debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/gitlab-basics/create-project.md
2020-03-13 15:44:24 +05:30

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---
type: howto
---
# Create a project
Most work in GitLab is done within a [Project](../user/project/index.md). Files and
code are saved in projects, and most features are used within the scope of projects.
## Create a project in GitLab
To create a project in GitLab:
1. In your dashboard, click the green **New project** button or use the plus
icon in the navigation bar. This opens the **New project** page.
1. On the **New project** page, choose if you want to:
- Create a [blank project](#blank-projects).
- Create a project using with one of the available [project templates](#project-templates).
- [Import a project](../user/project/import/index.md) from a different repository,
if enabled on your GitLab instance. Contact your GitLab admin if this is unavailable.
- Run [CI/CD pipelines for external repositories](../ci/ci_cd_for_external_repos/index.md). **(PREMIUM)**
NOTE: **Note:**
For a list of words that cannot be used as project names see
[Reserved project and group names](../user/reserved_names.md).
### Blank projects
To create a new blank project on the **New project** page:
1. On the **Blank project** tab, provide the following information:
- The name of your project in the **Project name** field. You can't use
special characters, but you can use spaces, hyphens, underscores or even
emoji. When adding the name, the **Project slug** will auto populate.
The slug is what the GitLab instance will use as the URL path to the project.
If you want a different slug, input the project name first,
then change the slug after.
- The path to your project in the **Project slug** field. This is the URL
path for your project that the GitLab instance will use. If the
**Project name** is blank, it will auto populate when you fill in
the **Project slug**.
- The **Project description (optional)** field enables you to enter a
description for your project's dashboard, which will help others
understand what your project is about. Though it's not required, it's a good
idea to fill this in.
- Changing the **Visibility Level** modifies the project's
[viewing and access rights](../public_access/public_access.md) for users.
- Selecting the **Initialize repository with a README** option creates a
README file so that the Git repository is initialized, has a default branch, and
can be cloned.
1. Click **Create project**.
### Project templates
Project templates can pre-populate a new project with the necessary files to get you
started quickly.
There are two types of project templates:
- [Built-in templates](#built-in-templates), sourced from the following groups:
- [`project-templates`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/project-templates)
- [`pages`](https://gitlab.com/pages)
- [Custom project templates](#custom-project-templates-premium), for custom templates
configured by GitLab administrators and users.
#### Built-in templates
Built-in templates are project templates that are:
- Developed and maintained in the [`project-templates`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/project-templates)
and [`pages`](https://gitlab.com/pages) groups.
- Released with GitLab.
To use a built-in template on the **New project** page:
1. On the **Create from template** tab, select the **Built-in** tab.
1. From the list of available built-in templates, click the:
- **Preview** button to look at the template source itself.
- **Use template** button to start creating the project.
1. Finish creating the project by filling out the project's details. The process is
the same as creating a [blank project](#blank-projects).
TIP: **Tip:**
You can improve the existing built-in templates or contribute new ones in the
[`project-templates`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/project-templates) and
[`pages`](https://gitlab.com/pages) groups.
#### Custom project templates **(PREMIUM)**
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/6860) in
[GitLab Premium](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) 11.2.
Creating new projects based on custom project templates is a convenient option for
quickly starting projects.
Custom projects are available at the [instance-level](../user/admin_area/custom_project_templates.md)
from the **Instance** tab, or at the [group-level](../user/group/custom_project_templates.md)
from the **Group** tab, under the **Create from template** tab.
To use a custom project template on the **New project** page:
1. On the **Create from template** tab, select the **Instance** tab or the **Group** tab.
1. From the list of available custom templates, click the:
- **Preview** button to look at the template source itself.
- **Use template** button to start creating the project.
1. Finish creating the project by filling out the project's details. The process is
the same as creating a [blank project](#blank-projects).
## Push to create a new project
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/26388) in GitLab 10.5.
When you create a new repository locally, instead of going to GitLab to manually
create a new project and then [clone the repo](start-using-git.md#clone-a-repository)
locally, you can directly push it to GitLab to create the new project, all without leaving
your terminal. If you have access rights to the associated namespace, GitLab will
automatically create a new project under that GitLab namespace with its visibility
set to Private by default (you can later change it in the [project's settings](../public_access/public_access.md#how-to-change-project-visibility)).
This can be done by using either SSH or HTTPS:
```shell
## Git push using SSH
git push --set-upstream git@gitlab.example.com:namespace/nonexistent-project.git master
## Git push using HTTPS
git push --set-upstream https://gitlab.example.com/namespace/nonexistent-project.git master
```
Once the push finishes successfully, a remote message will indicate
the command to set the remote and the URL to the new project:
```text
remote:
remote: The private project namespace/nonexistent-project was created.
remote:
remote: To configure the remote, run:
remote: git remote add origin https://gitlab.example.com/namespace/nonexistent-project.git
remote:
remote: To view the project, visit:
remote: https://gitlab.example.com/namespace/nonexistent-project
remote:
```
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