Updating the Geo nodes
Read these sections carefully before updating your Geo nodes. Not following
version-specific update steps may result in unexpected downtime. If you have
any specific questions, contact Support.
Updating Geo nodes involves performing:
- Version-specific update steps, depending on the version being updated to or from.
- General update steps, for all updates.
General update steps
These general update steps are not intended for high-availability deployments, and will cause downtime. If you want to avoid downtime, consider using zero downtime updates.
To update the Geo nodes when a new GitLab version is released, update primary and all secondary nodes:
- Optional: Pause replication on each secondary node.
- Log into the primary node.
- Update GitLab on the primary node using Omnibus.
- Log into each secondary node.
- Update GitLab on each secondary node using Omnibus.
- If you paused replication in step 1, resume replication on each secondary
- Test primary and secondary nodes, and check version in each.
Check status after updating
Now that the update process is complete, you may want to check whether everything is working correctly:
-
Run the Geo Rake task on all nodes, everything should be green:
sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:geo:check
- Check the primary node’s Geo dashboard for any errors.
- Test the data replication by pushing code to the primary node and see if it is received by secondary nodes.
If you encounter any issues, see the Geo troubleshooting guide.