0
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:12.823692 #27148] INFO -- : - User failures: 0
[...] other models possibly containing encrypted data
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:14.938335 #27148] INFO -- : - Group failures: 1
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.559162 #27148] INFO -- : - Operations::FeatureFlagsClient failures: 0
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.575533 #27148] INFO -- : - ScimOauthAccessToken failures: 0
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.575678 #27148] INFO -- : Total: 1 row(s) affected
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.575711 #27148] INFO -- : Done!
To get more detailed information about which rows and columns can't be
decrypted, you can pass a VERBOSE
environment variable:
-
Linux package installations:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:doctor:secrets VERBOSE=1
-
Self-compiled installations:
bundle exec rake gitlab:doctor:secrets RAILS_ENV=production VERBOSE=1
Example verbose output
I, [2020-06-11T17:17:54.951815 #27148] INFO -- : Checking encrypted values in the database
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:12.677708 #27148] INFO -- : - ApplicationSetting failures: 0
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:12.823692 #27148] INFO -- : - User failures: 0
[...] other models possibly containing encrypted data
D, [2020-06-11T17:19:53.224344 #27351] DEBUG -- : > Something went wrong for Group[10].runners_token: Validation failed: Route can't be blank
I, [2020-06-11T17:19:53.225178 #27351] INFO -- : - Group failures: 1
D, [2020-06-11T17:19:53.225267 #27351] DEBUG -- : - Group[10]: runners_token
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.559162 #27148] INFO -- : - Operations::FeatureFlagsClient failures: 0
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.575533 #27148] INFO -- : - ScimOauthAccessToken failures: 0
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.575678 #27148] INFO -- : Total: 1 row(s) affected
I, [2020-06-11T17:18:15.575711 #27148] INFO -- : Done!
The following are solutions to problems you might discover using the Rake tasks documented above.
The gitlab-rake gitlab:git:fsck
task can find dangling objects such as:
dangling blob a12...
dangling commit b34...
dangling tag c56...
dangling tree d78...
To delete them, try running housekeeping.
If the issue persists, try triggering garbage collection via the Rails Console:
p = Project.find_by_path("project-name")
Repositories::HousekeepingService.new(p, :gc).execute
If the dangling objects are younger than the 2 weeks default grace period, and you don't want to wait until they expire automatically, run:
Repositories::HousekeepingService.new(p, :prune).execute
gitlab-rake gitlab:uploads:check VERBOSE=1
detects remote objects that do not exist because they were
deleted externally but their references still exist in the GitLab database.
Example output with error message:
$ sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:uploads:check VERBOSE=1
Checking integrity of Uploads
- 100..434: Failures: 2
- Upload: 100: Remote object does not exist
- Upload: 101: Remote object does not exist
Done!
To delete these references to remote uploads that were deleted externally, open the GitLab Rails Console and run:
uploads_deleted=0
Upload.find_each do |upload|
next if upload.retrieve_uploader.file.exists?
uploads_deleted=uploads_deleted + 1
p upload ### allow verification before destroy
# p upload.destroy! ### uncomment to actually destroy
end
p "#{uploads_deleted} remote objects were destroyed."
gitlab-rake gitlab:artifacts:check VERBOSE=1
detects when artifacts (or job.log
files):
- Are deleted outside of GitLab.
- Have references still in the GitLab database.
When this scenario is detected, the Rake task displays an error message. For example:
Checking integrity of Job artifacts
- 1..15: Failures: 2
- Job artifact: 9: #<Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory @ rb_sysopen - /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/artifacts/4b/22/4b227777d4dd1fc61c6f884f48641d02b4d121d3fd328cb08b5531fcacdabf8a/2022_06_30/8/9/job.log>
- Job artifact: 15: Remote object does not exist
Done!
To delete these references to missing local and/or remote artifacts (job.log
files):
-
Open the GitLab Rails Console.
-
Run the following Ruby code:
artifacts_deleted = 0 ::Ci::JobArtifact.find_each do |artifact| ### Iterate artifacts # next if artifact.file.filename != "job.log" ### Uncomment if only `job.log` files' references are to be processed next if artifact.file.file.exists? ### Skip if the file reference is valid artifacts_deleted += 1 puts "#{artifact.id} #{artifact.file.path} is missing." ### Allow verification before destroy # artifact.destroy! ### Uncomment to actually destroy end puts "Count of identified/destroyed invalid references: #{artifacts_deleted}"
If gitlab-rake gitlab:lfs:check VERBOSE=1
detects LFS objects that exist in the database
but not on disk, follow the procedure in the LFS documentation
to remove the database entries.
If you have migrated from object storage to local storage and files were missing, then dangling database references remain.
This is visible in the migration logs with errors like the following:
W, [2022-11-28T13:14:09.283833 #10025] WARN -- : Failed to transfer Ci::JobArtifact ID 11 with error: undefined method `body' for nil:NilClass
W, [2022-11-28T13:14:09.296911 #10025] WARN -- : Failed to transfer Ci::JobArtifact ID 12 with error: undefined method `body' for nil:NilClass
Attempting to delete references to missing artifacts after you have disabled object storage, results in the following error:
RuntimeError (Object Storage is not enabled for JobArtifactUploader)
To update these references to point to local storage:
-
Open the GitLab Rails Console.
-
Run the following Ruby code:
artifacts_updated = 0 ::Ci::JobArtifact.find_each do |artifact| ### Iterate artifacts next if artifact.file_store != 2 ### Skip if file_store already points to local storage artifacts_updated += 1 # artifact.update(file_store: 1) ### Uncomment to actually update end puts "Updated file_store count: #{artifacts_updated}"
The script to delete references to missing artifacts now functions correctly and cleans up the database.
VERBOSE=1 gitlab-rake gitlab:ci_secure_files:check
detects when secure files:
- Are deleted outside of GitLab.
- Have references still in the GitLab database.
When this scenario is detected, the Rake task displays an error message. For example:
Checking integrity of CI Secure Files
- 1..15: Failures: 2
- Job SecureFile: 9: #<Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory @ rb_sysopen - /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/ci_secure_files/4b/22/4b227777d4dd1fc61c6f884f48641d02b4d121d3fd328cb08b5531fcacdabf8a/2022_06_30/8/9/distribution.cer>
- Job SecureFile: 15: Remote object does not exist
Done!
To delete these references to missing local or remote secure files:
-
Open the GitLab Rails Console.
-
Run the following Ruby code:
secure_files_deleted = 0 ::Ci::SecureFile.find_each do |secure_file| ### Iterate secure files next if secure_file.file.file.exists? ### Skip if the file reference is valid secure_files_deleted += 1 puts "#{secure_file.id} #{secure_file.file.path} is missing." ### Allow verification before destroy # secure_file.destroy! ### Uncomment to actually destroy end puts "Count of identified/destroyed invalid references: #{secure_files_deleted}"