--- stage: Create group: Code Review info: 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 description: "How to create merge requests in GitLab." disqus_identifier: 'https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/gitlab-basics/add-merge-request.html' --- # Creating merge requests **(FREE)** There are many different ways to create a merge request. ## From the merge request list You can create a merge request from the list of merge requests. 1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project. 1. On the left menu, select **Merge requests**. 1. In the top right, select **New merge request**. 1. Select a source and target branch and then **Compare branches and continue**. 1. Fill out the fields and select **Create merge request**. NOTE: Merge requests are designed around a one-to-one (1:1) branch relationship. Only one open merge request may be associated with a given target branch at a time. ## From an issue You can [create a merge request from an issue](../repository/web_editor.md#create-a-new-branch-from-an-issue). ## When you add, edit, or upload a file You can create a merge request when you add, edit, or upload a file to a repository. 1. Add, edit, or upload a file to the repository. 1. In the **Commit message**, enter a reason for the commit. 1. Select the **Target branch** or create a new branch by typing the name (without spaces, capital letters, or special chars). 1. Select the **Start a new merge request with these changes** checkbox or toggle. This checkbox or toggle is visible only if the target is not the same as the source branch, or if the source branch is protected. 1. Select **Commit changes**. ## When you create a branch You can create a merge request when you create a branch. 1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project. 1. On the left menu, select **Repository > Branches**. 1. Type a branch name and select **New branch**. 1. Above the file list, on the right side, select **Create merge request**. A merge request is created. The default branch is the target. 1. Fill out the fields and select **Create merge request**. ## When you use Git commands locally You can create a merge request by running Git commands on your local machine. 1. Create a branch: ```shell git checkout -b my-new-branch ``` 1. Create, edit, or delete files. The stage and commit them: ```shell git add . git commit -m "My commit message" ``` 1. [Push your branch to GitLab](../../../gitlab-basics/start-using-git.md#send-changes-to-gitlabcom): ```shell git push origin my-new-branch ``` GitLab prompts you with a direct link for creating a merge request: ```plaintext ... remote: To create a merge request for my-new-branch, visit: remote: https://gitlab.example.com/my-group/my-project/merge_requests/new?merge_request%5Bsource_branch%5D=my-new-branch ``` 1. Copy the link and paste it in your browser. You can add other [flags to commands when pushing through the command line](../push_options.md) to reduce the need for editing merge requests manually through the UI. ## When you work in a fork You can create a merge request from your fork to contribute back to the main project. 1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project. 1. Select your fork of the repository. 1. On the left menu, go to **Merge requests**, and select **New merge request**. 1. In the **Source branch** drop-down list box, select the branch in your forked repository as the source branch. 1. In the **Target branch** drop-down list box, select the branch from the upstream repository as the target branch. You can set a [default target project](#set-the-default-target-project) to change the default target branch (which can be useful if you are working in a forked project). 1. Select **Compare branches and continue**. 1. Select **Submit merge request**. After your work is merged, if you don't intend to make any other contributions to the upstream project, you can unlink your fork from its upstream project. Go to **Settings > Advanced Settings** and [remove the forking relationship](../settings/index.md#remove-a-fork-relationship). For more information, [see the forking workflow documentation](../repository/forking_workflow.md). ## By sending an email You can create a merge request by sending an email message to GitLab. The merge request target branch is the project's default branch. Prerequisites: - A GitLab administrator must configure [incoming email](../../../administration/incoming_email.md). - A GitLab administrator must configure [Reply by email](../../../administration/reply_by_email.md). To create a merge request by sending an email: 1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project. 1. On the left menu, select **Merge requests**. 1. In the top right, select **Email a new merge request to this project**. An email address is displayed. Copy this address. Ensure you keep this address private. 1. Open an email and compose a message with the following information: - The **To** line is the email address you copied. - The subject line is the source branch name. - The message body is the merge request description. 1. Send the email message. A merge request is created. ### Add attachments when creating a merge request by email You can add commits to a merge request by adding patches as attachments to the email. All attachments with a filename ending in `.patch` are considered patches and are processed ordered by name. The combined size of the patches can be 2 MB. If the source branch from the subject does not exist, it is created from the repository's HEAD or the specified target branch. You can specify the target branch by using the [`/target_branch` quick action](../quick_actions.md). If the source branch already exists, the patches are applied on top of it. ## Set the default target project > [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/58093) in GitLab 13.11. Merge requests have a source and a target project that are the same, unless forking is involved. Creating a fork of the project can cause either of these scenarios when you create a new merge request: - You target an upstream project (the project you forked, and the default option). - You target your own fork. To have merge requests from a fork by default target your own fork (instead of the upstream project), you can change the default. 1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project. 1. On the left menu, select **Settings > General > Merge requests**. 1. In the **Target project** section, select the option you want to use for your default target project. 1. Select **Save changes**.