Alternatively, you can manually launch the gitlab
container and the supporting postgresql
and redis
containers by following this three step guide.
Step 1. Launch a postgresql container
docker run --name gitlab-postgresql -d \
--env 'DB_NAME=gitlabhq_production' \
--env 'DB_USER=gitlab' --env 'DB_PASS=password' \
--env 'DB_EXTENSION=pg_trgm' \
--volume /srv/docker/gitlab/postgresql:/var/lib/postgresql \
sameersbn/postgresql:9.5-3
Step 2. Launch a redis container
docker run --name gitlab-redis -d \
--volume /srv/docker/gitlab/redis:/var/lib/redis \
sameersbn/redis:latest
Step 3. Launch the gitlab container
docker run --name gitlab -d \
--link gitlab-postgresql:postgresql --link gitlab-redis:redisio \
--publish 10022:22 --publish 10080:80 \
--env 'GITLAB_PORT=10080' --env 'GITLAB_SSH_PORT=10022' \
--env 'GITLAB_SECRETS_DB_KEY_BASE=long-and-random-alpha-numeric-string' \
--env 'GITLAB_SECRETS_SECRET_KEY_BASE=long-and-random-alpha-numeric-string' \
--env 'GITLAB_SECRETS_OTP_KEY_BASE=long-and-random-alpha-numeric-string' \
--volume /srv/docker/gitlab/gitlab:/home/git/data \
sameersbn/gitlab:8.14.0
Please refer to Available Configuration Parameters to understand GITLAB_PORT
and other configuration options
NOTE: Please allow a couple of minutes for the GitLab application to start.
Point your browser to http://localhost:10080
and set a password for the root
user account.
You should now have the GitLab application up and ready for testing. If you want to use this image in production then please read on.
The rest of the document will use the docker command line. You can quite simply adapt your configuration into a docker-compose.yml
file if you wish to do so.