- Configuring your identity provider
- Configuring GitLab
- Providers
- User access and management
- Group Sync
- Passwords for users created via SAML SSO for Groups
-
Troubleshooting
- SAML debugging tools
- Verifying configuration
- Verifying NameID
- Users receive a 404
- Message: “SAML authentication failed: Extern UID has already been taken”
- Message: “SAML authentication failed: User has already been taken”
- Message: “SAML authentication failed: Email has already been taken”
- Message: “SAML authentication failed: Extern UID has already been taken, User has already been taken”
- Message: “Request to link SAML account must be authorized”
- Stuck in a login “loop”
- The NameID has changed
- I need to change my SAML app
- I need additional information to configure my identity provider
- Searching Rails log
SAML SSO for GitLab.com groups
Introduced in GitLab 11.0.
This page describes SAML for Groups. For instance-wide SAML on self-managed GitLab instances, see SAML OmniAuth Provider. View the differences between SaaS and Self-Managed Authentication and Authorization Options.
SAML on GitLab.com allows users to sign in through their SAML identity provider. If the user is not already a member, the sign-in process automatically adds the user to the appropriate group.
User synchronization of SAML SSO groups is supported through SCIM. SCIM supports adding and removing users from the GitLab group automatically. For example, if you remove a user from the SCIM app, SCIM removes that same user from the GitLab group.
SAML SSO is only configurable at the top-level group.
If required, you can find a glossary of common terms.
Configuring your identity provider
- Navigate to the GitLab group and select Settings > SAML SSO.
- Configure your SAML identity provider using the Assertion consumer service URL, Identifier, and GitLab single sign-on URL. Alternatively GitLab provides metadata XML configuration. See specific identity provider documentation for more details.
- Configure the SAML response to include a NameID that uniquely identifies each user.
- Configure required assertions at minimum containing the user’s email address.
- While the default is enabled for most SAML providers, please ensure the app is set to have service provider initiated calls in order to link existing GitLab accounts.
- Once the identity provider is set up, move on to configuring GitLab.
NameID
GitLab.com uses the SAML NameID to identify users. The NameID element:
- Is a required field in the SAML response.
- Must be unique to each user.
- Must be a persistent value that will never change, such as a randomly generated unique user ID.
- Is case sensitive. The NameID must match exactly on subsequent login attempts, so should not rely on user input that could change between upper and lower case.
- Should not be an email address or username. We strongly recommend against these as it’s hard to guarantee it doesn’t ever change, for example, when a person’s name changes. Email addresses are also case-insensitive, which can result in users being unable to sign in.
The relevant field name and recommended value for supported providers are in the provider specific notes. appropriate corresponding field.
NameID
breaks the configuration and potentially locks users out of the GitLab group.NameID Format
We recommend setting the NameID format to Persistent
unless using a field (such as email) that requires a different format.
Assertions
For users to be created with the right information with the improved user access and management, the user details need to be passed to GitLab as SAML assertions.
At a minimum, the user’s email address must be specified as an assertion named email
or mail
.
See the assertions list for other available claims.
username
assertion is not supported for GitLab.com SaaS integrations.Metadata configuration
GitLab provides metadata XML that can be used to configure your identity provider.
- Navigate to the group and select Settings > SAML SSO.
- Copy the provided GitLab metadata URL.
- Follow your identity provider’s documentation and paste the metadata URL when it’s requested.
Configuring GitLab
After you set up your identity provider to work with GitLab, you must configure GitLab to use it for authentication:
- Navigate to the group’s Settings > SAML SSO.
- Find the SSO URL from your identity provider and enter it the Identity provider single sign-on URL field.
- Find and enter the fingerprint for the SAML token signing certificate in the Certificate field.
- Select the access level to be applied to newly added users in the Default membership role field. The default access level is ‘Guest’.
- Select the Enable SAML authentication for this group checkbox.
- Select the Save changes button.
SSO enforcement
- Introduced in GitLab 11.8.
- Improved in GitLab 11.11 with ongoing enforcement in the GitLab UI.
- Improved in GitLab 13.8, with an updated timeout experience.
- Improved in GitLab 13.8 with allowing group owners to not go through SSO.
- Improved in GitLab 13.11 with enforcing open SSO session to use Git if this setting is switched on.
With this option enabled, users (except owners) must go through your group’s GitLab single sign-on URL if they wish to access group resources through the UI. Users can’t be manually added as members.
SSO enforcement does not affect sign in or access to any resources outside of the group. Users can view which groups and projects they are a member of without SSO sign in.
However, users are not prompted to sign in through SSO on each visit. GitLab checks whether a user has authenticated through SSO. If it’s been more than 1 day since the last sign-in, GitLab prompts the user to sign in again through SSO.
We intend to add a similar SSO requirement for API activity.
SSO has the following effects when enabled:
- For groups, users can’t share a project in the group outside the top-level group, even if the project is forked.
- For a Git activity, users must be signed-in through SSO before they can push to or pull from a GitLab repository.
Providers
The SAML standard means that a wide range of identity providers will work with GitLab. Your identity provider may have relevant documentation. It may be generic SAML documentation, or specifically targeted for GitLab.
When configuring your identity provider, please consider the notes below for specific providers to help avoid common issues and as a guide for terminology used.
For providers not listed below, you can refer to the instance SAML notes on configuring an identity provider for additional guidance on information your identity provider may require.
Please note that GitLab provides the following for guidance only. If you have any questions on configuring the SAML app, please contact your provider’s support.
Azure setup notes
Please follow the Azure documentation on configuring single sign-on to applications with the notes below for consideration.
For a demo of the Azure SAML setup including SCIM, see SCIM Provisioning on Azure Using SAML SSO for Groups Demo. Please note that the video is outdated in regard to objectID mapping and the SCIM documentation should be followed.
GitLab Setting | Azure Field |
---|---|
Identifier | Identifier (Entity ID) |
Assertion consumer service URL | Reply URL (Assertion Consumer Service URL) |
GitLab single sign-on URL | Sign on URL |
Identity provider single sign-on URL | Login URL |
Certificate fingerprint | Thumbprint |
We recommend:
-
Unique User Identifier (Name identifier) set to
user.objectID
. - nameid-format set to persistent.
If using Group Sync, customize the name of the group claim to match the required attribute.
See the troubleshooting page for an example configuration.
Okta setup notes
Please follow the Okta documentation on setting up a SAML application in Okta with the notes below for consideration.
For a demo of the Okta SAML setup including SCIM, see Demo: Okta Group SAML & SCIM setup.
GitLab Setting | Okta Field |
---|---|
Identifier | Audience URI |
Assertion consumer service URL | Single sign-on URL |
GitLab single sign-on URL | Login page URL (under Application Login Page settings) |
Identity provider single sign-on URL | Identity Provider Single Sign-On URL |
Under Okta’s Single sign-on URL field, check the option Use this for Recipient URL and Destination URL.
For NameID, the following settings are recommended; for SCIM, the following settings are required:
-
Application username (NameID) set to Custom
user.getInternalProperty("id")
. - Name ID Format set to Persistent.
OneLogin setup notes
OneLogin supports their own GitLab (SaaS) application.
If you decide to use the OneLogin generic SAML Test Connector (Advanced), we recommend the “Use the OneLogin SAML Test Connector” documentation with the following settings:
GitLab Setting | OneLogin Field |
---|---|
Identifier | Audience |
Assertion consumer service URL | Recipient |
Assertion consumer service URL | ACS (Consumer) URL |
Assertion consumer service URL (escaped version) | ACS (Consumer) URL Validator |
GitLab single sign-on URL | Login URL |
Identity provider single sign-on URL | SAML 2.0 Endpoint |
Recommended NameID
value: OneLogin ID
.
User access and management
Improved in GitLab 13.7.
Once Group SSO is configured and enabled, users can access the GitLab.com group through the identity provider’s dashboard. If SCIM is configured, please see the user access and linking setup section on the SCIM page.
When a user tries to sign in with Group SSO, GitLab attempts to find or create a user based on the following:
- Find an existing user with a matching SAML identity. This would mean the user either had their account created by SCIM or they have previously signed in with the group’s SAML IdP.
- If there is no conflicting user with the same email address, create a new account automatically.
- If there is a conflicting user with the same email address, redirect the user to the sign-in page to:
- Create a new account with another email address.
- Sign-in to their existing account to link the SAML identity.
Linking SAML to your existing GitLab.com account
To link SAML to your existing GitLab.com account:
- Sign in to your GitLab.com account.
- Locate and visit the GitLab single sign-on URL for the group you’re signing in to. A group owner can find this on the group’s Settings > SAML SSO page. If the sign-in URL is configured, users can connect to the GitLab app from the identity provider.
- Select Authorize.
- Enter your credentials on the identity provider if prompted.
- You are then redirected back to GitLab.com and should now have access to the group. In the future, you can use SAML to sign in to GitLab.com.
On subsequent visits, you should be able to go sign in to GitLab.com with SAML or by visiting links directly. If the enforce SSO option is turned on, you are then redirected to sign in through the identity provider.
Signing in to GitLab.com with SAML
- Sign in to your identity provider.
- From the list of apps, select the “GitLab.com” app. (The name is set by the administrator of the identity provider.)
- You are then signed in to GitLab.com and redirected to the group.
Configure user settings from SAML response
Introduced in GitLab 13.7.
GitLab allows setting certain user attributes based on values from the SAML response. This affects users created on first sign-in via Group SAML. Existing users’ attributes are not affected regardless of the values sent in the SAML response.
Supported user attributes
-
can_create_group
- ‘true’ or ‘false’ to indicate whether the user can create new groups. Default istrue
. -
projects_limit
- The total number of personal projects a user can create. A value of0
means the user cannot create new projects in their personal namespace. Default is10000
.
Example SAML response
You can find SAML responses in the developer tools or console of your browser, in base64-encoded format. Use the base64 decoding tool of your choice to convert the information to XML. An example SAML response is shown here.
<saml2:AttributeStatement>
<saml2:Attribute Name="email" NameFormat="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:attrname-format:basic">
<saml2:AttributeValue xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="xs:string">user.email</saml2:AttributeValue>
</saml2:Attribute>
<saml2:Attribute Name="first_name" NameFormat="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:attrname-format:unspecified">
<saml2:AttributeValue xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="xs:string">user.firstName</saml2:AttributeValue>
</saml2:Attribute>
<saml2:Attribute Name="last_name" NameFormat="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:attrname-format:unspecified">
<saml2:AttributeValue xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="xs:string">user.lastName</saml2:AttributeValue>
</saml2:Attribute>
<saml2:Attribute Name="can_create_group" NameFormat="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:attrname-format:unspecified">
<saml2:AttributeValue xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="xs:string">true</saml2:AttributeValue>
</saml2:Attribute>
<saml2:Attribute Name="projects_limit" NameFormat="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:attrname-format:unspecified">
<saml2:AttributeValue xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="xs:string">10</saml2:AttributeValue>
</saml2:Attribute>
</saml2:AttributeStatement>
Role
Starting from GitLab 13.3, group owners can set a ‘Default membership role’ other than ‘Guest’. To do so, configure the SAML SSO for the group. That role becomes the starting access level of all users added to the group.
Existing members with appropriate privileges can promote or demote users, as needed.
If a user is already a member of the group, linking the SAML identity does not change their role.
Blocking access
To rescind access to the group, perform the following steps, in order:
- Remove the user from the user data store on the identity provider or the list of users on the specific app.
- Remove the user from the GitLab.com group.
Unlinking accounts
Users can unlink SAML for a group from their profile page. This can be helpful if:
- You no longer want a group to be able to sign you in to GitLab.com.
- Your SAML NameID has changed and so GitLab can no longer find your user.
Groups require at least one owner. If your account is the only owner in the group, you are not allowed to unlink the account. In that case, set up another user as a group owner, and then you can unlink the account.
For example, to unlink the MyOrg
account:
- In the top-right corner, select your avatar.
- Select Edit profile.
- In the left sidebar, select Account.
- In the Social sign-in section, select Disconnect next to the connected account.
Group Sync
For a demo of Group Sync using Azure, see Demo: SAML Group Sync.
When the SAML response includes a user and their group memberships from the SAML identity provider, GitLab uses that information to automatically manage that user’s GitLab group memberships.
Ensure your SAML identity provider sends an attribute statement named Groups
or groups
like the following:
<saml:AttributeStatement>
<saml:Attribute Name="Groups">
<saml:AttributeValue xsi:type="xs:string">Developers</saml:AttributeValue>
<saml:AttributeValue xsi:type="xs:string">Product Managers</saml:AttributeValue>
</saml:Attribute>
</saml:AttributeStatement>
Groups
or groups
in the SAML reponse can be either the group name or
the group ID depending what the IdP sends to GitLab.When SAML SSO is enabled for the top-level group, Maintainer
and Owner
level users
see a new menu item in group Settings > SAML Group Links. You can configure one or more SAML Group Links to map
a SAML identity provider group name to a GitLab Access Level. This can be done for the parent group or the subgroups.
To link the SAML groups from the saml:AttributeStatement
example above:
- Enter the value of
saml:AttributeValue
in theSAML Group Name
field. - Choose the desired
Access Level
. - Save the group link.
- Repeat to add additional group links if desired.
If a user is a member of multiple SAML groups mapped to the same GitLab group,
the user gets the highest access level from the groups. For example, if one group
is linked as Guest
and another Maintainer
, a user in both groups gets Maintainer
access.
Users who are not members of any mapped SAML groups are removed from the GitLab group.
You can prevent accidental member removal. For example, if you have a SAML group link for Owner
level access
in a top-level group, you should also set up a group link for all other members.
Passwords for users created via SAML SSO for Groups
The Generated passwords for users created through integrated authentication guide provides an overview of how GitLab generates and sets passwords for users created via SAML SSO for Groups.
Troubleshooting
This section contains possible solutions for problems you might encounter.
SAML debugging tools
SAML responses are base64 encoded, so we recommend the following browser plugins to decode them on the fly:
Specific attention should be paid to:
- The NameID, which we use to identify which user is signing in. If the user has previously signed in, this must match the value we have stored.
- The presence of a
X509Certificate
, which we require to verify the response signature. - The
SubjectConfirmation
andConditions
, which can cause errors if misconfigured.
Verifying configuration
For convenience, we’ve included some example resources used by our Support Team. While they may help you verify the SAML app configuration, they are not guaranteed to reflect the current state of third-party products.
Verifying NameID
In troubleshooting the Group SAML setup, any authenticated user can use the API to verify the NameID GitLab already has linked to the user by visiting https://gitlab.com/api/v4/user
and checking the extern_uid
under identities.
Similarly, group members of a role with the appropriate permissions can make use of the members API to view group SAML identity information for members of the group.
This can then be compared to the NameID being sent by the identity provider by decoding the message with a SAML debugging tool. We require that these match in order to identify users.
Users receive a 404
If a user is trying to sign in for the first time and the GitLab single sign-on URL has not been configured, they may see a 404. As outlined in the user access section, a group Owner will need to provide the URL to users.
Message: “SAML authentication failed: Extern UID has already been taken”
This error suggests you are signed in as a GitLab user but have already linked your SAML identity to a different GitLab user. Sign out and then try to sign in again using the SSO SAML link, which should log you into GitLab with the linked user account.
If you do not wish to use that GitLab user with the SAML login, you can unlink the GitLab account from the group’s SAML.
Message: “SAML authentication failed: User has already been taken”
The user that you’re signed in with already has SAML linked to a different identity. Here are possible causes and solutions:
Cause | Solution |
---|---|
You’ve tried to link multiple SAML identities to the same user, for a given identity provider. | Change the identity that you sign in with. To do so, unlink the previous SAML identity from this GitLab account before attempting to sign in again. |
Message: “SAML authentication failed: Email has already been taken”
Cause | Solution |
---|---|
When a user account with the email address already exists in GitLab, but the user does not have the SAML identity tied to their account. | The user will need to link their account. |
Message: “SAML authentication failed: Extern UID has already been taken, User has already been taken”
Getting both of these errors at the same time suggests the NameID capitalization provided by the identity provider didn’t exactly match the previous value for that user.
This can be prevented by configuring the NameID to return a consistent value. Fixing this for an individual user involves unlinking SAML in the GitLab account, although this will cause group membership and to-dos to be lost.
Message: “Request to link SAML account must be authorized”
Ensure that the user who is trying to link their GitLab account has been added as a user within the identity provider’s SAML app.
Alternatively, the SAML response may be missing the InResponseTo
attribute in the
samlp:Response
tag, which is expected by the SAML gem.
The identity provider administrator should ensure that the login is
initiated by the service provider and not the identity provider.
Stuck in a login “loop”
Ensure that the GitLab single sign-on URL has been configured as “Login URL” (or similarly named field) in the identity provider’s SAML app.
Alternatively, when users need to link SAML to their existing GitLab.com account, provide the GitLab single sign-on URL and instruct users not to use the SAML app on first sign in.
The NameID has changed
Cause | Solution |
---|---|
As mentioned in the NameID section, if the NameID changes for any user, the user can be locked out. This is a common problem when an email address is used as the identifier. | Follow the steps outlined in the “SAML authentication failed: User has already been taken” section. |
I need to change my SAML app
If the NameID is identical in both SAML apps, then no change is required.
Otherwise, to change the SAML app used for sign in, users need to unlink the current SAML identity and then link their identity to the new SAML app.
I need additional information to configure my identity provider
Many SAML terms can vary between providers. It is possible that the information you are looking for is listed under another name.
For more information, start with your identity provider’s documentation. Look for their options and examples to see how they configure SAML. This can provide hints on what you’ll need to configure GitLab to work with these providers.
It can also help to look at our more detailed docs for self-managed GitLab.
SAML configuration for GitLab.com is mostly the same as for self-managed instances.
However, self-managed GitLab instances use a configuration file that supports more options as described in the external OmniAuth SAML documentation.
Internally that uses the ruby-saml
library, so we sometimes check there to verify low level details of less commonly used options.
It can also help to compare the XML response from your provider with our example XML used for internal testing.
Searching Rails log
With access to the rails log or production_json.log
(available only to GitLab team members for GitLab.com),
you should be able to find the base64 encoded SAML response by searching with the following filters:
-
json.meta.caller_id
:Groups::OmniauthCallbacksController#group_saml
-
json.meta.user
orjson.username
:username
-
json.method
:POST
-
json.path
:/groups/GROUP-PATH/-/saml/callback
In a relevant log entry, the json.params
should provide a valid response with:
-
"key": "SAMLResponse"
and the"value": (full SAML response)
, -
"key": "RelayState"
with"value": "/group-path"
, and -
"key": "group_id"
with"value": "group-path"
.
In some cases, if the SAML response is lengthy, you may receive a "key": "truncated"
with "value":"..."
.
In these cases, please ask a group owner for a copy of the SAML response from when they select
the “Verify SAML Configuration” button on the group SSO Settings page.
Use a base64 decoder to see a human-readable version of the SAML response.