Geo proxying contribute
Secondaries proxy nearly all HTTP requests through Workhorse to the primary, so users navigating to the secondary see a read-write UI, and are able to do all operations that they can do on the primary.
High-level components
Proxying of GitLab UI and API HTTP requests is handled by the gitlab-workhorse
component. Traffic usually sent to the Rails application on the Geo secondary site is proxied to the internal URL of the primary Geo site instead.
Proxying of Git over HTTP requests is handled by the gitlab-workhorse
component, but the decision to proxy or not is handled by the Rails application, taking into account whether the request is push or pull, and whether the desired Git data is up-to-date.
Proxying of Git over SSH traffic is handled by the gitlab-shell
component, but the decision to proxy or not is handled by the Rails application, taking into account whether the request is push or pull, and whether the desired Git data is up-to-date.
Request lifecycle
Top-level view
The proxying interaction can be explained at a high level through the following diagram:
Proxy detection mechanism
To know whether or not it should proxy requests to the primary, and the URL of the primary (as it is stored in the database), Workhorse polls the internal API when Geo is enabled. When proxying should be enabled, the internal API responds with the primary URL and JWT-signed data that is passed on to the primary for every request.
In-depth request flow and local data acceleration compared with proxying
Detailing implementation, Workhorse on the secondary (requested) site decides whether to proxy the data or not. If it can “accelerate” the data type (that is, can serve locally to save a roundtrip request), it returns the data immediately. Otherwise, traffic is sent to the primary’s internal URL, served by Workhorse on the primary exactly as a direct request would. The response is then be proxied back to the user through the secondary Workhorse in the same connection.
Sign-in
Requests proxied to the primary requiring authorization
Git pull
For historical reasons, the push_from_secondary
path is used to forward a Git pull. There is
an issue proposing to rename this route to avoid confusion.
Git pull over HTTP(s)
Accelerated repositories
When a repository exists on the secondary and we detect is up to date with the primary, we serve it directly instead of proxying.
Proxied repositories
If a requested repository isn’t synced, or we detect is not up to date, the request will be proxied to the primary, in order to get the latest version of the changes.
Git pull over SSH
As SSH operations go through GitLab Shell instead of Workhorse, they are not proxied through the mechanism used for Workhorse requests. With SSH operations, they are proxied as Git HTTP requests to the primary site by the secondary Rails internal API.
Accelerated repositories
When a repository exists on the secondary and we detect is up to date with the primary, we serve it directly instead of proxying.
Proxied repositories
If a requested repository isn’t synced, or we detect is not up to date, the request will be proxied to the primary, in order to get the latest version of the changes.
Git push
Git push over SSH
As SSH operations go through GitLab Shell instead of Workhorse, they are not proxied through the mechanism used for Workhorse requests. With SSH operations, they are proxied as Git HTTP requests to the primary site by the secondary Rails internal API.
Git push over HTTP(S)
If a requested repository isn’t synced, or we detect is not up to date, the request will be proxied to the primary, a push redirects to a local path formatted as /-/push_from_secondary/$SECONDARY_ID/*
.
Further, requests through this path are proxied to the primary, which will handle the push.
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