266 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
266 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# Groups
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With GitLab Groups you can assemble related projects together
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and grant members access to several projects at once.
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Groups can also be nested in [subgroups](subgroups/index.md).
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Find your groups by expanding the left menu and clicking **Groups**:
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![GitLab Groups](img/groups.png)
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The Groups page displays all groups you are a member of, how many projects it holds,
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how many members it has, the group visibility, and, if you have enough permissions,
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a link to the group settings. By clicking the last button you can leave that group.
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## Use cases
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You can create groups for numerous reasons. To name a few:
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- Organize related projects under the same [namespace](#namespaces), add members to that
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group and grant access to all their projects at once
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- Create a group, include members of your team, and make it easier to
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`@mention` all the team at once in issues and merge requests
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- Create a group for your company members, and create [subgroups](subgroups/index.md)
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for each individual team. Let's say you create a group called `company-team`, and among others,
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you created subgroups in this group for each individual team `backend-team`,
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`frontend-team`, and `production-team`:
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1. When you start a new implementation from an issue, you add a comment:
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_"`@company-team`, let's do it! `@company-team/backend-team` you're good to go!"_
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1. When your backend team needs help from frontend, they add a comment:
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_"`@company-team/frontend-team` could you help us here please?"_
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1. When the frontend team completes their implementation, they comment:
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_"`@company-team/backend-team`, it's done! Let's ship it `@company-team/production-team`!"_
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## Namespaces
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In GitLab, a namespace is a unique name to be used as a user name, a group name, or a subgroup name.
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- `http://gitlab.example.com/username`
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- `http://gitlab.example.com/groupname`
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- `http://gitlab.example.com/groupname/subgroup_name`
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For example, consider a user called John:
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1. John creates his account on GitLab.com with the username `john`;
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his profile will be accessed under `https://gitlab.example.com/john`
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1. John creates a group for his team with the groupname `john-team`;
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his group and its projects will be accessed under `https://gitlab.example.com/john-team`
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1. John creates a subgroup of `john-team` with the subgroup name `marketing`;
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his subgroup and its projects will be accessed under `https://gitlab.example.com/john-team/marketing`
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By doing so:
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- Any team member mentions John with `@john`
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- John mentions everyone from his team with `@john-team`
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- John mentions only his marketing team with `@john-team/marketing`
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## Issues and merge requests within a group
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Issues and merge requests are part of projects. For a given group, view all the
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[issues](../project/issues/index.md#issues-per-group) and [merge requests](../project/merge_requests/index.md#merge-requests-per-group) across all the projects in that group,
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together in a single list view.
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## Create a new group
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> **Notes:**
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- For a list of words that are not allowed to be used as group names see the
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[reserved names](../reserved_names.md).
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You can create a group in GitLab from:
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1. The Groups page: expand the left menu, click **Groups**, and click the green button **New group**:
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![new group from groups page](img/new_group_from_groups.png)
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1. Elsewhere: expand the `plus` sign button on the top navbar and choose **New group**:
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![new group from elsewhere](img/new_group_from_other_pages.png)
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Add the following information:
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![new group info](img/create_new_group_info.png)
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1. Set the **Group path** which will be the **namespace** under which your projects
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will be hosted (path can contain only letters, digits, underscores, dashes
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and dots; it cannot start with dashes or end in dot).
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1. The **Group name** will populate with the path. Optionally, you can change
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it. This is the name that will display in the group views.
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1. Optionally, you can add a description so that others can briefly understand
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what this group is about.
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1. Optionally, choose an avatar for your project.
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1. Choose the [visibility level](../../public_access/public_access.md).
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## Add users to a group
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Add members to a group by navigating to the group's dashboard, and clicking **Members**:
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![add members to group](img/add_new_members.png)
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Select the [permission level](../permissions.md#permissions) and add the new member. You can also set the expiring
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date for that user, from which they will no longer have access to your group.
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One of the benefits of putting multiple projects in one group is that you can
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give a user to access to all projects in the group with one action.
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Consider we have a group with two projects:
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- On the **Group Members** page we can now add a new user to the group.
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- Now because this user is a **Developer** member of the group, he automatically
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gets **Developer** access to **all projects** within that group.
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If necessary, you can increase the access level of an individual user for a specific project,
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by adding them again as a new member to the project with the new permission levels.
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## Request access to a group
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As a group owner you can enable or disable non members to request access to
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your group. Go to the group settings and click on **Allow users to request access**.
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As a user, you can request to be a member of a group. Go to the group you'd
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like to be a member of, and click the **Request Access** button on the right
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side of your screen.
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![Request access button](img/request_access_button.png)
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---
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Group owners and masters will be notified of your request and will be able to approve or
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decline it on the members page.
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![Manage access requests](img/access_requests_management.png)
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---
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If you change your mind before your request is approved, just click the
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**Withdraw Access Request** button.
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![Withdraw access request button](img/withdraw_access_request_button.png)
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## Add projects to a group
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There are two different ways to add a new project to a group:
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- Select a group and then click on the **New project** button.
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![New project](img/create_new_project_from_group.png)
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You can then continue on [creating a project](../../gitlab-basics/create-project.md).
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- While you are creating a project, select a group namespace
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you've already created from the dropdown menu.
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![Select group](img/select_group_dropdown.png)
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## Transfer projects into groups
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Learn how to [transfer a project into a group](../project/index.md#transfer-an-existing-project-into-a-group).
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## Sharing a project with a group
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You can [share your projects with a group](../project/members/share_project_with_groups.md)
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and give your group members access to the project all at once.
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Alternatively, you can [lock the sharing with group feature](#share-with-group-lock).
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## Manage group memberships via LDAP
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In GitLab Enterprise Edition it is possible to manage GitLab group memberships using LDAP groups.
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See [the GitLab Enterprise Edition documentation](../../integration/ldap.md) for more information.
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## Transfer groups to another group
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From 10.5 there are two different ways to transfer a group:
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- Either by transferring a group into another group (making it a subgroup of that group).
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- Or by converting a subgroup into a root group (a group with no parent).
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Please make sure to understand that:
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- Changing a group's parent can have unintended side effects. See [Redirects when changing repository paths](https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/user/project/index.html#redirects-when-changing-repository-paths)
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- You can only transfer the group to a group you manage.
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- You will need to update your local repositories to point to the new location.
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- If the parent group's visibility is lower than the group current visibility, visibility levels for subgroups and projects will be changed to match the new parent group's visibility.
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## Group settings
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Once you have created a group, you can manage its settings by navigating to
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the group's dashboard, and clicking **Settings**.
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![group settings](img/group_settings.png)
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### General settings
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Besides giving you the option to edit any settings you've previously
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set when [creating the group](#create-a-new-group), you can also
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access further configurations for your group.
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#### Changing a group's path
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Changing a group's path can have unintended side effects. Read
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[how redirects will behave](../project/index.md#redirects-when-changing-repository-paths)
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before proceeding.
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If you are vacating the path so it can be claimed by another group or user,
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you may need to rename the group name as well since both names and paths must
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be unique.
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To change your group path:
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1. Navigate to your group's **Settings > General**.
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1. Enter a new name under "Group path".
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1. Hit **Save group**.
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CAUTION: **Caution:**
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It is currently not possible to rename a namespace if it contains a
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project with [Container Registry](../project/container_registry.md) tags,
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because the project cannot be moved.
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TIP: **TIP:**
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If you want to retain ownership over the original namespace and
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protect the URL redirects, then instead of changing a group's path or renaming a
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username, you can create a new group and transfer projects to it.
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#### Enforce 2FA to group members
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Add a security layer to your group by
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[enforcing two-factor authentication (2FA)](../../security/two_factor_authentication.md#enforcing-2fa-for-all-users-in-a-group)
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to all group members.
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#### Share with group lock
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Prevent projects in a group from [sharing
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a project with another group](../project/members/share_project_with_groups.md).
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This allows for tighter control over project access.
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For example, consider you have two distinct teams (Group A and Group B)
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working together in a project.
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To inherit the group membership, you share the project between the
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two groups A and B. **Share with group lock** prevents any project within
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the group from being shared with another group. By doing so, you
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guarantee only the right group members have access to that projects.
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To enable this feature, navigate to the group settings page. Select
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**Share with group lock** and **Save the group**.
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![Checkbox for share with group lock](img/share_with_group_lock.png)
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#### Member Lock
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> Available in [GitLab Starter](https://about.gitlab.com/products/) and
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[GitLab.com Bronze](https://about.gitlab.com/gitlab-com/).
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With **Member Lock** it is possible to lock membership in project to the
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level of members in group.
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Learn more about [Member Lock](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/group/index.html#member-lock).
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### Advanced settings
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- **Projects**: view all projects within that group, add members to each project,
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access each project's settings, and remove any project from the same screen.
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- **Webhooks**: configure [webhooks](../project/integrations/webhooks.md)
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and [push rules](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/push_rules/push_rules.html#push-rules) to your group (Push Rules is available in [GitLab Starter](https://about.gitlab.com/products/).)
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- **Audit Events**: view [Audit Events](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/audit_events.html#audit-events)
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for the group (GitLab admins only, available in [GitLab Starter][ee]).
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- **Pipelines quota**: keep track of the [pipeline quota](../admin_area/settings/continuous_integration.md) for the group
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