GitLab CLI Skills
Comprehensive GitLab CLI (glab) command reference and workflows.
Quick start
# First time setup
glab auth login
# Common operations
glab mr create --fill # Create MR from current branch
glab issue create # Create issue
glab ci view # View pipeline status
glab repo view --web # Open repo in browser
Multi-agent identity note
When you want different agents to appear as different GitLab users, give each agent its own GitLab bot/service account. Multiple personal access tokens on the same GitLab user still act as that same visible identity.
Use the Actor identity for actor-authored GitLab comments, replies, approvals, and other writes. Use an agent identity only when the GitLab action is explicitly that agent's own work product. Choose the intended visible actor before the first GitLab write.
Treat shell identity as sticky and unsafe by default. If another env file was sourced earlier in the same shell/session, glab may still write as that previously loaded identity unless you deliberately switch and verify first.
A practical pattern is one env file per actor, for example ~/.config/openclaw/env/gitlab-actor.env, ~/.config/openclaw/env/gitlab-reviewer.env, and ~/.config/openclaw/env/gitlab-release.env. Keep these env files outside version control, restrict their permissions (for example chmod 600), be mindful of backup exposure, and use least-privilege bot/service-account tokens. In a reused shell, clear stale GitLab auth vars first or start a fresh shell. If those files use plain KEY=value lines, load them with exported vars before running glab:
unset GITLAB_TOKEN GITLAB_ACCESS_TOKEN OAUTH_TOKEN GITLAB_HOST
set -a
source ~/.config/openclaw/env/gitlab-<actor>.env
set +a
Plain source updates the current shell but may not export variables to child processes such as glab. If the token/host vars are not exported, glab may silently fall back to shared stored auth from ~/.config/glab-cli/config.yml, which can make the wrong account appear to perform the action.
Required pre-flight before any GitLab write
Run this immediately before any GitLab write, including glab mr note, review replies/approvals, and any glab api POST/PATCH/PUT/DELETE call:
glab auth status --hostname "$GITLAB_HOST"
glab api --hostname "$GITLAB_HOST" user
This assumes the target actor env file set GITLAB_HOST for the exact GitLab instance you intend to modify. Do not write until both commands clearly show the intended visible actor on that host.
Wrong-identity remediation
If a comment or reply was posted under the wrong identity:
- Stop posting.
- Delete the mistaken comment or reply if cleanup is needed.
unset GITLAB_TOKEN GITLAB_ACCESS_TOKEN OAUTH_TOKEN GITLAB_HOSTor start a fresh shell.- Source the correct env file with
set -a; source ...; set +a. - Rerun
glab auth status --hostname "$GITLAB_HOST"andglab api --hostname "$GITLAB_HOST" user. - Repost under the correct actor.
- Verify the thread no longer shows the wrong visible author for the replacement message.
If the wrong-identity write changed state beyond a comment or reply, do not treat the comment cleanup steps as sufficient. Re-auth as above, then use the matching GitLab reversal for that write under the correct actor and host, such as unapproving an MR or sending the compensating glab api --hostname "$GITLAB_HOST" mutation for the exact resource that was changed.
Skill organization
This skill routes to specialized sub-skills by GitLab domain:
Core Workflows:
glab-mr- Merge requests: create, review, approve, mergeglab-issue- Issues: create, list, update, close, commentglab-ci- CI/CD: pipelines, jobs, logs, artifactsglab-repo- Repositories: clone, create, fork, manage
Project Management:
glab-milestone- Release planning and milestone trackingglab-iteration- Sprint/iteration managementglab-label- Label management and organizationglab-release- Software releases and versioning
Authentication & Config:
glab-auth- Login, logout, Docker registry authglab-config- CLI configuration and defaultsglab-ssh-key- SSH key managementglab-gpg-key- GPG keys for commit signingglab-token- Personal and project access tokensglab-todo- Personal GitLab to-do triage and completion
CI/CD Management:
glab-job- Individual job operationsglab-schedule- Scheduled pipelines and cron jobsglab-variable- CI/CD variables and secretsglab-securefile- Secure files for pipelinesglab-runner- Runner management: list, assign/unassign, inspect jobs/managers, pause/unpause, deleteglab-runner-controller- Runner controller, scope, and token management (EXPERIMENTAL, admin-only)
Collaboration:
glab-user- User profiles and informationglab-snippet- Code snippets (GitLab gists)glab-incident- Incident managementglab-workitems- Work items: tasks, OKRs, key results, next-gen epics
Advanced:
glab-api- Direct REST API callsglab-cluster- Kubernetes cluster integrationglab-deploy-key- Deploy keys for automationglab-quick-actions- GitLab slash command quick actions for batching state changesglab-stack- Stacked/dependent merge requestsglab-opentofu- Terraform/OpenTofu state management
Utilities:
glab-alias- Custom command aliasesglab-completion- Shell autocompletionglab-help- Command help and documentationglab-version- Version informationglab-check-update- Update checkerglab-changelog- Changelog generationglab-attestation- Software supply chain securityglab-duo- GitLab Duo AI assistantglab-mcp- Model Context Protocol server for AI assistant integration (EXPERIMENTAL)
When to use glab vs web UI
Use glab when:
- Automating GitLab operations in scripts
- Working in terminal-centric workflows
- Batch operations (multiple MRs/issues)
- Integration with other CLI tools
- CI/CD pipeline workflows
- Faster navigation without browser context switching
Use web UI when:
- Complex diff review with inline comments
- Visual merge conflict resolution
- Configuring repo settings and permissions
- Advanced search/filtering across projects
- Reviewing security scanning results
- Managing group/instance-level settings
Common workflows
Daily development
# Start work on issue
glab issue view 123
git checkout -b 123-feature-name
# Create MR when ready
glab mr create --fill --draft
# Mark ready for review
glab mr update --ready
# Merge after approval
glab mr merge --when-pipeline-succeeds --remove-source-branch
Code review
# List your review queue
glab mr list --reviewer=@me --state=opened
# Review an MR
glab mr checkout 456
glab mr diff
npm test
# Approve
glab mr approve 456
glab mr note 456 -m "LGTM! Nice work on the error handling."
CI/CD debugging
# Check pipeline status
glab ci status
# View failed jobs
glab ci view
# Get job logs
glab ci trace <job-id>
# Retry failed job
glab ci retry <job-id>
Decision Trees
"Should I create an MR or work on an issue first?"
Need to track work?
├─ Yes → Create issue first (glab issue create)
│ Then: glab mr for <issue-id>
└─ No → Direct MR (glab mr create --fill)
Use glab issue create + glab mr for when:
- Work needs discussion/approval before coding
- Tracking feature requests or bugs
- Sprint planning and assignment
- Want issue to auto-close when MR merges
Use glab mr create directly when:
- Quick fixes or typos
- Working from existing issue
- Hotfixes or urgent changes
"Which CI command should I use?"
What do you need?
├─ Overall pipeline status → glab ci status
├─ Visual pipeline view → glab ci view
├─ Specific job logs → glab ci trace <job-id>
├─ Download build artifacts → glab ci artifact <ref> <job-name>
├─ Validate config file → glab ci lint
├─ Trigger new run → glab ci run
└─ List all pipelines → glab ci list
Quick reference:
- Pipeline-level:
glab ci status,glab ci view,glab ci run - Job-level:
glab ci trace,glab job retry,glab job view - Artifacts:
glab ci artifact(by pipeline) or job artifacts viaglab job
"Clone or fork?"
What's your relationship to the repo?
├─ You have write access → glab repo clone group/project
├─ Contributing to someone else's project:
│ ├─ One-time contribution → glab repo fork + work + MR
│ └─ Ongoing contributions → glab repo fork, then sync regularly
└─ Just reading/exploring → glab repo clone (or view --web)
Fork when:
- You don't have write access to the original repo
- Contributing to open source projects
- Experimenting without affecting the original
- Need your own copy for long-term work
Clone when:
- You're a project member with write access
- Working on organization/team repositories
- No need for a personal copy
"Project vs group labels?"
Where should the label live?
├─ Used across multiple projects → glab label create --group <group>
└─ Specific to one project → glab label create (in project directory)
Group-level labels:
- Consistent labeling across organization
- Examples: priority::high, type::bug, status::blocked
- Managed centrally, inherited by projects
Project-level labels:
- Project-specific workflows
- Examples: needs-ux-review, deploy-to-staging
- Managed by project maintainers
Related Skills
MR and Issue workflows:
- Start with
glab-issueto create/track work - Use
glab-mrto create MR that closes issue - Script:
scripts/create-mr-from-issue.shautomates this
CI/CD debugging:
- Use
glab-cifor pipeline-level operations - Use
glab-jobfor individual job operations - Script:
scripts/ci-debug.shfor quick failure diagnosis
Repository operations:
- Use
glab-repofor repository management - Use
glab-authfor authentication setup - Script:
scripts/sync-fork.shfor fork synchronization
Configuration:
- Use
glab-authfor initial authentication - Use
glab-configto set defaults and preferences - Use
glab-aliasfor custom shortcuts