@@ -496,6 +496,7 @@ also be customized, and you can easily use a [custom buildpack](#custom-buildpac
| `POSTGRES_DB` | The PostgreSQL database name; defaults to the value of [`$CI_ENVIRONMENT_SLUG`](../../ci/variables/README.md#predefined-variables-environment-variables). Set it to use a custom database name. |
| `BUILDPACK_URL` | The buildpack's full URL. It can point to either Git repositories or a tarball URL. For Git repositories, it is possible to point to a specific `ref`, for example `https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-ruby.git#v142` |
| `STAGING_ENABLED` | From GitLab 10.8, this variable can be used to define a [deploy policy for staging and production environments](#deploy-policy-for-staging-and-production-environments). |
| `INCREMENTAL_ROLLOUT_ENABLED`| From GitLab 10.8, this variable can be used to enable an [incremental rollout](#incremental-rollout-to-production) of your application for the production environment. |
TIP: **Tip:**
Set up the replica variables using a
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@@ -578,6 +579,57 @@ If `STAGING_ENABLED` is defined in your project (e.g., set `STAGING_ENABLED` to
to a `staging` environment, and a `production_manual` job will be created for
you when you're ready to manually deploy to production.
#### Incremental rollout to production **[PREMIUM]**
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/issues/5415) in GitLab 10.8.
When you have a new version of your app to deploy in production, you may want
to use an incremental rollout to replace just a few pods with the latest code.
This will allow you to first check how the app is behaving, and later manually
increasing the rollout up to 100%.
If `INCREMENTAL_ROLLOUT_ENABLED` is defined in your project (e.g., set
`INCREMENTAL_ROLLOUT_ENABLED` to `1` as a secret variable), then instead of the