- Verify dependency versions
- Compatibility
- Upgrade Guide
- Early adopters
-
Resource Architectures of the
auto-deploy-app
chart - Troubleshooting
Upgrading deployments for newer Auto Deploy dependencies
Auto Deploy is a feature that deploys your application to a Kubernetes cluster. It consists of several dependencies:
-
Auto Deploy template is a set of pipeline jobs and scripts that makes use of
auto-deploy-image
. -
auto-deploy-image
is the executable image that communicates with the Kubernetes cluster. -
auto-deploy-app chart
is the Helm chart for deploying your application.
The auto-deploy-image
and auto-deploy-app
charts use Semantic Versioning.
By default, your Auto DevOps project keeps using the stable and non-breaking version.
However, these dependencies could be upgraded in a major version release of GitLab
with breaking changes requiring you to upgrade your deployments.
This guide explains how to upgrade your deployments with newer or different major versions of Auto Deploy dependencies.
Verify dependency versions
The process to check the current versions differs depending on which template you are using. First verify which template is in use:
- For self-managed instances, the stable Auto Deploy template bundled with the GitLab package is being used.
-
The GitLab.com stable Auto Deploy template
is being used if one of the following is true:
- Your Auto DevOps project doesn’t have a
.gitlab-ci.yml
file. - Your Auto DevOps project has a
.gitlab-ci.yml
and includes theAuto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml
template.
- Your Auto DevOps project doesn’t have a
-
The latest Auto Deploy template
is being used if both of the following is true:
- Your Auto DevOps project has a
.gitlab-ci.yml
file and includes theAuto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml
template. - It also includes the latest Auto Deploy template
- Your Auto DevOps project has a
If you know what template is being used:
- The
auto-deploy-image
version is in the template (for exampleauto-deploy-image:v1.0.3
). - The
auto-deploy-app
chart version is in the auto-deploy-image repository (for exampleversion: 1.0.3
).
Compatibility
The following table explains the version compatibility between GitLab and Auto Deploy dependencies:
GitLab version |
auto-deploy-image version
| Notes |
---|---|---|
v10.0 to v14.0 | v0.1.0 to v2.0.0 | v0 and v1 auto-deploy-image are backwards compatible. |
v13.4 and later | v2.0.0 and later | v2 auto-deploy-image contains breaking changes, as explained in the upgrade guide. |
You can find the current stable version of auto-deploy-image in the Auto Deploy stable template.
Upgrade Guide
Projects using Auto DevOps must use the unmodified chart managed by GitLab. Customized charts are unsupported.
Upgrade deployments to the v1 auto-deploy-image
The v1 chart is backward compatible with the v0 chart, so no configuration changes are needed.
Upgrade deployments to the v2 auto-deploy-image
The v2 auto-deploy-image contains multiple dependency and architectural changes.
If your Auto DevOps project has an active environment deployed with the v1 auto-deploy-image
, proceed with the following upgrade guide. Otherwise, you can skip this process.
Kubernetes 1.16+
The v2 auto-deploy-image drops support for Kubernetes 1.15 and earlier. If you need to upgrade your Kubernetes cluster, follow your cloud provider’s instructions. Here’s an example on GKE.
Helm v3
The auto-deploy-image
uses the Helm binary to manipulate the releases.
Previously, auto-deploy-image
used Helm v2, which used Tiller in a cluster.
In the v2 auto-deploy-image
, it uses Helm v3 that doesn’t require Tiller anymore.
If your Auto DevOps project has an active environment that was deployed with the v1
auto-deploy-image
, use the following steps to upgrade to v2, which uses Helm v3:
-
Include the Helm 2to3 migration CI/CD template:
- If you are on GitLab.com, or GitLab 14.0.1 or later, this template is already included in Auto DevOps.
-
On other versions of GitLab, you can modify your
.gitlab-ci.yml
to include the templates:include: - template: Auto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml - remote: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/raw/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Jobs/Helm-2to3.gitlab-ci.yml
-
Set the following CI/CD variables:
-
MIGRATE_HELM_2TO3
totrue
. If this variable is not present, migration jobs do not run. -
AUTO_DEVOPS_FORCE_DEPLOY_V2
to1
. -
Optional:
BACKUP_HELM2_RELEASES
to1
. If you set this variable, the migration job saves a backup for 1 week in a job artifact calledhelm-2-release-backups
. If you accidentally delete the Helm v2 releases before you are ready, you can restore this backup from a Kubernetes manifest file by usingkubectl apply -f $backup
.WARNING: Do not use this if you have public pipelines. This artifact can contain secrets and is visible to any user who can see your job.
-
- Run a pipeline and trigger the
<environment-name>:helm-2to3:migrate
job. - Deploy your environment as usual. This deployment uses Helm v3.
- If the deployment succeeds, you can safely run
<environment-name>:helm-2to3:cleanup
. This deletes all Helm v2 release data from the namespace. - Remove the
MIGRATE_HELM_2TO3
CI/CD variable or set it tofalse
. You can do this one environment at a time using environment scopes.
In-Cluster PostgreSQL Channel 2
The v2 auto-deploy-image drops support for legacy in-cluster PostgreSQL. If your Kubernetes cluster still depends on it, upgrade and migrate your data with the v1 auto-deploy-image.
Traffic routing change for canary deployments and incremental rollouts
Auto Deploy supports advanced deployment strategies such as canary deployments and incremental rollouts.
Previously, auto-deploy-image
created one service to balance the traffic between
unstable and stable tracks by changing the replica ratio. In the v2 auto-deploy-image
,
it controls the traffic with Canary Ingress.
For more details, see the v2 auto-deploy-app
chart resource architecture.
If your Auto DevOps project has active canary
or rollout
track releases in the
production
environment deployed with the v1 auto-deploy-image
, use the following
steps to upgrade to v2:
- Verify your project is using the v1
auto-deploy-image
. If not, specify the version. - If you’re in the process of deploying
canary
orrollout
deployments, promote them toproduction
first to delete the unstable tracks. - Verify your project is using the v2
auto-deploy-image
. If not, specify the version. - Add an
AUTO_DEVOPS_FORCE_DEPLOY_V2
CI/CD variable with a value oftrue
in the GitLab CI/CD settings. - Create a new pipeline and run the
production
job to renew the resource architecture with the v2auto-deploy-app chart
. - Remove the
AUTO_DEVOPS_FORCE_DEPLOY_V2
variable.
Use a specific version of Auto Deploy dependencies
To use a specific version of Auto Deploy dependencies, specify the previous Auto Deploy
stable template that contains the desired version of auto-deploy-image
and auto-deploy-app
.
For example, if the template is bundled in GitLab 16.10, change your .gitlab-ci.yml
to:
include:
- template: Auto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml
- remote: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/raw/v16.10.0-ee/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Jobs/Deploy.gitlab-ci.yml
Ignore warnings and continue deploying
If you are certain that the new chart version is safe to be deployed, you can add
the AUTO_DEVOPS_FORCE_DEPLOY_V<major-version-number>
CI/CD variable
to force the deployment to continue.
For example, if you want to deploy the v2.0.0
chart on a deployment that previously
used the v0.17.0
chart, add AUTO_DEVOPS_FORCE_DEPLOY_V2
.
Early adopters
If you want to use the latest beta or unstable version of auto-deploy-image
, include
the latest Auto Deploy template into your .gitlab-ci.yml
:
include:
- template: Auto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml
- template: Jobs/Deploy.latest.gitlab-ci.yml
auto-deploy-image
could cause unrecoverable damage to
your environments. Do not test it with important projects or environments.Resource Architectures of the auto-deploy-app
chart
v0 and v1 chart resource architecture
v2 chart resource architecture
Troubleshooting
Major version mismatch warning
If deploying a chart that has a major version that is different from the previous one, the new chart might not be correctly deployed. This could be due to an architectural change. If that happens, the deployment job fails with a message similar to:
*************************************************************************************
[WARNING]
Detected a major version difference between the chart that is currently deploying (auto-deploy-app-v0.7.0), and the previously deployed chart (auto-deploy-app-v1.0.0).
A new major version might not be backward compatible with the current release (production). The deployment could fail or be stuck in an unrecoverable status.
...
To clear this error message and resume deployments, you must do one of the following:
Error: missing key "app.kubernetes.io/managed-by": must be set to "Helm"
If your cluster has a deployment that was deployed with the v1 auto-deploy-image
,
you might encounter the following error:
Error: rendered manifests contain a resource that already exists. Unable to continue with install: Secret "production-postgresql" in namespace "<project-name>-production" exists and cannot be imported into the current release: invalid ownership metadata; label validation error: missing key "app.kubernetes.io/managed-by": must be set to "Helm"; annotation validation error: missing key "meta.helm.sh/release-name": must be set to "production-postgresql"; annotation validation error: missing key "meta.helm.sh/release-namespace": must be set to "<project-name>-production"
This is because the previous deployment was deployed with Helm2, which is not compatible with Helm3. To resolve the problem, follow the upgrade guide.