- REST API
- SCIM API
- GraphQL API
- Compatibility guidelines
- How to use the API
- Authentication
- Status codes
- Pagination
- Path parameters
- Namespaced path encoding
- File path, branches, and tags name encoding
- Request Payload
-
Encoding API parameters of
array
andhash
types id
vsiid
- Data validation and error reporting
- Unknown route
- Encoding
+
in ISO 8601 dates - Clients
- Rate limits
- Content type
- Resolve requests detected as spam
API Docs
Use the GitLab APIs to automate GitLab.
REST API
A REST API is available in GitLab. Usage instructions are below.
For examples, see How to use the API.
For a list of the available resources and their endpoints, see REST API resources.
You can also use a partial OpenAPI definition, to test the API directly from the GitLab user interface. Contributions are welcome.
For an introduction and basic steps, see How to make GitLab API calls.
SCIM API
GitLab provides a SCIM API that both implements
/Users endpoint. The base URL is A GraphQL API is available in GitLab.
For a list of the available resources and their endpoints, see
GraphQL API resources.
With GraphQL, you can make an API request for only what you need,
and it’s versioned by default.
GraphQL co-exists with the current v4 REST API. If we have a v5 API, this should
be a compatibility layer on top of GraphQL.
There were some patenting and licensing concerns with GraphQL. However, these
have been resolved to our satisfaction. The reference implementations
were re-licensed under MIT, and the OWF license used for the GraphQL specification.
The HTTP API is versioned with a single number, which is currently The minor version isn’t explicit, which allows for a stable API
endpoint. New features can be added to the API in the same
version number.
New features and bug fixes are released in tandem with GitLab. Apart
from incidental patch and security releases, GitLab is released on the 22nd of each
month. Major API version changes, and removal of entire API versions, are done in tandem
with major GitLab releases.
All deprecations and changes between versions are in the documentation.
For the changes between v3 and v4, see the .
Only API version v4 is available.
API requests must include both The following is a basic example of a request to the fictional The API uses JSON to serialize data. You don’t need to specify If you want to expose HTTP response headers, use the This request can help you investigate an unexpected response.
If you want to expose the HTTP exit code, include the The HTTP exit code can help you diagnose the success or failure of your REST request.
Most API requests require authentication, or only return public data when
authentication isn’t provided. When authentication is not required, the documentation
for each endpoint specifies this. For example, the
There are several ways you can authenticate with the GitLab API:
Project access tokens are supported by:
If you are an administrator, you or your application can authenticate as a specific user.
To do so, use:
If authentication information is not valid or is missing, GitLab returns an error
message with a status code of You can use an OAuth2 token to authenticate with the API by passing
it in either the Example of using the OAuth2 token in a parameter:
Example of using the OAuth2 token in a header:
Read more about GitLab as an OAuth2 provider.
A default refresh setting of two hours is tracked in .
You can use access tokens to authenticate with the API by passing it in either
the Example of using the personal, project, or group access token in a parameter:
Example of using the personal, project, or group access token in a header:
You can also use personal, project, or group access tokens with OAuth-compliant headers:
Signing in to the main GitLab application sets a The primary user of this authentication method is the web frontend of GitLab
itself. The web frontend can use the API as the authenticated user to get a
list of projects without explicitly passing an access token.
Impersonation tokens are a type of personal access token.
They can be created only by an administrator, and are used to authenticate with the
API as a specific user.
Use impersonation tokens as an alternative to:
For more information, see the users API
documentation.
Impersonation tokens are used exactly like regular personal access tokens, and
can be passed in either the By default, impersonation is enabled. To disable impersonation:
For Omnibus installations
Edit the Save the file, and then reconfigure
GitLab for the changes to take effect.
To re-enable impersonation, remove this configuration, and then reconfigure
GitLab.
For installations from source
Edit the Save the file, and then restart
GitLab for the changes to take effect.
To re-enable impersonation, remove this configuration, and then restart GitLab.
All API requests support performing an API request as if you were another user,
provided you’re authenticated as an administrator with an OAuth or personal
access token that has the As an administrator, pass the If a non administrative access token is provided, GitLab returns an error
message with a status code of If an access token without the If the sudo user ID or username cannot be found, an error message is
returned with a status code of Example of a valid API request and a request using cURL with sudo request,
providing a username:
Example of a valid API request and a request using cURL with sudo request,
providing an ID:
The API is designed to return different status codes according to context and
action. This way, if a request results in an error, you can get
insight into what went wrong.
The following table gives an overview of how the API functions generally behave.
/api/scim/v2/groups/:group_path/Users/
.
GraphQL API
Compatibility guidelines
4
. This number
symbolizes the major version number, as described by SemVer.
Because of this, backward-incompatible changes require this version number to
change.
Current status
How to use the API
api
and the API version. The API
version is defined in lib/api.rb.
For example, the root of the v4 API is at /api/v4
.
Valid API request
gitlab.example.com
endpoint:
curl "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
.json
at the
end of the API URL.
gitlab.example.com
with gitlab.com
to query GitLab.com (GitLab SaaS).
Access can be denied due to authentication. For more information, see Authentication.API request to expose HTTP response headers
--include
option:
curl --include "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
HTTP/2 200
...
API request that includes the exit code
--fail
option:
curl --fail "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/does-not-exist"
curl: (22) The requested URL returned error: 404
Authentication
/projects/:id
endpoint does not require authentication.
401
:
{
"message": "401 Unauthorized"
}
OAuth2 tokens
access_token
parameter or the Authorization
header.
curl "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects?access_token=OAUTH-TOKEN"
curl --header "Authorization: Bearer OAUTH-TOKEN" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
refresh_token
parameter
to refresh tokens. Integrations may need to be updated to use refresh tokens prior to
expiration, which is based on the
property in the token endpoint response. See OAuth2 token documentation
for examples requesting a new access token using a refresh token.Personal/project/group access tokens
private_token
parameter or the PRIVATE-TOKEN
header.
curl "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects?private_token=<your_access_token>"
curl --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
curl --header "Authorization: Bearer <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
Session cookie
_gitlab_session
cookie. The
API uses this cookie for authentication if it’s present. Using the API to
generate a new session cookie isn’t supported.
Impersonation tokens
private_token
parameter or the PRIVATE-TOKEN
header.
Disable impersonation
/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
file:
gitlab_rails['impersonation_enabled'] = false
config/gitlab.yml
file:
gitlab:
impersonation_enabled: false
Sudo
sudo
scope. The API requests are executed with the
permissions of the impersonated user.
sudo
parameter either
by using query string or a header with an ID or username (case insensitive) of
the user you want to perform the operation as. If passed as a header, the header
name must be Sudo
.
403
:
{
"message": "403 Forbidden - Must be admin to use sudo"
}
sudo
scope is provided, an error message is
returned with a status code of 403
:
{
"error": "insufficient_scope",
"error_description": "The request requires higher privileges than provided by the access token.",
"scope": "sudo"
}
404
:
{
"message": "404 User with ID or username '123' Not Found"
}
GET /projects?private_token=<your_access_token>&sudo=username
curl --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" --header "Sudo: username" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
GET /projects?private_token=<your_access_token>&sudo=23
curl --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" --header "Sudo: 23" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
Status codes
Request type | Description |
---|---|
GET
| Access one or more resources and return the result as JSON. |
POST
| Return 201 Created if the resource is successfully created and return the newly created resource as JSON.
|
GET / PUT
| Return 200 OK if the resource is accessed or modified successfully. The (modified) result is returned as JSON.
|
DELETE
| Returns 204 No Content if the resource was deleted successfully.
|
The following table shows the possible return codes for API requests.
Return values | Description |
---|---|
200 OK
| The GET , PUT or DELETE request was successful, and the resource(s) itself is returned as JSON.
|
204 No Content
| The server has successfully fulfilled the request, and there is no additional content to send in the response payload body. |
201 Created
| The POST request was successful, and the resource is returned as JSON.
|
304 Not Modified
| The resource hasn’t been modified since the last request. |
400 Bad Request
| A required attribute of the API request is missing. For example, the title of an issue is not given. |
401 Unauthorized
| The user isn’t authenticated. A valid user token is necessary. |
403 Forbidden
| The request isn’t allowed. For example, the user isn’t allowed to delete a project. |
404 Not Found
| A resource couldn’t be accessed. For example, an ID for a resource couldn’t be found. |
405 Method Not Allowed
| The request isn’t supported. |
409 Conflict
| A conflicting resource already exists. For example, creating a project with a name that already exists. |
412
| The request was denied. This can happen if the If-Unmodified-Since header is provided when trying to delete a resource, which was modified in between.
|
422 Unprocessable
| The entity couldn’t be processed. |
429 Too Many Requests
| The user exceeded the application rate limits. |
500 Server Error
| While handling the request, something went wrong on the server. |
Pagination
GitLab supports the following pagination methods:
- Offset-based pagination. This is the default method and is available on all endpoints.
- Keyset-based pagination. Added to selected endpoints but being .
For large collections, for performance reasons we recommend keyset pagination (when available) instead of offset pagination.
Offset-based pagination
Sometimes, the returned result spans many pages. When listing resources, you can pass the following parameters:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
page
| Page number (default: 1 ).
|
per_page
| Number of items to list per page (default: 20 , max: 100 ).
|
In the following example, we list 50 namespaces per page:
curl --request GET --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/namespaces?per_page=50"
Pagination Link
header
rel set to For GitLab.com users, some pagination headers may not be returned.
In the following cURL example, we limit the output to three items per page
( The response is:
GitLab also returns the following additional pagination headers:
prev
, next
, first
, or last
and contain
the relevant URL. Be sure to use these links instead of generating your own URLs.
per_page=3
) and we request the second page (page=2
) of comments
of the issue with ID 8
which belongs to the project with ID 9
:
curl --head --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/9/issues/8/notes?per_page=3&page=2"
HTTP/2 200 OK
cache-control: no-cache
content-length: 1103
content-type: application/json
date: Mon, 18 Jan 2016 09:43:18 GMT
link: <https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/8/issues/8/notes?page=1&per_page=3>; rel="prev", <https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/8/issues/8/notes?page=3&per_page=3>; rel="next", <https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/8/issues/8/notes?page=1&per_page=3>; rel="first", <https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/8/issues/8/notes?page=3&per_page=3>; rel="last"
status: 200 OK
vary: Origin
x-next-page: 3
x-page: 2
x-per-page: 3
x-prev-page: 1
x-request-id: 732ad4ee-9870-4866-a199-a9db0cde3c86
x-runtime: 0.108688
x-total: 8
x-total-pages: 3
Other pagination headers
Header | Description |
---|---|
x-next-page
| The index of the next page. |
x-page
| The index of the current page (starting at 1). |
x-per-page
| The number of items per page. |
X-prev-page
| The index of the previous page. |
x-total
| The total number of items. |
x-total-pages
| The total number of pages. |
For GitLab.com users, some pagination headers may not be returned.
Keyset-based pagination
Keyset-pagination allows for more efficient retrieval of pages and - in contrast to offset-based pagination - runtime is independent of the size of the collection.
This method is controlled by the following parameters:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
pagination
|
keyset (to enable keyset pagination).
|
per_page
| Number of items to list per page (default: 20 , max: 100 ).
|
In the following example, we list 50 projects per page, ordered
by id
ascending.
curl --request GET --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects?pagination=keyset&per_page=50&order_by=id&sort=asc"
The response header includes a link to the next page. For example:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
Link: <https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects?pagination=keyset&per_page=50&order_by=id&sort=asc&id_after=42>; rel="next"
Status: 200 OK
...
The link to the next page contains an additional filter id_after=42
that
excludes already-retrieved records.
As another example, the following request lists 50 groups per page ordered
by name
ascending using keyset pagination:
curl --request GET --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/groups?pagination=keyset&per_page=50&order_by=name&sort=asc"
The response header includes a link to the next page:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
Link: <https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/groups?pagination=keyset&per_page=50&order_by=name&sort=asc&cursor=eyJuYW1lIjoiRmxpZ2h0anMiLCJpZCI6IjI2IiwiX2tkIjoibiJ9>; rel="next"
Status: 200 OK
...
The link to the next page contains an additional filter cursor=eyJuYW1lIjoiRmxpZ2h0anMiLCJpZCI6IjI2IiwiX2tkIjoibiJ9
that
excludes already-retrieved records.
The type of filter depends on the
order_by
option used, and we can have more than one additional filter.
Links
header was removed in GitLab 14.0 to be aligned with the
Link
header was
and should be used instead.When the end of the collection is reached and there are no additional
records to retrieve, the Link
header is absent and the resulting array is
empty.
We recommend using only the given link to retrieve the next page instead of building your own URL. Apart from the headers shown, we don’t expose additional pagination headers.
Keyset-based pagination is supported only for selected resources and ordering options:
Resource | Options | Availability |
---|---|---|
Projects |
order_by=id only
| Authenticated and unauthenticated users |
Groups |
order_by=name , sort=asc only
| Unauthenticated users only |
Path parameters
If an endpoint has path parameters, the documentation displays them with a preceding colon.
For example:
DELETE /projects/:id/share/:group_id
The :id
path parameter needs to be replaced with the project ID, and the
:group_id
needs to be replaced with the ID of the group. The colons :
shouldn’t be included.
The resulting cURL request for a project with ID 5
and a group ID of 17
is then:
curl --request DELETE --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/5/share/17"
Path parameters that are required to be URL-encoded must be followed. If not, it doesn’t match an API endpoint and responds with a 404. If there’s something in front of the API (for example, Apache), ensure that it doesn’t decode the URL-encoded path parameters.
Namespaced path encoding
If using namespaced API requests, make sure that the NAMESPACE/PROJECT_PATH
is
URL-encoded.
For example, /
is represented by %2F
:
GET /api/v4/projects/diaspora%2Fdiaspora
A project’s path isn’t necessarily the same as its name. A project’s path is found in the project’s URL or in the project’s settings, under General > Advanced > Change path.
File path, branches, and tags name encoding
If a file path, branch or tag contains a /
, make sure it is URL-encoded.
For example, /
is represented by %2F
:
GET /api/v4/projects/1/repository/files/src%2FREADME.md?ref=master
GET /api/v4/projects/1/branches/my%2Fbranch/commits
GET /api/v4/projects/1/repository/tags/my%2Ftag
Request Payload
API Requests can use parameters sent as
or as a .
GET requests usually send a query string, while PUT or POST requests usually
send the payload body:
Query string:
Request payload (JSON):
URL encoded query strings have a length limitation. Requests that are too large
result in a You can request the API with Some resources have two similarly-named fields. For example, issues,
merge requests, and project milestones.
The fields are:
If a resource has both the For example, suppose a project with Not all resources with the When working with the API you may encounter validation errors, in which case
the API returns an HTTP Such errors appear in the following cases:
When an attribute is missing, you receive something like:
When a validation error occurs, error messages are different. They hold
all details of validation errors:
This makes error messages more machine-readable. The format can be described as
follows:
When you attempt to access an API URL that doesn’t exist, you receive a
404 Not Found message.
If you need to include a The correct encoding for the query parameter would be:
There are many unofficial GitLab API Clients for most of the popular programming
languages. For a complete list, visit the .
For administrator documentation on rate limit settings, see
Rate limits. To find the settings that are
specifically used by GitLab.com, see
GitLab.com-specific rate limits.
The GitLab API supports the In ,
API endpoints do not support
REST API requests can be detected as spam. If a request is detected as spam and:
A CAPTCHA service is not configured, an error response is returned. For example:
For example:
curl --request POST "https://gitlab/api/v4/projects?name=<example-name>&description=<example-description>"
curl --request POST --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
--data '{"name":"<example-name>", "description":"<example-description>"}' "https://gitlab/api/v4/projects"
414 Request-URI Too Large
error message. This can be resolved by
using a payload body instead.
Encoding API parameters of
array
and hash
types
array
and hash
types parameters:
array
import_sources
is a parameter of type array
:
curl --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" \
-d "import_sources[]=github" \
-d "import_sources[]=bitbucket" \
"https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/some_endpoint"
hash
override_params
is a parameter of type hash
:
curl --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" \
--form "namespace=email" \
--form "path=impapi" \
--form "file=@/path/to/somefile.txt" \
--form "override_params[visibility]=private" \
--form "override_params[some_other_param]=some_value" \
"https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/import"
Array of hashes
variables
is a parameter of type array
containing hash key/value pairs
[{ 'key': 'UPLOAD_TO_S3', 'value': 'true' }]
:
curl --globoff --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" \
"https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/169/pipeline?ref=master&variables[0][key]=VAR1&variables[0][value]=hello&variables[1][key]=VAR2&variables[1][value]=world"
curl --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" \
--header "Content-Type: application/json" \
--data '{ "ref": "master", "variables": [ {"key": "VAR1", "value": "hello"}, {"key": "VAR2", "value": "world"} ] }' \
"https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/169/pipeline"
id
vs iid
id
: ID that is unique across all projects.
iid
: Additional, internal ID (displayed in the web UI) that’s unique in the
scope of a single project.
iid
field and the id
field, the iid
field is
usually used instead of id
to fetch the resource.
id: 42
has an issue with id: 46
and
iid: 5
. In this case:
GET /projects/42/issues/5
.
GET /projects/42/issues/46
.
iid
field are fetched by iid
. For guidance
regarding which field to use, see the documentation for the specific resource.
Data validation and error reporting
400
error.
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Content-Type: application/json
{
"message":"400 (Bad request) \"title\" not given"
}
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Content-Type: application/json
{
"message": {
"bio": [
"is too long (maximum is 255 characters)"
]
}
}
{
"message": {
"<property-name>": [
"<error-message>",
"<error-message>",
...
],
"<embed-entity>": {
"<property-name>": [
"<error-message>",
"<error-message>",
...
],
}
}
}
Unknown route
HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
Content-Type: application/json
{
"error": "404 Not Found"
}
Encoding
+
in ISO 8601 dates
+
in a query parameter, you may need to use %2B
instead, due to a
that causes a +
to be interpreted as a space. For example, in an ISO 8601 date,
you may want to include a specific time in ISO 8601 format, such as:
2017-10-17T23:11:13.000+05:30
2017-10-17T23:11:13.000%2B05:30
Clients
Rate limits
Content type
application/json
content type by default, though
some API endpoints also support text/plain
.
text/plain
by default, unless it’s explicitly documented.
Resolve requests detected as spam
{"message":{"error":"Your snippet has been recognized as spam and has been discarded."}}
needs_captcha_response
set to true
.
spam_log_id
and captcha_site_key
fields set.
{"needs_captcha_response":true,"spam_log_id":42,"captcha_site_key":"6LeIxAcTAAAAAJcZVRqyHh71UMIEGNQ_MXjiZKhI","message":{"error":"Your snippet has been recognized as spam. Please, change the content or solve the reCAPTCHA to proceed."}}
captcha_site_key
to obtain a CAPTCHA response value using the appropriate CAPTCHA API.
Only Resubmit the request with the X-GitLab-Captcha-Response
and X-GitLab-Spam-Log-Id
headers set.
export CAPTCHA_RESPONSE="<CAPTCHA response obtained from CAPTCHA service>"
export SPAM_LOG_ID="<spam_log_id obtained from initial REST response>"
curl --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: $PRIVATE_TOKEN" --header "X-GitLab-Captcha-Response: $CAPTCHA_RESPONSE" --header "X-GitLab-Spam-Log-Id: $SPAM_LOG_ID" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/snippets?title=Title&file_name=FileName&content=Content&visibility=public"