GitLab is developed for the Linux operating system. For the installations options and instructions please see the installation section of the readme.
- Ubuntu
- Debian
- CentOS
- RedHat Enterprise Linux
- Scientific Linux
- Oracle Linux
- Arch Linux
- Fedora
- Gentoo
But on the above unsupported distributions is stll possible to install GitLab yourself with the manual installation guide.
There is nothing that prevents GitLab from running on other Unix operating systems. This means you may get it to work on systems running FreeBSD or OS X. If you want to do this, please be aware it could be a lot of work. Please consider using a virtual machine to run GitLab.
GitLab does not run on Windows and we have no plans of supporting it in the near future. Please consider using a virtual machine to run GitLab.
GitLab requires Ruby (MRI) 1.9.3 or 2.0+. You will have to use the standard MRI implementation of Ruby. We love JRuby and Rubinius) but GitLab needs several Gems that have native extensions.
- 1 core works for under 100 users but the responsiveness might suffer
- 2 cores is the recommended number of cores and supports up to 100 users
- 4 cores supports up to 1,000 users
- 8 cores supports up to 10,000 users
- 512MB is too little memory, GitLab will be very slow and you will need 250MB of swap
- 768MB is the minimal memory size but we advise against this
- 1GB supports up to 100 users (with individual repositories under 250MB, otherwise git memory usage necessitates using swap space)
- 2GB is the recommended memory size and supports up to 1,000 users
- 4GB supports up to 10,000 users
The necessary hard drive space largely depends on the size of the repos you want to store in GitLab. But as a rule of thumb you should have at least twice as much free space as your all repos combined take up. You need twice the storage because GitLab satellites contain an extra copy of each repo.
If you want to be flexible about growing your hard drive space in the future consider mounting it using LVM so you can add more hard drives when you need them.
Apart from a local hard drive you can also mount a volume that supports the network file system (NFS) protocol. This volume might be located on a file server, a network attached storage (NAS) device, a storage area network (SAN) or on an Amazon Web Services (AWS) Elastic Block Store (EBS) volume.
If you have enough RAM memory and a recent CPU the speed of GitLab is mainly limited by hard drive seek times. Having a fast drive (7200 RPM and up) or a solid state drive (SSD) will improve the responsiveness of GitLab.
- Chrome (Latest stable version)
- Firefox (Latest released version)
- Safari 7+ (Know problem: required fields in html5 do not work)
- Opera (Latest released version)
- IE 10+