Signing commits with GPG (FREE)

You can sign the commits you make in a GitLab repository with a GPG (GNU Privacy Guard) key. When you add a cryptographic signature to your commit, you provide extra assurance that a commit originated from you, rather than an impersonator. If GitLab can verify a commit author's identity with a public GPG key, the commit is marked Verified in the GitLab UI. You can then configure push rules for your project to reject individual commits not signed with GPG, or reject all commits from unverified users.

NOTE: GitLab uses the term GPG for all OpenPGP, PGP, and GPG-related material and implementations.

For GitLab to consider a commit verified:

  • The committer must have a GPG public/private key pair.
  • The committer's public key must be uploaded to their GitLab account.
  • One of the email addresses in the GPG public key must match a verified email address used by the committer in GitLab. To keep this address private, use the automatically generated private commit email address GitLab provides in your profile.
  • The committer's email address must match the verified email address from the GPG key.

GitLab uses its own keyring to verify the GPG signature. It does not access any public key server.

GPG verified tags are not supported.

For more details about GPG, refer to the related topics list.

View a user's public GPG key

To view a user's public GPG key, you can either:

  • Go to https://gitlab.example.com/<USERNAME>.gpg. GitLab displays the GPG key, if the user has configured one, or a blank page for users without a configured GPG key.
  • Go to the user's profile (such as https://gitlab.example.com/<USERNAME>). In the top right of the user's profile, select View public GPG keys ({key}).

Configure commit signing

To sign commits, you must configure both your local machine and your GitLab account:

  1. Create a GPG key.
  2. Add a GPG key to your account.
  3. Associate your GPG key with Git.
  4. Sign your Git commits.

Create a GPG key

If you don't already have a GPG key, create one:

  1. Install GPG for your operating system. If your operating system has gpg2 installed, replace gpg with gpg2 in the commands on this page.

  2. To generate your key pair, run the command appropriate for your version of gpg:

    # Use this command for the default version of GPG, including
    # Gpg4win on Windows, and most macOS versions:
    gpg --gen-key
    
    # Use this command for versions of GPG later than 2.1.17:
    gpg --full-gen-key
  3. Select the algorithm your key should use, or press Enter to select the default option, RSA and RSA.

  4. Select the key length, in bits. GitLab recommends 4096-bit keys.

  5. Specify the validity period of your key. This value is subjective, and the default value is no expiration.

  6. To confirm your answers, enter y.

  7. Enter your name.

  8. Enter your email address. It must match a verified email address in your GitLab account.

  9. Optional. Enter a comment to display in parentheses after your name.

  10. GPG displays the information you've entered so far. Edit the information or press O (for Okay) to continue.

  11. Enter a strong password, then enter it again to confirm it.

  12. To list your private GPG key, run this command, replacing <EMAIL> with the email address you used when you generated the key:

    gpg --list-secret-keys --keyid-format LONG <EMAIL>
  13. In the output, identify the sec line, and copy the GPG key ID. It begins after the / character. In this example, the key ID is 30F2B65B9246B6CA:

    sec   rsa4096/30F2B65B9246B6CA 2017-08-18 [SC]
          D5E4F29F3275DC0CDA8FFC8730F2B65B9246B6CA
    uid                   [ultimate] Mr. Robot <your_email>
    ssb   rsa4096/B7ABC0813E4028C0 2017-08-18 [E]
  14. To show the associated public key, run this command, replacing <ID> with the GPG key ID from the previous step:

    gpg --armor --export <ID>
  15. Copy the public key, including the BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK and END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK lines. You need this key in the next step.

Add a GPG key to your account

To add a GPG key to your user settings:

  1. Sign in to GitLab.

  2. In the top-right corner, select your avatar.

  3. Select Edit profile.

  4. On the left sidebar, select GPG Keys ({key}).

  5. In Key, paste your public key.

  6. To add the key to your account, select Add key. GitLab shows the key's fingerprint, email address, and creation date:

    GPG key single page

After you add a key, you cannot edit it. Instead, remove the offending key and re-add it.

Associate your GPG key with Git

After you create your GPG key and add it to your account, you must configure Git to use this key:

  1. Run this command to list the private GPG key you just created, replacing <EMAIL> with the email address for your key:

    gpg --list-secret-keys --keyid-format LONG <EMAIL>
  2. Copy the GPG private key ID that starts with sec. In this example, the private key ID is 30F2B65B9246B6CA:

    sec   rsa4096/30F2B65B9246B6CA 2017-08-18 [SC]
          D5E4F29F3275DC0CDA8FFC8730F2B65B9246B6CA
    uid                   [ultimate] Mr. Robot <your_email>
    ssb   rsa4096/B7ABC0813E4028C0 2017-08-18 [E]
  3. Run this command to configure Git to sign your commits with your key, replacing <KEY ID> with your GPG key ID:

    git config --global user.signingkey <KEY ID>
  4. Optional. If Git uses gpg and you get errors like secret key not available or gpg: signing failed: secret key not available, run this command to use gpg2 instead:

    git config --global gpg.program gpg2

Sign your Git commits

After you add your public key to your account, you can sign individual commits manually, or configure Git to default to signed commits:

  • Sign individual Git commits manually:

    1. Add -S flag to any commit you want to sign:

      git commit -S -m "My commit message"
    2. Enter the passphrase of your GPG key when asked.

    3. Push to GitLab and check that your commits are verified.

  • Sign all Git commits by default by running this command:

    git config --global commit.gpgsign true

Verify commits

You can review commits for a merge request, or for an entire project:

  1. To review commits for a project:

    1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Projects and find your project.
    2. On the left sidebar, select Repository > Commits.
  2. To review commits for a merge request:

    1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Projects and find your project.
    2. On the left sidebar, select Merge requests, then select your merge request.
    3. Select Commits.
  3. Identify the commit you want to review. Signed commits show either a Verified or Unverified badge, depending on the verification status of the GPG signature. Unsigned commits do not display a badge:

    Signed and unsigned commits

  4. To display the signature details for a commit, select the GPG badge:

    Signed commit with verified signature

    Signed commit with unverified signature

Revoke a GPG key

If a GPG key becomes compromised, revoke it. Revoking a key changes both future and past commits:

  • Past commits signed by this key are marked as unverified.
  • Future commits signed by this key are marked as unverified.

To revoke a GPG key:

  1. In the top-right corner, select your avatar.
  2. Select Edit profile.
  3. On the left sidebar, select GPG Keys ({key}).
  4. Select Revoke next to the GPG key you want to delete.

Remove a GPG key

When you remove a GPG key from your GitLab account:

  • Previous commits signed with this key remain verified.
  • Future commits (including any commits created but not yet pushed) that attempt to use this key are unverified.

To remove a GPG key from your account:

  1. In the top-right corner, select your avatar.
  2. Select Edit profile.
  3. On the left sidebar, select GPG Keys ({key}).
  4. Select Remove ({remove}) next to the GPG key you want to delete.

If you must unverify both future and past commits, revoke the associated GPG key instead.

Related topics