FOLLOWING THE EARLIER ANNOUNCEMENT ABOUT ITS OFFICIAL ADOPTION BY AND TRANSITION TO GITLAB (SEE #983), THIS PROJECT IS NO LONGER MAINTAINED IN THIS REPOSITORY . THE NEW HOME OF THIS PROJECT IS https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/cli. ALL NEW CONTRIBUTIONS (INCLUDING FEATURE REQUESTS AND BUG REPORTS) SHOULD BE SENT TO THE OFFICIAL REPOSITORY ON GITLAB.
GLab is an open source GitLab CLI tool bringing GitLab to your terminal next to where you are already working with git
and your code without switching between windows and browser tabs. Work with issues, merge requests, watch running pipelines directly from your CLI among other features.
Inspired by gh, the official GitHub CLI tool.
glab
is available for repositories hosted on GitLab.com and self-hosted GitLab Instances. glab
supports multiple authenticated GitLab instances and automatically detects the authenticated hostname from the remotes available in the working git directory.
- Usage
- Demo
- Documentation
- Installation
- Authentication
- Configuration
- Environment Variables
- What about lab
- Issues
- Contributing
- License
glab <command> <subcommand> [flags]
Read the documentation for usage instructions.
Download a binary suitable for your OS at the releases page.
Supported Platforms: Linux and macOS
brew install glab
Updating (Homebrew):
brew upgrade glab
Alternatively, you can install glab
by shell script:
curl -sL https://j.mp/glab-cli | sudo sh
or
curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/profclems/glab/trunk/scripts/install.sh | sudo sh
Installs into usr/bin
NOTE: Please take care when running scripts in this fashion. Consider peeking at the install script itself and verify that it works as intended.
Available for download via WinGet, scoop, or downloadable EXE installer file.
winget install glab.glab
Updating (WinGet):
winget install glab.glab
scoop install glab
Updating (Scoop):
scoop update glab
EXE installers are available for download on the releases page.
Prebuilt binaries available at the releases page.
brew install glab
Updating (Homebrew):
brew upgrade glab
Make sure you have snap installed on your Linux Distro.
sudo snap install --edge glab
sudo snap connect glab:ssh-keys
to grant ssh access
glab
is available through the community/glab package or download and install an archive from the releases page. Arch Linux also supports snap.
pacman -S glab
WARNING: It seems that KISS Linux may no longer be actively maintained, so links to its web domain have been removed from this README.
glab
is available on the KISS Linux Community Repo as gitlab-glab
.
If you already have the community repo configured in your KISS_PATH
you can install glab
through your terminal.
kiss b gitlab-glab && kiss i gitlab-glab
glab
is available on the Alpine Community Repo as glab
.
We use --no-cache
so we don't need to do an apk update
before.
apk add --no-cache glab
To ensure that by default edge will be used to get the latest updates. We need the edge repository under /etc/apk/repositories
.
Afterwards you can install it with apk add --no-cache glab@edge
We use --no-cache
so we don't need to do an apk update
before.
echo "@edge http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories
apk add --no-cache glab@edge
Use edge directly
FROM alpine:3.13
RUN apk add --no-cache glab
Fetching latest glab version from edge
FROM alpine:3.13
RUN echo "@edge http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories
RUN apk add --no-cache glab@edge
Nix/NixOS users can install from nixpkgs:
nix-env -iA nixos.glab
glab
is available via Homebrew
brew install glab
Updating:
brew upgrade glab
glab
is also available via MacPorts
sudo port install glab
Updating:
sudo port selfupdate && sudo port upgrade glab
If a supported binary for your OS is not found at the releases page, you can build from source:
make
- Go 1.13+
-
Verify that you have Go 1.13+ installed
$ go version go version go1.14
If
go
is not installed, follow instructions on the Go website. -
Clone this repository
git clone https://github.com/profclems/glab.git cd glab
If you have $GOPATH/bin or $GOBIN in your $PATH, you can just install with
make install
(install glab in $GOPATH/bin) and skip steps 3 and 4. -
Build the project
make
-
Change PATH to find newly compiled
glab
export PATH=$PWD/bin:$PATH
-
Run
glab version
to confirm that it worked
Get a GitLab access token at https://gitlab.com/-/profile/personal_access_tokens or https://gitlab.example.com/-/profile/personal_access_tokens if self-hosted
-
start interactive setup
glab auth login
-
authenticate against gitlab.com by reading the token from a file
glab auth login --stdin < myaccesstoken.txt
-
authenticate against a self-hosted GitLab instance by reading from a file
glab auth login --hostname salsa.debian.org --stdin < myaccesstoken.txt
-
authenticate with token and hostname (Not recommended for shared environments)
glab auth login --hostname gitlab.example.org --token xxxxx
By default, glab
follows the XDG Base Directory Spec: global configuration file is saved at ~/.config/glab-cli
. Local configuration file is saved at .git/glab-cli
in the current working git directory. Advanced workflows may override the location of the global configuration by setting the GLAB_CONFIG_DIR
environment variable.
To set configuration globally
glab config set --global editor vim
To set configuration for current directory (must be a git repository)
glab config set editor vim
To set configuration for a specific host
Use the --host
flag to set configuration for a specific host. This is always stored in the global config file with or without the global
flag.
glab config set editor vim --host gitlab.example.org
GITLAB_TOKEN: an authentication token for API requests. Setting this avoids being
prompted to authenticate and overrides any previously stored credentials.
Can be set in the config with 'glab config set token xxxxxx'
GITLAB_URI or GITLAB_HOST: specify the url of the gitlab server if self hosted (eg: https://gitlab.example.com). Default is https://gitlab.com.
GITLAB_API_HOST: specify the host where the API endpoint is found. Useful when there are separate [sub]domains or hosts for git and the API endpoint: defaults to the hostname found in the git URL
REMOTE_ALIAS or GIT_REMOTE_URL_VAR: git remote variable or alias that contains the gitlab url.
Can be set in the config with 'glab config set remote_alias origin'
VISUAL, EDITOR (in order of precedence): the editor tool to use for authoring text.
Can be set in the config with 'glab config set editor vim'
BROWSER: the web browser to use for opening links.
Can be set in the config with 'glab config set browser mybrowser'
GLAMOUR_STYLE: environment variable to set your desired markdown renderer style
Available options are (dark|light|notty) or set a custom style
https://github.com/charmbracelet/glamour#styles
NO_COLOR: set to any value to avoid printing ANSI escape sequences for color output.
FORCE_HYPERLINKS: set to 1 to force hyperlinks to be output, even when not outputing to a TTY
What about Lab?
Both glab
and lab are open-source tools with the same goal of bringing GitLab to your command line and simplifying the developer workflow. In many ways lab
is to hub, while glab
is to gh.
If you want a tool that’s more opinionated and intended to help simplify your GitLab workflows from the command line, then glab
is for you. However, If you're looking for a tool like hub that feels like using git and allows you to interact with GitLab, you might consider using lab.
Some glab
commands such as ci view
and ci trace
were adopted from lab.
If you have an issue: report it on the issue tracker
Feel like contributing? That's awesome! We have a contributing guide and Code of conduct to help guide you
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute. [Contribute].
Copyright © Clement Sam
glab
is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license.