diff --git a/doc/install/requirements.md b/doc/install/requirements.md index 1dba04f4237033c498406e2d05d5a8f7c75ee4c7..30a9564674105e7ed847e5328c1786e630b238ea 100644 --- a/doc/install/requirements.md +++ b/doc/install/requirements.md @@ -41,23 +41,30 @@ some work on your part. ## CPU -We recommend a processor with **4 cores**. At a minimum you need a processor with 2 cores to responsively run an unmodified installation. +- 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 about 1,000 users +- 8 cores supports up to 10,000 users ## Memory - 512MB is too little memory, GitLab will be very slow and you will need 250MB of swap -- 768MB is the minimal memory size and supports up to 100 users -- **1GB** is the **recommended** memory size and supports up to 1,000 users -- 1.5GB supports up to 10,000 users +- 768MB is the minimal memory size but we advise against this +- 1GB supports up to 100 users if you do not have individual repo's over 250MB +- **2GB** is the **recommended** memory size and supports up to 1,000 users +- 4GB supports up to 10,000 users ## Storage 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](structure.md) contain an extra copy of each repo. 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. +free space as your all repos combined take up. You need twice the storage because [GitLab satellites](structure.md) contain an extra copy of each repo. -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. +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. # Installation troubles and reporting success or failure