gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/push_rules/push_rules.md

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Push rules (PREMIUM)

Gain additional control over what can and can't be pushed to your repository by using regular expressions to reject pushes based on commit contents, branch names or file details.

GitLab already offers protected branches, but there are cases when you need some specific rules. Some common scenarios: preventing Git tag removal, or enforcing a special format for commit messages.

Push rules are pre-receive Git hooks you can enable in a user-friendly interface. They are defined either:

  • Globally if you are an administrator.
  • Per project, so you can have different rules applied to different projects depending on your needs.

Use cases

Every push rule could have its own use case, but let's consider some examples.

Commit messages with a specific reference

Let's assume you have the following requirements for your workflow:

  • every commit should reference a Jira issue, for example: Refactored css. Fixes JIRA-123.
  • users should not be able to remove Git tags with git push

Write a regular expression that requires the mention of a Jira issue in the commit message, like JIRA\-\d+.

Now when a user tries to push a commit with a message Bugfix, their push is declined. Only pushing commits with messages like Bugfix according to JIRA-123 is accepted.

Restrict branch names

If your company has a strict policy for branch names, you may want the branches to start with a certain name. This approach enables different GitLab CI/CD jobs (such as feature, hotfix, docker, android) that rely on the branch name.

Your developers may not remember that policy, so they might push to various branches, and CI pipelines might not work as expected. By restricting the branch names globally in Push Rules, such mistakes are prevented. All branch names that don't match your push rule are rejected.

Note that the name of your default branch is always allowed, regardless of the branch naming regular expression (regex) specified. GitLab is configured this way because merges typically have the default branch as their target. If you have other target branches, include them in your regex. (See Enabling push rules).

The default branch also defaults to being a protected branch, which already limits users from pushing directly.

Some example regular expressions you can use in push rules:

  • ^JIRA- Branches must start with JIRA-.
  • -JIRA$ Branches must end with -JIRA.
  • ^[a-z0-9\\-]{4,15}$ Branches must be between 4 and 15 characters long, accepting only lowercase letters, numbers and dashes.

Default restricted branch names

Introduced in GitLab 12.10.

By default, GitLab restricts certain formats of branch names for security purposes. 40-character hexadecimal names, similar to Git commit hashes, are prohibited.

Custom Push Rules (PREMIUM SELF)

It's possible to create custom push rules rather than the push rules available in Admin Area > Push Rules by using more advanced server hooks.

See server hooks for more information.

Enabling push rules

You can create push rules for all new projects to inherit, but they can be overridden at the project level or the group level.

To create global push rules:

  1. On the top bar, select Menu > Admin.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Push Rules.

To override global push rules in a project's settings:

  1. On the top bar, select Menu > Projects and find your project.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > Repository.
  3. Expand Push rules.
  4. Set the rule you want.
  5. Select Save push rules.

The following options are available:

Push rule Description
Removal of tags with git push Forbid users to remove Git tags with git push. Tags can be deleted through the web UI.
Check whether the commit author is a GitLab user Restrict commits to existing GitLab users (checked against their emails). 1
Reject unverified users GitLab rejects any commit that was not committed by the same user as the user who pushed it, or where the committer's email address is not confirmed.
Check whether commit is signed through GPG Reject commit when it is not signed through GPG. Read signing commits with GPG.
Prevent pushing secret files GitLab rejects any files that are likely to contain secrets. See the forbidden file names.
Require expression in commit messages Only commit messages that match this regular expression are allowed to be pushed. 2 Leave empty to allow any commit message. Uses multiline mode, which can be disabled using (?-m).
Reject expression in commit messages Only commit messages that do not match this regular expression are allowed to be pushed. 2 Leave empty to allow any commit message. Uses multiline mode, which can be disabled using (?-m).
Restrict by branch name Only branch names that match this regular expression are allowed to be pushed. 2 Leave empty to allow all branch names.
Restrict by commit author's email Only commit author's email that match this regular expression are allowed to be pushed. 1 2 Leave empty to allow any email.
Prohibited file names Any committed filenames that match this regular expression and do not already exist in the repository are not allowed to be pushed. 2 Leave empty to allow any filenames. See common examples.
Maximum file size Pushes that contain added or updated files that exceed this file size (in MB) are rejected. Set to 0 to allow files of any size. Files tracked by Git LFS are exempted.
  1. Checks both the commit author and committer.
  2. GitLab uses RE2 syntax for regular expressions in push rules, and you can test them at the regex101 regex tester.

Caveat to "Reject unsigned commits" push rule

This push rule ignores commits that are authenticated and created by GitLab (either through the UI or API). When the Reject unsigned commits push rule is enabled, unsigned commits may still show up in the commit history if a commit was created in GitLab itself. As expected, commits created outside GitLab and pushed to the repository are rejected. For more information about how GitLab plans to fix this issue, read issue #19185.

"Reject unsigned commits" push rule disables Web IDE

In 13.10, if a project has the "Reject unsigned commits" push rule, the user is not allowed to commit through GitLab Web IDE.

To allow committing through the Web IDE on a project with this push rule, a GitLab administrator must disable the feature flag reject_unsigned_commits_by_gitlab. This can be done through a rails console and running:

Feature.disable(:reject_unsigned_commits_by_gitlab)

Prevent pushing secrets to the repository

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

Secrets, such as credential files and SSH private keys, should never be committed to a version control system. In GitLab, you can use a predefined list of files to block those files from a repository. Any merge request containing a file matching the list is blocked from being merged. Files already committed to the repository are not restricted by this push rule.

Files blocked by this rule are listed below. For a complete list of criteria, see files_denylist.yml.

  • AWS CLI credential blobs:

    • .aws/credentials
    • aws/credentials
    • homefolder/aws/credentials
  • Private RSA SSH keys:

    • /ssh/id_rsa
    • /.ssh/personal_rsa
    • /config/server_rsa
    • id_rsa
    • .id_rsa
  • Private DSA SSH keys:

    • /ssh/id_dsa
    • /.ssh/personal_dsa
    • /config/server_dsa
    • id_dsa
    • .id_dsa
  • Private ED25519 SSH keys:

    • /ssh/id_ed25519
    • /.ssh/personal_ed25519
    • /config/server_ed25519
    • id_ed25519
    • .id_ed25519
  • Private ECDSA SSH keys:

    • /ssh/id_ecdsa
    • /.ssh/personal_ecdsa
    • /config/server_ecdsa
    • id_ecdsa
    • .id_ecdsa
  • Private ECDSA_SK SSH keys (GitLab 14.8 and later):

    • /ssh/id_ecdsa_sk
    • /.ssh/personal_ecdsa_sk
    • /config/server_ecdsa_sk
    • id_ecdsa_sk
    • .id_ecdsa_sk
  • Private ED25519_SK SSH keys (GitLab 14.8 and later):

    • /ssh/id_ed25519_sk
    • /.ssh/personal_ed25519_sk
    • /config/server_ed25519_sk
    • id_ed25519_sk
    • .id_ed25519_sk
  • Any files ending with these suffixes:

    • *.pem
    • *.key
    • *.history
    • *_history

Prevent pushing secrets to all projects

To set a global push rule to prevent pushing secrets to all projects:

  1. On the top bar, select Menu > Admin.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Push Rules.
  3. Expand Push rules.
  4. Select Prevent pushing secret files.
  5. Select Save push rules.

Prevent pushing secrets to a project

The push rule of a project overrides the global push rule.

To prevent pushing secrets to a project:

  1. On the top bar, select Menu > Projects and find your project.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > Repository.
  3. Expand Push rules.
  4. Select Prevent pushing secret files.
  5. Select Save push rules.

Prohibited file names

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

Each filename contained in a Git push is compared to the regular expression in this field. Filenames in Git consist of both the file's name and any directory that may precede it. A singular regular expression can contain multiple independent matches used as exclusions. File names can be broadly matched to any location in the repository, or restricted to specific locations. Filenames can also be partial matches used to exclude file types by extension.

The following examples make use of regex string boundary characters which match the beginning of a string (^), and the end ($). They also include instances where either the directory path or the filename can include . or /. Both of these special regex characters have to be escaped with a backslash \\ to be used as normal characters in a match condition.

Example: prevent pushing any .exe files to any location in the repository. This uses a partial match, which matches any filename that contains .exe at the end:

\.exe$

Example: prevent a specific configuration file in the repository root from being pushed:

^config\.yml$

Example: prevent a specific configuration file in a known directory from being pushed:

^directory-name\/config\.yml$

Example: prevent the specific file named install.exe from being pushed to any location in the repository. The parenthesized expression (^|\/) matches either a file following a directory separator or a file in the root directory of the repository:

(^|\/)install\.exe$

Example: combining all of the above in a single expression. The preceding expressions rely on the end-of-string character $. We can move that part of each expression to the end of the grouped collection of match conditions where it is appended to all matches:

(\.exe|^config\.yml|^directory-name\/config\.yml|(^|\/)install\.exe)$