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stage | group | info | type |
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Release | Release | To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments | concepts, howto |
Protected environments (PREMIUM)
Introduced in GitLab Premium 11.3.
Environments can be used for different reasons:
- Some of them are just for testing.
- Others are for production.
Since deploy jobs can be raised by different users with different roles, it is important that specific environments are "protected" to prevent unauthorized people from affecting them.
By default, a protected environment does one thing: it ensures that only people with the right privileges can deploy to it, thus keeping it safe.
NOTE: A GitLab admin is always allowed to use environments, even if they are protected.
To protect, update, or unprotect an environment, you need to have at least the Maintainer role.
Protecting environments
To protect an environment:
- Navigate to your project's Settings > CI/CD.
- Expand the Protected environments section.
- From the Environment dropdown menu, select the environment you want to protect.
- In the Allowed to Deploy dropdown menu, select the role, users, or groups you
want to give deploy access to. Keep in mind that:
- There are two roles to choose from:
- Maintainers: Allows access to all maintainers in the project.
- Developers: Allows access to all maintainers and all developers in the project.
- You can only select groups that are already associated with the project.
- Only users that have at least the Developer role appear in the Allowed to Deploy dropdown menu.
- There are two roles to choose from:
- Click the Protect button.
The protected environment now appears in the list of protected environments.
Use the API to protect an environment
Alternatively, you can use the API to protect an environment:
-
Use a project with a CI that creates an environment. For example:
stages: - test - deploy test: stage: test script: - 'echo "Testing Application: ${CI_PROJECT_NAME}"' production: stage: deploy when: manual script: - 'echo "Deploying to ${CI_ENVIRONMENT_NAME}"' environment: name: ${CI_JOB_NAME}
-
Use the UI to create a new group. For example, this group is called
protected-access-group
and has the group ID9899826
. Note that the rest of the examples in these steps use this group. -
Use the API to add a user to the group as a reporter:
$ curl --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" \ --data "user_id=3222377&access_level=20" "https://gitlab.com/api/v4/groups/9899826/members" {"id":3222377,"name":"Sean Carroll","username":"sfcarroll","state":"active","avatar_url":"https://assets.gitlab-static.net/uploads/-/system/user/avatar/3222377/avatar.png","web_url":"https://gitlab.com/sfcarroll","access_level":20,"created_at":"2020-10-26T17:37:50.309Z","expires_at":null}
-
Use the API to add the group to the project as a reporter:
$ curl --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" \ --request POST "https://gitlab.com/api/v4/projects/22034114/share?group_id=9899826&group_access=20" {"id":1233335,"project_id":22034114,"group_id":9899826,"group_access":20,"expires_at":null}
-
Use the API to add the group with protected environment access:
curl --header 'Content-Type: application/json' --request POST --data '{"name": "production", "deploy_access_levels": [{"group_id": 9899826}]}' \ --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.com/api/v4/projects/22034114/protected_environments"
The group now has access and can be seen in the UI.
Environment access by group membership
A user may be granted access to protected environments as part of group membership. Users with Reporter permissions, can only be granted access to protected environments with this method.
Deployment branch access
Users with the Developer role can be granted access to a protected environment through any of these methods:
- As an individual contributor, through a role.
- Through a group membership.
If the user also has push or merge access to the branch deployed on production, they have the following privileges:
Deployment-only access to protected environments
Users granted access to a protected environment, but not push or merge access to the branch deployed to it, are only granted access to deploy the environment. An individual in a group with the Reporter permission, or in groups added to the project with Reporter permissions, appears in the dropdown menu for deployment-only access.
To add deployment-only access:
- Add a group with Reporter permissions.
- Add user(s) to the group.
- Invite the group to be a project member.
- Follow the steps outlined in Protecting Environments.
Note that deployment-only access is the only possible access level for groups with Reporter permissions.
Modifying and unprotecting environments
Maintainers can:
- Update existing protected environments at any time by changing the access in the Allowed to Deploy dropdown menu.
- Unprotect a protected environment by clicking the Unprotect button for that environment.
After an environment is unprotected, all access entries are deleted and must be re-entered if the environment is re-protected.
For more information, see Deployment safety.
Group-level protected environments
- Introduced in GitLab Premium 14.0.
- Deployed behind a feature flag, disabled by default.
- Disabled on GitLab.com.
- Not recommended for production use.
- To use in GitLab self-managed instances, ask a GitLab administrator to enable it. (FREE SELF)
This in-development feature might not be available for your use. There can be risks when enabling features still in development. Refer to this feature's version history for more details.
Typically, large enterprise organizations have an explicit permission boundary between developers and operators. Developers build and test their code, and operators deploy and monitor the application. With group-level protected environments, the permission of each group is carefully configured in order to prevent unauthorized access and maintain proper separation of duty. Group-level protected environments extend the project-level protected environments to the group-level.
The permissions of deployments can be illustrated in the following table:
Environment | Developer | Operator | Category |
---|---|---|---|
Development | Allowed | Allowed | Lower environment |
Testing | Allowed | Allowed | Lower environment |
Staging | Disallowed | Allowed | Higher environment |
Production | Disallowed | Allowed | Higher environment |
(Reference: Deployment environments on Wikipedia)
Group-level protected environments names
Contrary to project-level protected environments, group-level protected environments use the deployment tier as their name.
A group may consist of many project environments that have unique names.
For example, Project-A has a gprd
environment and Project-B has a Production
environment, so protecting a specific environment name doesn't scale well.
By using deployment tiers, both are recognized as production
deployment tier
and are protected at the same time.
Configure group-level memberships
In an enterprise organization, with thousands of projects under a single group, ensuring that all of the project-level protected environments are properly configured is not a scalable solution. For example, a developer might gain privileged access to a higher environment when they are added as a maintainer to a new project. Group-level protected environments can be a solution in this situation.
To maximize the effectiveness of group-level protected environments, group-level memberships must be correctly configured:
- Operators should be assigned the maintainer role (or above) to the top-level group. They can maintain CI/CD configurations for the higher environments (such as production) in the group-level settings page, wnich includes group-level protected environments, group-level runners, group-level clusters, etc. Those configurations are inherited to the child projects as read-only entries. This ensures that only operators can configure the organization-wide deployment ruleset.
- Developers should be assigned the developer role (or below) at the top-level group, or explicitly assigned to a child project as maintainers. They do NOT have access to the CI/CD configurations in the top-level group, so operators can ensure that the critical configuration won't be accidentally changed by the developers.
- For sub-groups and child projects:
- Regarding sub-groups, if a higher group has configured the group-level protected environment, the lower groups cannot override it.
- Project-level protected environments can be combined with the group-level setting. If both group-level and project-level environment configurations exist, the user must be allowed in both rulesets in order to run a deployment job.
- Within a project or a sub-group of the top-level group, developers can be
safely assigned the Maintainer role to tune their lower environments (such
as
testing
).
Having this configuration in place:
- If a user is about to run a deployment job in a project and allowed to deploy to the environment, the deployment job proceeds.
- If a user is about to run a deployment job in a project but disallowed to deploy to the environment, the deployment job fails with an error message.
Protect a group-level environment
To protect a group-level environment:
- Make sure your environments have the correct
deployment_tier
defined ingitlab-ci.yml
. - Configure the group-level protected environments via the REST API.
NOTE: Configuration via the UI is scheduled for a later release.
Enable or disable Group-level protected environments (FREE SELF)
Group-level protected environments is under development and not ready for production use. It is deployed behind a feature flag that is disabled by default. GitLab administrators with access to the GitLab Rails console can enable it.
To enable it:
Feature.enable(:group_level_protected_environments)
To disable it:
Feature.disable(:group_level_protected_environments)