Install Sourcegraph with Kubernetes
Deploying Sourcegraph into a Kubernetes cluster is for organizations that need highly scalable and available code search and code intelligence.
The Kubernetes manifests for a Sourcegraph on Kubernetes installation are in the repository deploy-sourcegraph.
Requirements
- Sourcegraph Enterprise license. You can run through these instructions without one, but you must obtain a license for instances of more than 10 users.
- Kubernetes v1.15
- Verify that you have enough capacity by following our resource allocation guidelines
- Sourcegraph requires an SSD backed storage class
- Cluster role administrator access
- kubectl v1.15 or later (run
kubectl version
for version info)- Configure cluster access for
kubectl
- Configure cluster access for
Steps
1) After meeting all the requirements, make sure you can access your cluster with kubectl
.
# Google Cloud Platform (GCP) users are required to give their user the ability to create roles in Kubernetes. # See the [GCP's documentation: https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/docs/how-to/role-based-access-control#prerequisites_for_using_role-based_access_control kubectl create clusterrolebinding cluster-admin-binding \ --clusterrole cluster-admin --user $(gcloud config get-value account)
2) Clone the deploy-sourcegraph repository and check out the version tag you wish to deploy:
# 🚨 The master branch tracks development. # Use the branch of this repository corresponding to the version of Sourcegraph you wish to deploy, e.g. git checkout 3.24 git clone https://github.com/sourcegraph/deploy-sourcegraph cd deploy-sourcegraph export SOURCEGRAPH_VERSION="v3.30.3" git checkout $SOURCEGRAPH_VERSION
3) Configure the sourcegraph
storage class for the cluster by following “Configure a storage class”.
4) (OPTIONAL) By default sourcegraph
will be deployed in the default
kubernetes namespace. If you wish to deploy sourcegraph
in a non-default namespace, it is highly recommended you use the provided overlays to ensure updates are made in all manifests correctly. See the “Overlays docs” for full instructions on how to use overlays with Sourcegraph and learn more about “Use non-default namespace”.
5) (OPTIONAL) If you want to add a large number of repositories to your instance, you should configure the number of gitserver replicas and the number of indexed-search replicas before you continue with the next step. (See “Tuning replica counts for horizontal scalability” for guidelines.)
6) Deploy the desired version of Sourcegraph to your cluster:
./kubectl-apply-all.sh
7) Monitor the status of the deployment:
kubectl get pods -o wide --watch
8) After deployment is completed, verify Sourcegraph is running by temporarily making the frontend port accessible:
kubectl port-forward svc/sourcegraph-frontend 3080:30080
9) Open http://localhost:3080 in your browser and you will see a setup page.
10) 🎉 Congrats, you have Sourcegraph up and running! Now configure your deployment.
Configuration
See the Configuration docs.
Overlays
See the Overlays docs.
Troubleshooting
See the Troubleshooting docs.
Updating
- See the Updating Sourcegraph docs on how to upgrade.
- See the Updating a Kubernetes Sourcegraph instance docs for details on changes in each version to determine if manual migration steps are necessary.
Restarting
Some updates, such as changing the externalURL
for an instance, will require restarting the instance using kubectl
. To restart, run kubectl rollout restart deployment sourcegraph-frontend
. If updating the externalURL
for the instance, only the frontend pods will need to be restarted.
Cluster-admin privileges
Note: Not all organizations have this split in admin privileges. If your organization does not then you don’t need to change anything and can ignore this section.
The default installation has a few manifests that require cluster-admin privileges to apply. We have labelled all resources with a label indicating if they require cluster-admin privileges or not. This allows cluster admins to install the manifests that cannot be installed otherwise.
- Manifests deployed by cluster-admin
./kubectl-apply-all.sh -l sourcegraph-resource-requires=cluster-admin
- Manifests deployed by non-cluster-admin
./kubectl-apply-all.sh -l sourcegraph-resource-requires=no-cluster-admin
We also provide an overlay that generates a version of the manifests that does not require cluster-admin privileges.
Cloud installation guides
Security note: If you intend to set this up as a production instance, we recommend you create the cluster in a VPC or other secure network that restricts unauthenticated access from the public Internet. You can later expose the necessary ports via an Internet Gateway or equivalent mechanism. Take care to secure your cluster in a manner that meets your organization’s security requirements.
Follow the instructions linked in the table below to provision a Kubernetes cluster for the infrastructure provider of your choice, using the recommended node and list types in the table.
Note: Sourcegraph can run on any Kubernetes cluster, so if your infrastructure provider is not listed, see the “Other” row. Pull requests to add rows for more infrastructure providers are welcome!
Provider | Node type | Boot/ephemeral disk size |
---|---|---|
Compute nodes | ||
Amazon EKS (better than plain EC2) | m5.4xlarge | N/A |
AWS EC2 | m5.4xlarge | N/A |
Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) | n1-standard-16 | 100 GB (default) |
Azure | D16 v3 | 100 GB (SSD preferred) |
Other | 16 vCPU, 60 GiB memory per node | 100 GB (SSD preferred) |