debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/user/project/code_owners.md
2022-01-26 12:08:38 +05:30

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Code Owners (PREMIUM)

  • Introduced in GitLab 11.3.
  • Code Owners for merge request approvals was introduced in GitLab Premium 11.9.
  • Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

INFO: Get access to Code Owners and more with a free 30-day trial of GitLab Ultimate.

Code Owners define who owns specific files or directories in a repository.

  • The users you define as Code Owners are displayed in the UI when you browse directories.
  • You can set your merge requests so they must be approved by Code Owners before merge.
  • You can protect a branch and allow only Code Owners to approve changes to the branch.

If you don't want to use Code Owners for approvals, you can configure rules instead.

Set up Code Owners

You can use Code Owners to specify users or shared groups that are responsible for specific files and directories in a repository.

To set up Code Owners:

  1. Choose the location where you want to specify Code Owners:

    • In the root directory of the repository
    • In the .gitlab/ directory
    • In the docs/ directory
  2. In that location, create a file named CODEOWNERS.

  3. In the file, enter text that follows one of these patterns:

    # Code Owners for a file
    filename @username1 @username2
    
    # Code Owners for a directory
    directoryname/ @username1 @username2
    
    # All group members as Code Owners for a file
    filename @groupname
    
    # All group members as Code Owners for a directory
    directoryname/ @groupname
    

The Code Owners are now displayed in the UI. They apply to the current branch only.

Next steps:

Groups as Code Owners

You can use members of groups and subgroups as Code Owners for a project.

For example, if you have these groups:

  • Group X (group-x) with Project A in it.
  • Subgroup Y (group-x/subgroup-y), which belongs to Group X, with Project B in it.

The eligible Code Owners:

  • For Project A are the members of Group X only, because Project A doesn't belong to Subgroup Y.
  • For Project B are the members of both Group X and Subgroup Y.

Eligible Code Owners

You can invite Subgroup Y to Project A so that their members also become eligible Code Owners.

Invite subgroup members to become eligible Code Owners

If you do not invite Subgroup Y to Project A, but make them Code Owners, their approval of the merge request becomes optional.

Inviting Subgroup Y to a parent group of Project A is not supported. To set Subgroup Y as Code Owners, add this group directly to the project itself.

Add a group as a Code Owner

To set a group as a Code Owner:

In the CODEOWNERS file, enter text that follows one of these patterns:

# All group members as Code Owners for a file
file.md @group-x

# All subgroup members as Code Owners for a file
file.md @group-x/subgroup-y

# All group and subgroup members as Code Owners for a file
file.md @group-x @group-x/subgroup-y

When a file matches multiple CODEOWNERS entries

When a file matches multiple entries in the CODEOWNERS file, the users from last pattern matching the file are used.

For example, in the following CODEOWNERS file:

README.md @user1

# This line would also match the file README.md
*.md @user2

The Code Owner for README.md would be @user2.

If you use sections, the last user for each section is used.

Only one CODEOWNERS pattern can match per file path.

Organize Code Owners by putting them into sections

You can organize Code Owners by putting them into named sections.

You can use sections for shared directories, so that multiple teams can be reviewers.

To add a section to the CODEOWNERS file, enter a section name in brackets, followed by the files or directories, and users, groups, or subgroups:

[README Owners]
README.md @user1 @user2
internal/README.md @user2

Each Code Owner in the merge request widget is listed under a label. The following image shows a Groups and Documentation section:

MR widget - Sectional Code Owners

Sections with duplicate names

If multiple sections have the same name, they are combined. Also, section headings are not case-sensitive. For example:

[Documentation]
ee/docs/    @docs
docs/       @docs

[Database]
README.md  @database
model/db/   @database

[DOCUMENTATION]
README.md  @docs

This code results in three entries under the Documentation section header, and two entries under Database. The entries defined under the sections Documentation and DOCUMENTATION are combined, using the case of the first section.

Make a Code Owners section optional

Introduced in GitLab Premium 13.8.

You can designate optional sections in your Code Owners file. Prepend the section name with the caret ^ character to treat the entire section as optional. Optional sections enable you to designate responsible parties for various parts of your codebase, but not require approval from them. This approach provides a more relaxed policy for parts of your project that are frequently updated, but don't require stringent reviews.

In this example, the [Go] section is optional:

[Documentation]
*.md @root

[Ruby]
*.rb @root

^[Go]
*.go @root

The optional Code Owners section displays in merge requests under the Approval Rules area:

MR widget - Optional Code Owners sections

If a section is duplicated in the file, and one of them is marked as optional and the other isn't, the section is required.

Optional sections in the CODEOWNERS file are treated as optional only when changes are submitted by using merge requests. If a change is submitted directly to the protected branch, approval from Code Owners is still required, even if the section is marked as optional.

Allowed to Push

The Code Owner approval and protected branch features do not apply to users who are Allowed to push.

Example CODEOWNERS file

# This is an example of a CODEOWNERS file.
# Lines that start with `#` are ignored.

# app/ @commented-rule

# Specify a default Code Owner by using a wildcard:
* @default-codeowner

# Specify multiple Code Owners by using a tab or space:
* @multiple @code @owners

# Rules defined later in the file take precedence over the rules
# defined before.
# For example, for all files with a filename ending in `.rb`:
*.rb @ruby-owner

# Files with a `#` can still be accessed by escaping the pound sign:
\#file_with_pound.rb @owner-file-with-pound

# Specify multiple Code Owners separated by spaces or tabs.
# In the following case the CODEOWNERS file from the root of the repo
# has 3 Code Owners (@multiple @code @owners):
CODEOWNERS @multiple @code @owners

# You can use both usernames or email addresses to match
# users. Everything else is ignored. For example, this code
# specifies the `@legal` and a user with email `janedoe@gitlab.com` as the
# owner for the LICENSE file:
LICENSE @legal this_does_not_match janedoe@gitlab.com

# Use group names to match groups, and nested groups to specify
# them as owners for a file:
README @group @group/with-nested/subgroup

# End a path in a `/` to specify the Code Owners for every file
# nested in that directory, on any level:
/docs/ @all-docs

# End a path in `/*` to specify Code Owners for every file in
# a directory, but not nested deeper. This code matches
# `docs/index.md` but not `docs/projects/index.md`:
/docs/* @root-docs

# This code makes matches a `lib` directory nested anywhere in the repository:
lib/ @lib-owner

# This code match only a `config` directory in the root of the repository:
/config/ @config-owner

# If the path contains spaces, escape them like this:
path\ with\ spaces/ @space-owner

# Code Owners section:
[Documentation]
ee/docs    @docs
docs       @docs

[Database]
README.md  @database
model/db   @database

# This section is combined with the previously defined [Documentation] section:
[DOCUMENTATION]
README.md  @docs