Installing the agent for Kubernetes

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To connect a Kubernetes cluster to GitLab, you must install an agent in your cluster.

Prerequisites

Before you can install the agent in your cluster, you need:

Installation steps

It takes three steps to install the agent in your cluster:

  1. Optional. Create an agent configuration file.
  2. Register the agent with GitLab.
  3. Install the agent in your cluster.

Watch a walk-through of this process.

Create an agent configuration file

For configuration settings, the agent uses a YAML file in the GitLab project. Adding an agent configuration file is optional. You must create this file if:

To create an agent configuration file:

  1. Choose a name for your agent. The agent name follows the DNS label standard from RFC 1123. The name must:

    • Be unique in the project.
    • Contain at most 63 characters.
    • Contain only lowercase alphanumeric characters or -.
    • Start with an alphanumeric character.
    • End with an alphanumeric character.
  2. In the repository, in the default branch, create an agent configuration file at:

    .gitlab/agents/<agent-name>/config.yaml
    

You can leave the file blank for now, and configure it later.

Register the agent with GitLab

You can create a new agent record directly from the GitLab UI. The agent can be registered without creating an agent configuration file.

You must register an agent before you can install the agent in your cluster. To register an agent:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project. If you have an agent configuration file, it must be in this project. Your cluster manifest files should also be in this project.
  2. Select Operate > Kubernetes clusters.
  3. Select Connect a cluster (agent).
    • If you want to create a configuration with CI/CD defaults, type a name.
    • If you already have an agent configuration file, select it from the list.
  4. Select Register an agent.
  5. GitLab generates an access token for the agent. You need this token to install the agent in your cluster.

    caution
    Securely store the agent access token. A bad actor can use this token to access source code in the agent’s configuration project, access source code in any public project on the GitLab instance, or even, under very specific conditions, obtain a Kubernetes manifest.
  6. Copy the command under Recommended installation method. You need it when you use the one-liner installation method to install the agent in your cluster.

Install the agent in the cluster

GitLab recommends using Helm to install the agent.

To connect your cluster to GitLab, install the registered agent in your cluster. You can either:

If you do not know which one to choose, we recommend starting with Helm.

note
To connect to multiple clusters, you must configure, register, and install an agent in each cluster. Make sure to give each agent a unique name.

Install the agent with Helm

caution
For simplicity, the default Helm chart configuration sets up a service account for the agent with cluster-admin rights. You should not use this on production systems. To deploy to a production system, follow the instructions in Customize the Helm installation to create a service account with the minimum permissions required for your deployment and specify that during installation.

To install the agent on your cluster using Helm:

  1. Install the Helm CLI.
  2. In your computer, open a terminal and connect to your cluster.
  3. Run the command you copied when you registered your agent with GitLab. The command should look like:

    helm repo add gitlab https://charts.gitlab.io
    helm repo update
    helm upgrade --install test gitlab/gitlab-agent \
        --namespace gitlab-agent-test \
        --create-namespace \
        --set image.tag=<current agentk version> \
        --set config.token=<your_token> \
        --set config.kasAddress=<address_to_GitLab_KAS_instance>
    
  4. Optional. Customize the Helm installation. If you install the agent on a production system, you should customize the Helm installation to restrict the permissions of the service account. Related customization options are described below.
Customize the Helm installation

By default, the Helm installation command generated by GitLab:

  • Creates a namespace gitlab-agent for the deployment (--namespace gitlab-agent). You can skip creating the namespace by omitting the --create-namespace flag.
  • Sets up a service account for the agent and assigns it the cluster-admin role. You can:
    • Skip creating the service account by adding --set serviceAccount.create=false to the helm install command. In this case, you must set serviceAccount.name to a pre-existing service account.
    • Customise the role assigned to the service account by adding --set rbac.useExistingRole <your role name> to the helm install command. In this case, you should have a pre-created role with restricted permissions that can be used by the service account.
    • Skip role assignment altogether by adding --set rbac.create=false to your helm install command. In this case, you must create ClusterRoleBinding manually.
  • Creates a Secret resource for the agent’s access token. To instead bring your own secret with a token, omit the token (--set token=...) and instead use --set config.secretName=<your secret name>.
  • Creates a Deployment resource for the agentk pod.

To see the full list of customizations available, see the Helm chart’s README.

Use the agent when KAS is behind a self-signed certificate

When KAS is behind a self-signed certificate, you can set the value of config.kasCaCert to the certificate. For example:

helm upgrade --install gitlab-agent gitlab/gitlab-agent \
  --set-file config.kasCaCert=my-custom-ca.pem

In this example, my-custom-ca.pem is the path to a local file that contains the CA certificate used by KAS. The certificate is automatically stored in a config map and mounted in the agentk pod.

If KAS is installed with the GitLab chart, and the chart is configured to provide an auto-generated self-signed wildcard certificate, you can extract the CA certificate from the RELEASE-wildcard-tls-ca secret.

Use the agent behind an HTTP proxy
History
  • Introduced in GitLab 15.0, the GitLab agent Helm chart supports setting environment variables.

To configure an HTTP proxy when using the Helm chart, you can use the environment variables HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NO_PROXY. Upper and lowercase are both acceptable.

You can set these variables by using the extraEnv value, as a list of objects with keys name and value. For example, to set only the environment variable HTTPS_PROXY to the value https://example.com/proxy, you can run:

helm upgrade --install gitlab-agent gitlab/gitlab-agent \
  --set extraEnv[0].name=HTTPS_PROXY \
  --set extraEnv[0].value=https://example.com/proxy \
  ...
note
DNS rebind protection is disabled when either the HTTP_PROXY or the HTTPS_PROXY environment variable is set, and the domain DNS can’t be resolved.

Advanced installation method

GitLab also provides a KPT package for the agent. This method provides greater flexibility, but is only recommended for advanced users.

Install multiple agents in your cluster

note
In most cases, you should run one agent per cluster and use the agent impersonation features (Premium and Ultimate only) to support multi-tenancy. If you must run multiple agents, we would love to hear from you about any issues you encounter. You can provide your feedback in issue 454110.

To install a second agent in your cluster, you can follow the previous steps a second time. To avoid resource name collisions within the cluster, you must either:

  • Use a different release name for the agent, for example, second-gitlab-agent:

    helm upgrade --install second-gitlab-agent gitlab/gitlab-agent ...
    
  • Or, install the agent in a different namespace, for example, different-namespace:

    helm upgrade --install gitlab-agent gitlab/gitlab-agent \
      --namespace different-namespace \
      ...
    

Because each agent in a cluster runs independently, reconciliations are triggered by every agent with the Flux module enabled. Issue 357516 proposes to change this behavior.

As a workaround, you can:

  • Configure RBAC with the agent so that it only accesses the Flux resources it needs.
  • Disable the Flux module on the agents that don’t use it.

Example projects

The following example projects can help you get started with the agent.

Updates and version compatibility

GitLab warns you on the agent’s list page to update the agent version installed on your cluster.

For the best experience, the version of the agent installed in your cluster should match the GitLab major and minor version. The previous and next minor versions are also supported. For example, if your GitLab version is v14.9.4 (major version 14, minor version 9), then versions v14.9.0 and v14.9.1 of the agent are ideal, but any v14.8.x or v14.10.x version of the agent is also supported. See the release page of the GitLab agent.

Update the agent version

note
Instead of using --reuse-values, you should specify all needed values. If you use --reuse-values, you might miss new defaults or use deprecated values. To retrieve previous --set arguments, use helm get values <release name>. You can save the values to a file with helm get values gitlab-agent > agent.yaml, and pass the file to Helm with -f: helm upgrade gitlab-agent gitlab/gitlab-agent -f agent.yaml. This safely replaces the behavior of --reuse-values.

To update the agent to the latest version, you can run:

helm repo update
helm upgrade --install gitlab-agent gitlab/gitlab-agent \
  --namespace gitlab-agent \

To set a specific version, you can override the image.tag value. For example, to install version v14.9.1, run:

helm upgrade gitlab-agent gitlab/gitlab-agent \
  --namespace gitlab-agent \
  --set image.tag=v14.9.1

The Helm chart is updated separately from the agent for Kubernetes, and might occasionally lag behind the latest version of the agent. If you run helm repo update and don’t specify an image tag, your agent runs the version specified in the chart.

To use the latest release of the agent for Kubernetes, set the image tag to match the most recent agent image.

Uninstall the agent

If you installed the agent with Helm, then you can also uninstall with Helm. For example, if the release and namespace are both called gitlab-agent, then you can uninstall the agent using the following command:

helm uninstall gitlab-agent \
    --namespace gitlab-agent