Syntax Highlighting
GitLab provides syntax highlighting on all files through the Rouge Ruby gem. It attempts to guess what language to use based on the file extension, which most of the time is sufficient.
If GitLab is guessing wrong, you can override its choice of language using the
gitlab-language
attribute in .gitattributes
. For example, if you are working in a Prolog
project and using the .pl
file extension (which would normally be highlighted as Perl),
you can add the following to your .gitattributes
file:
*.pl gitlab-language=prolog
When you check in and push that change, all *.pl
files in your project are highlighted as Prolog.
The paths here are Git’s built-in .gitattributes
interface. So, if you were to invent a file format called a Nicefile
at the root of your project that used Ruby syntax, all you need is:
/Nicefile gitlab-language=ruby
To disable highlighting entirely, use gitlab-language=text
. Lots more fun shenanigans are available through common gateway interface (CGI) options, such as:
# json with erb in it
/my-cool-file gitlab-language=erb?parent=json
# an entire file of highlighting errors!
/other-file gitlab-language=text?token=Error
Please note that these configurations only take effect when the .gitattributes
file is in your default branch.
.gitattribute
files, but it’s planned for a future release.Configure maximum file size for highlighting
You can configure the maximum size of the file to be highlighted.
The file size is measured in kilobytes, and is set to a default of 512 KB
. Any file over the file size is rendered in plain text.
-
Open the
gitlab.yml
configuration file. -
Add this section, replacing
maximum_text_highlight_size_kilobytes
with the value you want.gitlab: extra: ## Maximum file size for syntax highlighting ## https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/highlighting.html maximum_text_highlight_size_kilobytes: 512