Group access and permissions

Configure your groups to control group permissions and access.

Group push rules (PREMIUM)

Group push rules allow group maintainers to set push rules for newly created projects in the specific group.

In GitLab 15.4 and later, to configure push rules for a group:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Push rules.
  2. Select the settings you want.
  3. Select Save Push Rules.

In GitLab 15.3 and earlier, to configure push rules for a group:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Settings > Repository page.
  2. Expand the Pre-defined push rules section.
  3. Select the settings you want.
  4. Select Save Push Rules.

The group's new subgroups have push rules set for them based on either:

  • The closest parent group with push rules defined.
  • Push rules set at the instance level, if no parent groups have push rules defined.

Restrict Git access protocols

Introduced in GitLab 15.1 with a flag named group_level_git_protocol_control. Disabled by default.

FLAG: On self-managed GitLab, by default this feature is not available. To make it available, ask an administrator to enable the feature flag named group_level_git_protocol_control. On GitLab.com, this feature is available.

You can set the permitted protocols used to access a group's repositories to either SSH, HTTPS, or both. This setting is disabled when the instance setting is configured by an administrator.

To change the permitted Git access protocols for a group:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
  3. Expand the Permissions and group features section.
  4. Choose the permitted protocols from Enabled Git access protocols.
  5. Select Save changes.

Restrict group access by IP address (PREMIUM)

  • Introduced in GitLab 12.0.
  • Moved from GitLab Ultimate to GitLab Premium in 13.1.

To ensure only people from your organization can access particular resources, you can restrict access to groups by IP address. This group-level setting applies to:

Security implications

You should consider some security implications before configuring IP address restrictions.

  • Administrators and group owners can access group settings from any IP address, regardless of IP restriction. However:
    • Groups owners cannot access projects belonging to the group when accessing from a disallowed IP address.
    • Administrators can access projects belonging to the group when accessing from a disallowed IP address. Access to projects includes cloning code from them.
    • Users can still see group and project names and hierarchies. Only the following are restricted:
  • When you register a runner, it is not bound by the IP restrictions. When the runner requests a new job or an update to a job's state, it is also not bound by the IP restrictions. But when the running CI/CD job sends Git requests from a restricted IP address, the IP restriction prevents code from being cloned.
  • Users may still see some events from the IP restricted groups and projects on their dashboard. Activity may include push, merge, issue, or comment events.
  • IP access restrictions for Git operations via SSH are supported only on GitLab SaaS. IP access restrictions applied to self-managed instances block SSH completely.

Restrict group access by IP address

To restrict group access by IP address:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
  3. Expand the Permissions and group features section.
  4. In the Restrict access by IP address field, enter IPv4 or IPv6 address ranges in CIDR notation.
  5. Select Save changes.

In self-managed installations of GitLab 15.1 and later, you can also configure globally-allowed IP address ranges at the group level.

Restrict group access by domain (PREMIUM)

  • Support for specifying multiple email domains added in GitLab 13.1.
  • Support for restricting access to projects in the group added in GitLab 14.1.2.
  • Support for restricting group memberships to groups with a subset of the allowed email domains added in GitLab 15.1.1

You can prevent users with email addresses in specific domains from being added to a group and its projects.

To restrict group access by domain:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
  3. Expand the Permissions and group features section.
  4. In the Restrict membership by email field, enter the domain names.
  5. Select Save changes.

Any time you attempt to add a new user, the user's primary email is compared against this list. Only users with a primary email that matches any of the configured email domain restrictions can be added to the group.

The most popular public email domains cannot be restricted, such as:

  • gmail.com, yahoo.com, aol.com, icloud.com
  • hotmail.com, hotmail.co.uk, hotmail.fr
  • msn.com, live.com, outlook.com

When you share a group, both the source and target namespaces must allow the domains of the members' email addresses.

NOTE: Removing a domain from the Restrict membership by email list does not remove the users with this email domain from the groups and projects under this group. Also, if you share a group or project with another group, the target group can add more email domains to its list that are not in the list of the source group. Hence, this feature does not ensure that the current members always conform to the Restrict membership by email list.

Prevent group sharing outside the group hierarchy

You can configure a top-level group so its subgroups and projects cannot invite other groups outside of the top-level group's hierarchy. This option is only available for top-level groups.

For example, in the following group and project hierarchy:

  • Animals > Dogs > Dog Project
  • Animals > Cats
  • Plants > Trees

If you prevent group sharing outside the hierarchy for the Animals group:

  • Dogs can invite the group Cats.
  • Dogs cannot invite the group Trees.
  • Dog Project can invite the group Cats.
  • Dog Project cannot invite the group Trees.

To prevent sharing outside of the group's hierarchy:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
  3. Expand Permissions and group features.
  4. Select Members cannot invite groups outside of <group_name> and its subgroups.
  5. Select Save changes.

Prevent a project from being shared with groups

Prevent projects in a group from sharing a project with another group to enable tighter control over project access.

To prevent a project from being shared with other groups:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
  3. Expand the Permissions and group features section.
  4. Select Projects in <group_name> cannot be shared with other groups.
  5. Select Save changes.

This setting applies to all subgroups unless overridden by a group owner. Groups already added to a project lose access when the setting is enabled.

Prevent users from requesting access to a group

As a group owner, you can prevent non-members from requesting access to your group.

  1. On the top bar, Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. Select Your Groups.
  3. Find the group and select it.
  4. From the left menu, select Settings > General.
  5. Expand the Permissions and group features section.
  6. Clear the Allow users to request access checkbox.
  7. Select Save changes.

Prevent project forking outside group (PREMIUM)

Introduced in GitLab 13.3.

By default, projects in a group can be forked. Optionally, on GitLab Premium or higher tiers, you can prevent the projects in a group from being forked outside of the current top-level group.

This setting will be removed from the SAML setting page, and migrated to the group settings page. In the interim period, both of these settings are taken into consideration. If even one is set to true, then the group does not allow outside forks.

To prevent projects from being forked outside the group:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
  3. Expand the Permissions and group features section.
  4. Check Prevent project forking outside current group.
  5. Select Save changes.

Existing forks are not removed.

Prevent members from being added to projects in a group (PREMIUM)

As a group owner, you can prevent any new project membership for all projects in a group, allowing tighter control over project membership.

For example, if you want to lock the group for an Audit Event, you can guarantee that project membership cannot be modified during the audit.

You can still invite groups or to add members to groups, implicitly giving members access to projects in the locked group.

The setting does not cascade. Projects in subgroups observe the subgroup configuration, ignoring the parent group.

To prevent members from being added to projects in a group:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
  3. Under Membership, select Users cannot be added to projects in this group.
  4. Select Save changes.

All users who previously had permissions can no longer add members to a group. API requests to add a new user to a project are not possible.

Manage group memberships via LDAP (PREMIUM SELF)

Group syncing allows LDAP groups to be mapped to GitLab groups. This provides more control over per-group user management. To configure group syncing, edit the group_base DN ('OU=Global Groups,OU=GitLab INT,DC=GitLab,DC=org'). This OU contains all groups that are associated with GitLab groups.

Group links can be created by using either a CN or a filter. To create these group links, go to the group's Settings > LDAP Synchronization page. After configuring the link, it may take more than an hour for the users to sync with the GitLab group.

For more information on the administration of LDAP and group sync, refer to the main LDAP documentation.

NOTE: When you add LDAP synchronization, if an LDAP user is a group member and they are not part of the LDAP group, they are removed from the group.

Create group links via CN (PREMIUM SELF)

To create group links via CN:

  1. Select the LDAP Server for the link.
  2. As the Sync method, select LDAP Group cn.
  3. In the LDAP Group cn field, begin typing the CN of the group. There is a dropdown list with matching CNs in the configured group_base. Select your CN from this list.
  4. In the LDAP Access section, select the permission level for users synced in this group.
  5. Select Add Synchronization.

Create group links via filter (PREMIUM SELF)

To create group links via filter:

  1. Select the LDAP Server for the link.
  2. As the Sync method, select LDAP user filter.
  3. Input your filter in the LDAP User filter box. Follow the documentation on user filters.
  4. In the LDAP Access section, select the permission level for users synced in this group.
  5. Select Add Synchronization.

Override user permissions (PREMIUM SELF)

LDAP user permissions can be manually overridden by an administrator. To override a user's permissions:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Group information > Members.
  3. In the row for the user you are editing, select the pencil ({pencil}) icon.
  4. Select Edit permissions in the modal.

Now you can edit the user's permissions from the Members page.

Troubleshooting

Verify if access is blocked by IP restriction

If a user sees a 404 when they would normally expect access, and the problem is limited to a specific group, search the auth.log rails log for one or more of the following:

  • json.message: 'Attempting to access IP restricted group'
  • json.allowed: false

In viewing the log entries, compare the remote.ip with the list of allowed IPs for the group.