--- stage: Plan group: Product Planning info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#designated-technical-writers --- # Reply by email > [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/merge_requests/1173) in GitLab 8.0. GitLab can be set up to allow users to comment on issues and merge requests by replying to notification emails. ## Requirement Make sure [incoming email](incoming_email.md) is set up. ## How it works? ### 1. GitLab sends a notification email When GitLab sends a notification and Reply by email is enabled, the `Reply-To` header is set to the address defined in your GitLab configuration, with the `%{key}` placeholder (if present) replaced by a specific "reply key". In addition, this "reply key" is also added to the `References` header. ### 2. You reply to the notification email When you reply to the notification email, your email client will: - send the email to the `Reply-To` address it got from the notification email - set the `In-Reply-To` header to the value of the `Message-ID` header from the notification email - set the `References` header to the value of the `Message-ID` plus the value of the notification email's `References` header. ### 3. GitLab receives your reply to the notification email When GitLab receives your reply, it will look for the "reply key" in the following headers, in this order: 1. the `To` header 1. the `References` header If it finds a reply key, it will be able to leave your reply as a comment on the entity the notification was about (issue, merge request, commit...). For more details about the `Message-ID`, `In-Reply-To`, and `References headers`, please consult [RFC 5322](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5322#section-3.6.4).