gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/user/group/subgroups/index.md

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# Subgroups
> [Introduced][ce-2772] in GitLab 9.0.
With subgroups (aka nested groups or hierarchical groups) you can have
up to 20 levels of nested groups, which among other things can help you to:
- **Separate internal / external organizations.** Since every group
can have its own visibility level, you are able to host groups for different
purposes under the same umbrella.
- **Organize large projects.** For large projects, subgroups makes it
potentially easier to separate permissions on parts of the source code.
- **Make it easier to manage people and control visibility.** Give people
different [permissions][] depending on their group [membership](#membership).
## Overview
A group can have many subgroups inside it, and at the same time a group can have
only 1 parent group. It resembles a directory behavior or a nested items list:
- Group 1
- Group 1.1
- Group 1.2
- Group 1.2.1
- Group 1.2.2
- Group 1.2.2.1
In a real world example, imagine maintaining a GNU/Linux distribution with the
first group being the name of the distro and subsequent groups split like:
- Organization Group - GNU/Linux distro
- Category Subgroup - Packages
- (project) Package01
- (project) Package02
- Category Subgroup - Software
- (project) Core
- (project) CLI
- (project) Android app
- (project) iOS app
- Category Subgroup - Infra tools
- (project) Ansible playbooks
Another example of GitLab as a company would be the following:
- Organization Group - GitLab
- Category Subroup - Marketing
- (project) Design
- (project) General
- Category Subgroup - Software
- (project) GitLab CE
- (project) GitLab EE
- (project) Omnibus GitLab
- (project) GitLab Runner
- (project) GitLab Pages daemon
- Category Subgroup - Infra tools
- (project) Chef cookbooks
- Category Subgroup - Executive team
---
The maximum nested groups a group can have, including the first one in the
hierarchy, is 21.
Things like transferring or importing a project inside nested groups, work like
when performing these actions the traditional way with the `group/project`
structure.
## Creating a subgroup
>**Notes:**
- You need to be an Owner of a group in order to be able to create
a subgroup. For more information check the [permissions table][permissions].
- For a list of words that are not allowed to be used as group names see the
[`namespace_validator.rb` file][reserved] under the `RESERVED` and
`WILDCARD_ROUTES` lists.
To create a subgroup:
1. In the group's dashboard go to the **Subgroups** page and click **Create subgroup**.
![Subgroups page](img/create_subgroup_button.png)
1. Create a new group like you would normally do. Notice that the parent group
namespace is fixed under **Group path**. The visibility level can differ from
the parent group.
![Subgroups page](img/create_new_group.png)
1. Click the **Create group** button and you will be taken to the new group's
dashboard page.
---
You can follow the same process to create any subsequent groups.
## Membership
When you add a member to a subgroup, they inherit the membership and permission
level from the parent group. This model allows access to nested groups if you
have membership in one of its parents.
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The group permissions for a member can be changed only by Owners and only on
the **Members** page of the group the member was added.
You can tell if a member has inherited the permissions from a parent group by
looking at the group's **Members** page.
![Group members page](img/group_members.png)
From the image above, we can deduct the following things:
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- There are 5 members that have access to the group `four`
- User0 is a Reporter and has inherited their permissions from group `one`
which is above the hierarchy of group `four`
- User1 is a Developer and has inherited their permissions from group
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`one/two` which is above the hierarchy of group `four`
- User2 is a Developer and has inherited their permissions from group
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`one/two/three` which is above the hierarchy of group `four`
- For User3 there is no indication of a parent group, therefore they belong to
group `four`, the one we're inspecting
- Administrator is the Owner and member of **all** subgroups and for that reason,
same as User3, there is no indication of an ancestor group
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### Overriding the ancestor group membership
>**Note:**
You need to be an Owner of a group in order to be able to add members to it.
To override a user's membership of an ancestor group (the first group they were
added to), simply add the user in the new subgroup again, but with different
permissions.
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For example, if User0 was first added to group `group-1/group-1-1` with Developer
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permissions, then they will inherit those permissions in every other subgroup
of `group-1/group-1-1`. To give them Master access to `group-1/group-1-1/group1-1-1`,
you would add them again in that group as Master. Removing them from that group,
the permissions will fallback to those of the ancestor group.
## Mentioning subgroups
Mentioning groups (`@group`) in issues, commits and merge requests, would
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notify all members of that group. Now with subgroups, there is a more granular
support if you want to split your group's structure. Mentioning works as before
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and you can choose the group of people to be notified.
![Mentioning subgroups](img/mention_subgroups.png)
## Limitations
Here's a list of what you can't do with subgroups:
- [GitLab Pages](../../project/pages/index.md) are not currently working for
projects hosted under a subgroup. That means that only projects hosted under
the first parent group will work.
- Group level labels don't work in subgroups / sub projects
- It is not possible to share a project with a group that's an ancestor of
the group the project is in. That means you can only share as you walk down
the hierarchy. For example, `group/subgroup01/project` **cannot** be shared
with `group`, but can be shared with `group/subgroup02` or
`group/subgroup01/subgroup03`.
[ce-2772]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/2772
[permissions]: ../../permissions.md#group
[reserved]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/app/validators/namespace_validator.rb