13 KiB
GitLab API
Automate GitLab via a simple and powerful API. All definitions can be found
under /lib/api
.
Resources
Documentation for various API resources can be found separately in the following locations:
- Award Emoji
- Branches
- Broadcast Messages
- Build Variables
- Commits
- Deployments
- Deploy Keys
- Gitignores templates
- GitLab CI Config templates
- Groups
- Group Access Requests
- Group Members
- Issues
- Issue Boards
- Jobs
- Keys
- Labels
- Merge Requests
- Milestones
- Open source license templates
- Namespaces
- Notes (comments)
- Notification settings
- Pipelines
- Pipeline Triggers
- Projects including setting Webhooks
- Project Access Requests
- Project Members
- Project Snippets
- Repositories
- Repository Files
- Runners
- Services
- Session
- Settings
- Sidekiq metrics
- System Hooks
- Tags
- Todos
- Users
- Validate CI configuration
- V3 to V4
- Version
Internal CI API
The following documentation is for the internal CI API:
Authentication
All API requests require authentication via a session cookie or token. There are three types of tokens available: private tokens, OAuth 2 tokens, and personal access tokens.
If authentication information is invalid or omitted, an error message will be
returned with status code 401
:
{
"message": "401 Unauthorized"
}
Private Tokens
You need to pass a private_token
parameter via query string or header. If passed as a
header, the header name must be PRIVATE-TOKEN
(uppercase and with a dash instead of
an underscore). You can find or reset your private token in your account page
(/profile/account
).
OAuth 2 Tokens
You can use an OAuth 2 token to authenticate with the API by passing it either in the
access_token
parameter or in the Authorization
header.
Example of using the OAuth2 token in the header:
curl --header "Authorization: Bearer OAUTH-TOKEN" https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects
Read more about GitLab as an OAuth2 client.
Personal Access Tokens
Introduced in GitLab 8.8.
You can create as many personal access tokens as you like from your GitLab
profile (/profile/personal_access_tokens
); perhaps one for each application
that needs access to the GitLab API.
Once you have your token, pass it to the API using either the private_token
parameter or the PRIVATE-TOKEN
header.
Introduced in GitLab 8.15.
Personal Access Tokens can be created with one or more scopes that allow various actions
that a given token can perform. Although there are only two scopes available at the
moment – read_user
and api
– the groundwork has been laid to add more scopes easily.
At any time you can revoke any personal access token by just clicking Revoke.
Session Cookie
When signing in to GitLab as an ordinary user, a _gitlab_session
cookie is
set. The API will use this cookie for authentication if it is present, but using
the API to generate a new session cookie is currently not supported.
Basic Usage
API requests should be prefixed with api
and the API version. The API version
is defined in lib/api.rb
.
Example of a valid API request:
GET https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects?private_token=9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK
Example of a valid API request using cURL and authentication via header:
curl --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: 9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
The API uses JSON to serialize data. You don't need to specify .json
at the
end of an API URL.
Status codes
The API is designed to return different status codes according to context and action. This way, if a request results in an error, the caller is able to get insight into what went wrong.
The following table gives an overview of how the API functions generally behave.
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 / DELETE |
Return 200 OK if the resource is accessed, modified or deleted successfully. The (modified) result is returned as JSON. |
DELETE |
Designed to be idempotent, meaning a request to a resource still returns 200 OK even it was deleted before or is not available. The reasoning behind this, is that the user is not really interested if the resource existed before or not. |
The following table shows the possible return codes for API requests.
Return values | Description |
---|---|
200 OK |
The GET , PUT or DELETE request was successful, the resource(s) itself is returned as JSON. |
204 No Content |
The server has successfully fulfilled the request and that 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 |
Indicates that the resource has not been modified since the last request. |
400 Bad Request |
A required attribute of the API request is missing, e.g., the title of an issue is not given. |
401 Unauthorized |
The user is not authenticated, a valid user token is necessary. |
403 Forbidden |
The request is not allowed, e.g., the user is not allowed to delete a project. |
404 Not Found |
A resource could not be accessed, e.g., an ID for a resource could not be found. |
405 Method Not Allowed |
The request is not supported. |
409 Conflict |
A conflicting resource already exists, e.g., creating a project with a name that already exists. |
422 Unprocessable |
The entity could not be processed. |
500 Server Error |
While handling the request something went wrong server-side. |
Sudo
All API requests support performing an API call as if you were another user,
provided your private token is from an administrator account. You need to pass
the sudo
parameter either via query string or a header with an ID/username of
the user you want to perform the operation as. If passed as a header, the
header name must be SUDO
(uppercase).
If a non administrative private_token
is provided, then an error message will
be returned with status code 403
:
{
"message": "403 Forbidden - Must be admin to use sudo"
}
If the sudo user ID or username cannot be found, an error message will be
returned with status code 404
:
{
"message": "404 Not Found: No user id or username for: <id/username>"
}
Example of a valid API call and a request using cURL with sudo request, providing a username:
GET /projects?private_token=9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK&sudo=username
curl --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: 9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK" --header "SUDO: username" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
Example of a valid API call and a request using cURL with sudo request, providing an ID:
GET /projects?private_token=9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK&sudo=23
curl --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: 9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK" --header "SUDO: 23" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects"
Impersonation Tokens
Impersonation Tokens are a type of Personal Access Token that can only be created by an admin for a specific user. These can be used by automated tools to authenticate with the API as a specific user, as a better alternative to using the user's password or private token directly, which may change over time, and to using the Sudo feature, which requires the tool to know an admin's password or private token, which can change over time as well and are extremely powerful.
For more information about the usage please refer to the Users page
Pagination
Sometimes the returned result will span across 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 example below, we list 50 namespaces per page.
curl --request PUT --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: 9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/namespaces?per_page=50
Pagination Link header
Link headers are sent back with each
response. They have rel
set to prev/next/first/last and contain the relevant
URL. Please use these links instead of generating your own URLs.
In the cURL example below, we limit the output to 3 items per page (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 8
:
curl --head --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: 9koXpg98eAheJpvBs5tK" https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/8/issues/8/notes?per_page=3&page=2
The response will then be:
HTTP/1.1 200 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
Additional pagination headers are also sent back.
Header | Description |
---|---|
X-Total |
The total number of items |
X-Total-Pages |
The total number of pages |
X-Per-Page |
The number of items per page |
X-Page |
The index of the current page (starting at 1) |
X-Next-Page |
The index of the next page |
X-Prev-Page |
The index of the previous page |
id
vs iid
When you work with the API, you may notice two similar fields in API entities:
id
and iid
. The main difference between them is scope.
For example, an issue might have id: 46
and iid: 5
.
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
id |
Is unique across all issues and is used for any API call |
iid |
Is unique only in scope of a single project. When you browse issues or merge requests with the Web UI, you see the iid |
That means that if you want to get an issue via the API you should use the id
:
GET /projects/42/issues/:id
On the other hand, if you want to create a link to a web page you should use
the iid
:
GET /projects/42/issues/:iid
Data validation and error reporting
When working with the API you may encounter validation errors, in which case
the API will answer with an HTTP 400
status.
Such errors appear in two cases:
- A required attribute of the API request is missing, e.g., the title of an issue is not given
- An attribute did not pass the validation, e.g., user bio is too long
When an attribute is missing, you will get something like:
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Content-Type: application/json
{
"message":"400 (Bad request) \"title\" not given"
}
When a validation error occurs, error messages will be different. They will hold all details of validation errors:
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Content-Type: application/json
{
"message": {
"bio": [
"is too long (maximum is 255 characters)"
]
}
}
This makes error messages more machine-readable. The format can be described as follows:
{
"message": {
"<property-name>": [
"<error-message>",
"<error-message>",
...
],
"<embed-entity>": {
"<property-name>": [
"<error-message>",
"<error-message>",
...
],
}
}
}
Unknown route
When you try to access an API URL that does not exist you will receive 404 Not Found.
HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
Content-Type: application/json
{
"error": "404 Not Found"
}
Clients
There are many unofficial GitLab API Clients for most of the popular programming languages. Visit the GitLab website for a complete list.