Configure GitLab using an external PostgreSQL service (FREE SELF)
If you're hosting GitLab on a cloud provider, you can optionally use a managed service for PostgreSQL. For example, AWS offers a managed Relational Database Service (RDS) that runs PostgreSQL.
Alternatively, you may opt to manage your own PostgreSQL instance or cluster separate from the Omnibus GitLab package.
If you use a cloud-managed service, or provide your own PostgreSQL instance:
-
Set up PostgreSQL according to the database requirements document.
-
Set up a
gitlab
user with a password of your choice, create thegitlabhq_production
database, and make the user an owner of the database. You can see an example of this setup in the installation from source documentation. -
If you are using a cloud-managed service, you may need to grant additional roles to your
gitlab
user:- Amazon RDS requires the
rds_superuser
role. - Azure Database for PostgreSQL requires the
azure_pg_admin
role. - Google Cloud SQL requires the
cloudsqlsuperuser
role.
This is for the installation of extensions during installation and upgrades. As an alternative, ensure the extensions are installed manually, and read about the problems that may arise during future GitLab upgrades.
- Amazon RDS requires the
-
Configure the GitLab application servers with the appropriate connection details for your external PostgreSQL service in your
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
file:# Disable the bundled Omnibus provided PostgreSQL postgresql['enable'] = false # PostgreSQL connection details gitlab_rails['db_adapter'] = 'postgresql' gitlab_rails['db_encoding'] = 'unicode' gitlab_rails['db_host'] = '10.1.0.5' # IP/hostname of database server gitlab_rails['db_password'] = 'DB password'
For more information on GitLab multi-node setups, refer to the reference architectures.
-
Reconfigure for the changes to take effect:
sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure