gitlab-ci-multi-runner register
gave me
couldn't execute POST against https://xxxx/ci/api/v1/runners/register.json:
Post https://xxxx/ci/api/v1/runners/register.json:
x509: cannot validate certificate for xxxx because it doesn't contain any IP SANs
Is there a way to disable certification validation ?
I'm using Gitlab 8.13.1 and gitlab-ci-multi-runner 1.11.2.
Based on Wassim's answer, and gitlab documentation about tls-self-signed and custom CA-signed certificates, here's to save some time if you're not the admin of the gitlab server but just of the server with the runners (and if the runner is run as root):
SERVER=gitlab.example.com
PORT=443
CERTIFICATE=/etc/gitlab-runner/certs/${SERVER}.crt
# Create the certificates hierarchy expected by gitlab
sudo mkdir -p $(dirname "$CERTIFICATE")
# Get the certificate in PEM format and store it
openssl s_client -connect ${SERVER}:${PORT} -showcerts </dev/null 2>/dev/null | sed -e '/-----BEGIN/,/-----END/!d' | sudo tee "$CERTIFICATE" >/dev/null
# Register your runner
gitlab-runner register --tls-ca-file="$CERTIFICATE" [your other options]
Update 1: the certificate needs to be an absolute path at the right location.
Update 2: it might still fail with custom CA-signed because of gitlab bug #2675
Currently there is no possibility to run the multi runner with an insecure ssl option.
There is currently an open issue at GitLab about that.
Still you should be able to get your certificate, make it a PEM file and give it to the runner command using --tls-ca-file
To craft the PEM file use openssl.openssl x509 -in mycert.crt -out mycert.pem -outform PEM
Ok I followed step by step this post http://moonlightbox.logdown.com/posts/2016/09/12/gitlab-ci-runner-register-x509-error and then it worked like a charm. To prevent dead link I copy the steps below:
First edit ssl configuration on the GitLab server (not the runner)
vim /etc/pki/tls/openssl.cnf
[ v3_ca ]
subjectAltName=IP:192.168.1.1 <---- Add this line. 192.168.1.1 is your GitLab server IP.
Re-generate self-signed certificate
cd /etc/gitlab/ssl
sudo openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 3650 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout /etc/gitlab/ssl/192.168.1.1.key -out /etc/gitlab/ssl/192.168.1.1.crt
sudo openssl dhparam -out /etc/gitlab/ssl/dhparam.pem 2048
sudo gitlab-ctl restart
Copy the new CA to the GitLab CI runner
scp /etc/gitlab/ssl/192.168.1.1.crt root@192.168.1.2:/etc/gitlab-runner/certs
Thanks @Moon Light @Wassim Dhif
In my case I got it working by adding the path to the .pem file as following:
sudo gitlab-runner register --tls-ca-file /my/path/gitlab/gitlab.myserver.com.pem
In my setup the following the following worked as well. It's just important that IP/Name used for creating certificate matches IP/Name used for registering the runner.
gitlab-runner register --tls-ca-file /my/path/gitlab/gitlab.myserver.com.pem
Furthermore, it could be necessary to add a line for hostname lookup to the runners config.toml file also (section [runners.docker]): extra_hosts = ["git.domain.com:192.168.99.100"]
see also https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/issues/2209
In addition, there could be some network-trouble if for gitlab/gitlab-runner network-mode host is used, it has to be added to the config.toml as well, as it starts additional containers, which otherwise could have a problem to connect to the gitlab-host ((section [runners.docker]): network_mode="host"
Finally, there might be an issue with the self-signed SSL-Cert (https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/issues/2659). A dirty workaround is to add environment = ["GIT_SSL_NO_VERIFY=true"]
to the [[runners]] section.
The following steps worked in my environment. (Ubuntu)
Download certificate
I did not have access to the gitlab server. Therefore,
In gitlab-runner host
Rename the downloaded certificate with .crt
$ mv some-host-gitlab.com some-host-gitlab.com.crt
Register the runner now with this file
$ sudo gitlab-runner register --tls-ca-file /path/to/some-host-gitlab.com.crt
I was able to register runner to a project.