--- type: reference, concepts --- # Merge Request dependencies **(PREMIUM)** > - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/9688) in [GitLab Premium](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) 12.2. > - [Renamed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/merge_requests/17291) from "Cross-project dependencies" to "Merge Requests dependencies" in [GitLab Premium](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) 12.4. Merge request dependencies allows a required order of merging between merge requests to be expressed. If a merge request "depends on" another, then it cannot be merged until its dependency is itself merged. NOTE: **Note:** Merge requests dependencies are a **PREMIUM** feature, but this restriction is only enforced for the dependent merge request. A merge request in a **CORE** or **STARTER** project can be a dependency of a **PREMIUM** merge request, but not vice-versa. NOTE: **Note:** A merge request can only depend on merge requests in a different project. Two merge requests in the same project cannot depend on each other. ## Use cases - Ensure changes to a library are merged before changes to a project that imports the library. - Prevent a documentation-only merge request from being merged before the merge request implementing the feature to be documented. - Require an merge request updating a permissions matrix to be merged before merging an merge request from someone who hasn't yet been granted permissions. It is common for a single logical change to span several merge requests, spread out across multiple projects, and the order in which they are merged can be significant. For example, given a project `mycorp/awesome-project` that imports a library at `myfriend/awesome-lib`, adding a feature in `awesome-project` may **also** require changes to `awesome-lib`, and so necessitate two merge requests. Merging the `awesome-project` merge request before the `awesome-lib` one would break the `master`branch. The `awesome-project` merge request could be [marked as WIP](work_in_progress_merge_requests.md), and the reason for the WIP stated included in the comments. However, this requires the state of the `awesome-lib` merge request to be manually tracked, and doesn't scale well if the `awesome-project` merge request depends on changes to **several** other projects. By making the `awesome-project` merge request depend on the `awesome-lib` merge request instead, this relationship is automatically tracked by GitLab, and the WIP state can be used to communicate the readiness of the code in each individual merge request instead. ## Configuration To continue the above example, you can configure a dependency when creating the new merge request in `awesome-project` (or by editing it, if it already exists). The dependency needs to be configured on the **dependent** merge request. There is a **Merge request dependencies** section in the form: ![Merge request dependencies form control](img/dependencies_edit_v12_4.png) Anyone who can edit a merge request can change the list of dependencies. New dependencies can be added by reference, or by URL. To remove a dependency, press the **X** by its reference. As dependencies can be specified across projects, it's possible that someone else has added a dependency for a merge request in a project you don't have access to. These are shown as a simple count: ![Merge request dependencies form control with inaccessible merge requests](img/dependencies_edit_inaccessible_v12_4.png) If necessary, you can remove all the dependencies like this by pressing the **X**, just as you would for a single, visible dependency. Once you're finished, press the **Save changes** button to submit the request, or **Cancel** to return without making any changes. The list of configured dependencies, and the status of each one, is shown in the merge request widget: ![Dependencies in merge request widget](img/dependencies_view_v12_2.png) Until all dependencies have, themselves, been merged, the **Merge** button will be disabled for the dependent merge request. In particular, note that **closed merge requests** still prevent their dependents from being merged - it is impossible to automatically determine whether the dependency expressed by a closed merge request has been satisfied in some other way or not. If a merge request has been closed **and** the dependency is no longer relevant, it must be removed as a dependency, following the instructions above, before merge. ## Limitations - API support: [issue #12551](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/12551) - Dependencies are not preserved across project export/import: [issue #12549](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/12549) - Complex merge order dependencies are not supported: [issue #11393](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/11393) The last item merits a little more explanation. Dependencies between merge requests can be described as a graph of relationships. The simplest possible graph has one merge request that depends upon another: ```mermaid graph LR; myfriend/awesome-lib!10-->mycorp/awesome-project!100; ``` A more complex (and still supported) graph might have one merge request that directly depends upon several others: ```mermaid graph LR; myfriend/awesome-lib!10-->mycorp/awesome-project!100; herfriend/another-lib!1-->mycorp/awesome-project!100; ``` Several different merge requests can also directly depend upon the same merge request: ```mermaid graph LR; herfriend/another-lib!1-->myfriend/awesome-lib!10; herfriend/another-lib!1-->mycorp/awesome-project!100; ``` What is **not** supported is a "deep", or "nested" graph of dependencies, e.g.: ```mermaid graph LR; herfriend/another-lib!1-->myfriend/awesome-lib!10; myfriend/awesome-lib!10-->mycorp/awesome-project!100; ``` In this example, `myfriend/awesome-lib!10` depends on `herfriend/another-lib!1`, and is itself a dependent of `mycorp/awesome-project!100`. This means that `myfriend/awesome-lib!10` becomes an **indirect** dependency of `mycorp/awesome-project!100`, which is not yet supported.