122 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
122 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Manage
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group: Access
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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
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---
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# GitLab permissions guide
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There are multiple types of permissions across GitLab, and when implementing
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anything that deals with permissions, all of them should be considered.
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## Groups and Projects
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### General permissions
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Groups and projects can have the following visibility levels:
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- public (`20`) - an entity is visible to everyone
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- internal (`10`) - an entity is visible to logged in users
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- private (`0`) - an entity is visible only to the approved members of the entity
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By default, subgroups can **not** have higher visibility levels.
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For example, if you create a new private group, it can not include a public subgroup.
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The visibility level of a group can be changed only if all subgroups and
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sub-projects have the same or lower visibility level. For example, a group can be set
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to internal only if all subgroups and projects are internal or private.
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WARNING:
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If you migrate an existing group to a lower visibility level, that action does not migrate subgroups
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in the same way. This is a [known issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/22406).
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Visibility levels can be found in the `Gitlab::VisibilityLevel` module.
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### Feature specific permissions
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Additionally, the following project features can have different visibility levels:
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- Issues
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- Repository
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- Merge Request
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- Pipelines
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- Container Registry
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- Git Large File Storage
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- Wiki
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- Snippets
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These features can be set to "Everyone with Access" or "Only Project Members".
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They make sense only for public or internal projects because private projects
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can be accessed only by project members by default.
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### Members
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Users can be members of multiple groups and projects. The following access
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levels are available (defined in the `Gitlab::Access` module):
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- No access (`0`)
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- Guest (`10`)
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- Reporter (`20`)
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- Developer (`30`)
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- Maintainer (`40`)
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- Owner (`50`)
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If a user is the member of both a project and the project parent group(s), the
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higher permission is taken into account for the project.
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If a user is the member of a project, but not the parent group(s), they
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can still view the groups and their entities (like epics).
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Project membership (where the group membership is already taken into account)
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is stored in the `project_authorizations` table.
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WARNING:
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Due to [an issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/219299),
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projects in personal namespace do not show owner (`50`) permission in
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`project_authorizations` table. Note however that [`user.owned_projects`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/blob/0d63823b122b11abd2492bca47cc26858eee713d/app/models/user.rb#L906-916)
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is calculated properly.
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### Confidential issues
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Confidential issues can be accessed only by project members who are at least
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reporters (they can't be accessed by guests). Additionally they can be accessed
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by their authors and assignees.
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### Licensed features
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Some features can be accessed only if the user has the correct license plan.
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## Permission dependencies
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Feature policies can be quite complex and consist of multiple rules.
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Quite often, one permission can be based on another.
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Designing good permissions means reusing existing permissions as much as possible
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and making access to features granular.
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In the case of a complex resource, it should be broken into smaller pieces of information
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and each piece should be granted a different permission.
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A good example in this case is the _Merge Request widget_ and the _Security reports_.
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Depending on the visibility level of the _Pipelines_, the _Security reports_ are either visible
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in the widget or not. So, the _Merge Request widget_, the _Pipelines_, and the _Security reports_,
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have separate permissions. Moreover, the permissions for the _Merge Request widget_
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and the _Pipelines_ are dependencies of the _Security reports_.
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### Permission dependencies of Secure features
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Secure features have complex permissions since these features are integrated
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into different features like Merge Requests and CI flow.
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Here is a list of some permission dependencies.
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| Activity level | Resource | Locations |Permission dependency|
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|----------------|----------|-----------|-----|
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| View | License information | Dependency list, License Compliance | Can view repository |
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| View | Dependency information | Dependency list, License Compliance | Can view repository |
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| View | Vulnerabilities information | Dependency list | Can view security findings |
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| View | Black/Whitelisted licenses for the project | License Compliance, Merge request | Can view repository |
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| View | Security findings | Merge Request, CI job page, Pipeline security tab | Can read the project and CI jobs |
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| View | Vulnerability feedback | Merge Request | Can read security findings |
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| View | Dependency List page | Project | Can access Dependency information |
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| View | License Compliance page | Project | Can access License information|
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