Merge request approvals
Redesign introduced in GitLab Premium 11.8 and feature flag removed in 12.0.
You can configure your merge requests so that they must be approved before they can be merged. You can do this by creating rules or by specifying a list of users who act as code owners for specific files.
You can configure merge request approvals for each project. In higher GitLab tiers, Administrators of self-managed GitLab instances can configure approvals for the entire instance.
How approvals work
With merge request approval rules, you can set the minimum number of required approvals before work can merge into your project. You can also extend these rules to define what types of users can approve work. Some examples of rules you can create include:
- Users with specific permissions can always approve work.
- Code owners can approve work for files they own.
- Users with specific permissions can approve work, even if they don’t have merge rights to the repository.
- Users with specific permissions can be allowed or denied the ability to override approval rules on a specific merge request.
You can also configure additional settings for merge request approvals for more control of the level of oversight and security your project needs, including:
- Prevent users from overriding a merge request approval rule.
- Reset approvals when new code is pushed.
- Allow (or disallow) authors and committers to approve their own merge requests.
- Require password authentication when approving.
- Require security team approval.
You can configure your merge request approval rules and settings through the GitLab user interface or with the Merge request approvals API.
Approve a merge request
When an eligible approver visits an open merge request, GitLab displays one of these buttons after the body of the merge request:
- Approve: The merge request doesn’t yet have the required number of approvals.
- Approve additionally: The merge request has the required number of approvals.
- Revoke approval: The user viewing the merge request has already approved the merge request.
Eligible approvers can also use the /approve
quick action when adding a comment to
a merge request.
After a merge request receives the number and type of approvals you configure, it can merge unless it’s blocked for another reason. Merge requests can be blocked by other problems, such as merge conflicts, pending discussions, or a failed CI/CD pipeline.
To prevent merge request authors from approving their own merge requests, enable Prevent author approval in your project’s settings.
If you enable approval rule overrides, merge requests created before a change to default approval rules are not affected. The only exceptions are changes to the target branch of the rule.
Optional approvals
Introduced in GitLab 13.2.
GitLab allows all users with Developer or greater permissions to approve merge requests. Approvals in GitLab Free are optional, and don’t prevent a merge request from merging without approval.
Required approvals
Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.
Required approvals enforce code reviews by the number and type of users you specify. Without the approvals, the work cannot merge. Required approvals enable multiple use cases:
- Enforce review of all code that gets merged into a repository.
- Specify reviewers for a given proposed code change, and a minimum number of reviewers, through Approval rules.
- Specify categories of reviewers, such as backend, frontend, quality assurance, or database, for all proposed code changes.
- Use the code owners of changed files, to determine who should review the work.
- Require approval from a security team before merging code that could introduce a vulnerability.
Related links
- Merge request approvals API
- Instance-level approval rules for self-managed installations