Finally, they guys from GitLab brought Pages feature to CE!(link) :smile::joy::no_mouth::smile::joy::no_mouth::smile::joy::no_mouth:
So there's no meaning to continue with this project(What? You want me to fight with them??)
Thank you all for your cutting edge sights that made you require this feature that eventually lead you to support this project. Special thanks to you guys who reported back to this one and some who even helped building it.
As I said, this project is almost compatible with Pages in EE. So for supporters of GCP, I guess what you need to do after updated to Pages-feature-included version of GitLab are:
- Leave
.gitlab-ci.yml
as is - Shut down GCP service
- Enable Pages feature in corresponding projects
- Set CNAMEs(if any)
R.I.P to GCP with :)
This is an unofficial GitLab Pages implementation for GitLab CE (GitLab Community Edition), denoted as GCP.
Official GitLab Pages is only for GiLab EE, as discussed here and here.
Actually, there's already a project aiming at the same goal as this one. Luckily, I found it after my finishing the initial version of this project. The philosophy behind these two projects are different: mine provides a close imitation of official GitLab Pages while the other embeds Jekyll which makes it more like GitHub Pages.
This project is almost compatible with official GitLab Pages, which means you can directly use these GitLab Pages examples and summon GCP to handle the rest (if configured correctly of course). If one day, you switched to GitLab EE or GitLab.com, or Pages is included into GitLab CE, the immigration would be seamless.
Currently, following features are supported:
- Pages per project with compatible page generation DSL in
.gitlab-ci.yml
(official doc here) - CNAME support
The only supported encouraged way to run GCP is with Docker.
-
GitLab CE 8.4+: GCP cooperates with GitLab rather than
^((?!GitLab).)*$
norGitLab (8\.[0-3]\..*|[0-7]\..*|[0-7]|8\.3)
-
GitLab CI: build is essential for everything. If you haven't enabled GitLab CI, you can take this chance to start trying it. It's totally awesome. Here's the doc.
- Create an peeking account (I'll name it page) for GCP. This has to be done in order to retrieve artifacts in private projects. Actually, you can also use an privileged (admin) account to peek at those private projects.
- Go to Profile Settings -> Account and copy Private Token. This will later be used when running Docker.
- Get Docker image
docker pull yums/gitlab-ce-pages:1.3.4
- Run Docker container with
docker run --name gitlab-ce-pages -d --restart=always \
--env 'PAGE_PRIVATE_TOKEN=private_token_of_peeking_account' \
--env 'GITLAB_URL=http://gitlab.example.com/' \
--env 'PROJECT_ROOT=public' \
--volume /srv/gitlab-ce-pages/public:/home/pages/public/ \
--volume /srv/gitlab-ce-pages/cname:/home/pages/cname/ \
-p 80:80 \
yums/gitlab-ce-pages:1.3.4
- Tell your GitLab users the URL of your GCP server. They will use it as webhook URL. Note that this URL is the one which can actually access your running Docker instance's exposed port.
- If you want, import some of these examples into your own GitLab, as public projects. This will help your users to start building their own pages quickly by just forking them.
Enable for project (I expect you, the reader, to retell the following bullet points to your GitLab users, in your own way):
- Add peeking (I named it page, remember?) account as your project members and grant Reporter privilege. If an privileged account is used as peeking account, this step is optional.
- Set Webhook in Project Settings -> Webhooks, tick only Build event and fill in URL provided by administrator.
- Write
.gitlab-ci.yml
like demonstrated in these examples. Or if your administrator has already imported some of them into GitLab, fork one. - Wait for build to complete and check your page under
{GITLAB_CE_PAGE_URL}/{WORKSPACE}/{PROJECT_NAME}
.
CNAME is supported since GCP 1.1.0.
Official GitLab Pages service provides a way for users to host their static websites on gitlab.io, also you can point your domain to your *.gitlab.io using CNAME DNS record. For GCP, things are different: GCP, along with your sites, are hosted on your own server. What GCP needs is actually an A record to your server IP in domain DNS records. But since the final purposes of two are similar, both to customize domains. So the name CNAME is used.
With customized domains, you can directly access your projects’ Pages directly under your own domains, without complicated workspace and project name in url. This makes GCP essentially a static site deployer. In fact, you can use GCP to deploy your static site even without owning a running GitLab instance!
Unlike official Pages, we can’t easily set CNAMEs on web UI. GCP uses a configuration file to enable this.
Following are steps to set CNAME:
- Map some directory to GCP volume
/home/pages/cname
with an additional option ofdocker run
. Like
--volume /srv/gitlab-ce-pages/cname:/home/pages/cname/
- You should find
cnames.txt
in mapped directory. - Put your domain names into
cnames.txt
in following format:
workspace_1/project_1 domain1.com project1.domain2.com page.domain3.com
workspace_2/project_2 domain3.com
Each line sets domains for a project. Pointing multiple domains to one project is supported.
- Set your domains’ A record to GCP server IP and all settled.
Wildcard CNAME is supported since GCP 1.3.0.
Wildcard CNAME is the follow-up to CNAME configuration, which enables GCP to automatically apply some patterns for page routing.
Here's some recipe cnames.txt
s to use wildcard CNAME:
- visit generated site of any project named
homepage
directly using workspace name as subdomain name
$1/homepage ~^(.*)\.example\.com$
foo.example.com
will point to foo/homepage
- visit generated site of any project named
{workspace_name}.example.com
directly using workspace name as subdomain name
$1/$1.example.com ~^(.*)\.example\.com$
foo.example.com
will point to foo/foo.example.com
You can find your best fit by combination of these.
Note that you need to set A record to GCP server IP for all domains/subdomains you want to use. Here's an example from GoDaddy about how to set wildcard DNS record.
You can easily upgrade your GCP in following steps:
- pull latest image
docker pull yums/gitlab-ce-pages:1.3.4
- remove running image
docker rm -f gitlab-ce-pages
- start service with new image
docker run --name gitlab-ce-pages -d --restart=always \
--env 'PAGE_PRIVATE_TOKEN=private_token_of_peeking_account' \
--env 'GITLAB_URL=http://gitlab.example.com/' \
--env 'PROJECT_ROOT=public' \
--volume /srv/gitlab-ce-pages/public:/home/pages/public/ \
--volume /srv/gitlab-ce-pages/cname:/home/pages/cname/ \
-p 80:80 \
yums/gitlab-ce-pages:1.3.4
- PAGE_PRIVATE_TOKEN: private token of peeking account
- GITLAB_URL: GitLab CE URL
- RELATIVE_URL: relative URL of GCP, with this you can deploy GCP under existing domains with some proxy forwarding.
This variable should looks like
pages
, without prefix or trailing splashes. - PROJECT_ROOT: root directory of decompressed artifacts file. If set, files inside of PROJECT_ROOT directory will be taken out.
This variable should looks like
public
, without prefix or trailing splashes. Note that in GitLab's official examples, artifacts are put insidepublic
folder and then packed into artifacts.
This is a sample docker-compose.yml
file for you if you want to use docker-compose. It behaves similarly to the command line version.
gitlab-ce-pages:
restart: always
image: yums/gitlab-ce-pages:1.3.4
environment:
- PAGE_PRIVATE_TOKEN=private_token_of_peeking_account
- GITLAB_URL=http://gitlab.example.com/
- PROJECT_ROOT=public
volumes:
- ./public:/home/pages/public
- ./cname:/home/pages/cname
ports:
- "80:80"