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This is a collection of Rake tasks to help you list and migrate existing projects and their attachments to the new hashed storage that GitLab uses to organize the Git data.
The following Rake tasks lists the projects and attachments that are available on legacy and hashed storage.
To have a summary and then a list of projects and their attachments using legacy storage:
-
Linux package installations:
# Projects sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:legacy_projects sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:list_legacy_projects # Attachments sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:legacy_attachments sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:list_legacy_attachments
-
Self-compiled installations:
# Projects sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:legacy_projects RAILS_ENV=production sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:list_legacy_projects RAILS_ENV=production # Attachments sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:legacy_attachments RAILS_ENV=production sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:list_legacy_attachments RAILS_ENV=production
To have a summary and then a list of projects and their attachments using hashed storage:
-
Linux package installations:
# Projects sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:hashed_projects sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:list_hashed_projects # Attachments sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:hashed_attachments sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:list_hashed_attachments
-
Self-compiled installations:
# Projects sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:hashed_projects RAILS_ENV=production sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:list_hashed_projects RAILS_ENV=production # Attachments sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:hashed_attachments RAILS_ENV=production sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:list_hashed_attachments RAILS_ENV=production
WARNING: In GitLab 13.0, hashed storage is enabled by default and the legacy storage is deprecated. GitLab 14.0 eliminates support for legacy storage. If you're on GitLab 13.0 and later, switching new projects to legacy storage is not possible. The option to choose between hashed and legacy storage in the Admin Area has been disabled.
This task must be run on any machine that has Rails/Sidekiq configured, and the task schedules all your existing projects and attachments associated with it to be migrated to the Hashed storage type:
-
Linux package installations:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:migrate_to_hashed
-
Self-compiled installations:
sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:migrate_to_hashed RAILS_ENV=production
If you have any existing integration, you may want to do a small rollout first,
to validate. You can do so by specifying an ID range with the operation by using
the environment variables ID_FROM
and ID_TO
. For example, to limit the rollout
to project IDs 50 to 100 in a Linux package installation:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:migrate_to_hashed ID_FROM=50 ID_TO=100
To monitor the progress in GitLab:
- On the left sidebar, expand the top-most chevron ({chevron-down}).
- Select Admin Area.
- On the left sidebar, select Monitoring > Background Jobs.
- Watch how long the
hashed_storage:hashed_storage_project_migrate
queue takes to finish. After it reaches zero, you can confirm every project has been migrated by running the commands above.
If you find it necessary, you can run the previous migration script again to schedule missing projects.
Any error or warning is logged in Sidekiq's log file.
If Geo is enabled, each project that is successfully migrated generates an event to replicate the changes on any secondary nodes.
You only need the gitlab:storage:migrate_to_hashed
Rake task to migrate your repositories, but there are
additional commands to help you inspect projects and attachments in both legacy and hashed storage.
WARNING: In GitLab 13.0, hashed storage is enabled by default and the legacy storage is deprecated. GitLab 14.0 eliminates support for legacy storage. If you're on GitLab 13.0 and later, switching new projects to legacy storage is not possible. The option to choose between hashed and legacy storage in the Admin Area has been disabled.
This task schedules all your existing projects and associated attachments to be rolled back to the legacy storage type.
-
Linux package installations:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:rollback_to_legacy
-
Self-compiled installations:
sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:storage:rollback_to_legacy RAILS_ENV=production
If you have any existing integration, you may want to do a small rollback first,
to validate. You can do so by specifying an ID range with the operation by using
the environment variables ID_FROM
and ID_TO
. For example, to limit the rollout
to project IDs 50 to 100 in a Linux package installation:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:storage:rollback_to_legacy ID_FROM=50 ID_TO=100
You can monitor the progress in the Admin Area > Monitoring > Background Jobs page.
On the Queues tab, you can watch the hashed_storage:hashed_storage_project_rollback
queue to see how long the process takes to finish.
After it reaches zero, you can confirm every project has been rolled back by running the commands above. If some projects weren't rolled back, you can run this rollback script again to schedule further rollbacks. Any error or warning is logged in Sidekiq's log file.
If you have a Geo setup, the rollback is not reflected automatically
on the secondary node. You may need to wait for a backfill operation to kick-in and remove
the remaining repositories from the special @hashed/
folder manually.
The Rake task might not be able to complete the migration to hashed storage. Checks on the instance will continue to report that there is legacy data:
* Found 1 projects using Legacy Storage
- janedoe/testproject (id: 1234)
If you have a subscription, raise a ticket with GitLab support as most of the fixes are relatively high risk, involving running code on the Rails console.
If you have set projects as read only they might fail to migrate.
-
Check if the project is read only:
project = Project.find_by_full_path('janedoe/testproject') project.repository_read_only
-
If it returns
true
(notnil
orfalse
), set it writable:project.update!(repository_read_only: false)
-
Set the project read-only again:
project.update!(repository_read_only: true)
Check the project details in the Admin Area. If deleting the project failed
it will show as Marked For Deletion At ..
, Scheduled Deletion At ..
and
pending removal
, but the dates will not be recent.
Delete the project using the Rails console:
-
With the following code, select the project to be deleted and account to action it:
project = Project.find_by_full_path('janedoe/testproject') user = User.find_by_username('admin_handle') puts "\nproject selected for deletion is:\nID: #{project.id}\nPATH: #{project.full_path}\nNAME: #{project.name}\n\n"
- Replace
janedoe/testproject
with your project path from the Rake take output or from the Admin Area. - Replace
admin_handle
with the handle of an instance administrator or withroot
. - Verify the output before proceeding. There are no other checks performed.
- Replace
-
Destroy the project immediately:
Projects::DestroyService.new(project, user).execute
If destroying the project generates a stack trace relating to encryption or the error OpenSSL::Cipher::CipherError
:
-
If the affected projects have secrets that cannot be decrypted it will be necessary to remove those specific secrets. Our documentation for dealing with lost secrets is for loss of all secrets, but it's possible for specific projects to be affected. For example, to reset specific runner registration tokens for a specific project ID:
UPDATE projects SET runners_token = null, runners_token_encrypted = null where id = 1234;
Projects might fail to migrate with errors in the Sidekiq log:
# grep 'Repository cannot be moved' /var/log/gitlab/sidekiq/current
{"severity":"ERROR","time":"2021-02-29T02:29:02.021Z","message":"Repository cannot be moved from 'janedoe/testproject' to '@hashed<value>' (PROJECT_ID=1234)"}
This might be caused by a bug in the original code for hashed storage migration.
There is a workaround for projects still affected by this issue.