Deprecations by version
These GitLab features are deprecated and no longer recommended for use. Each deprecated feature will be removed in a future release. Some features cause breaking changes when they are removed.
To be notified of upcoming breaking changes,
add this URL to your RSS feed reader: https://about.gitlab.com/breaking-changes.xml
You can also view REST API and GraphQL deprecations/removals.
GitLab 17.0
Accessibility Testing is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Due to low customer usage, Accessibility Testing is deprecated and will be removed. There is no planned replacement and users should stop using Accessibility Testing before GitLab 17.0.
Auto DevOps support for Herokuish is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
Auto DevOps support for Herokuish is deprecated in favor of Cloud Native Buildpacks. You should migrate your builds from Herokuish to Cloud Native Buildpacks. From GitLab 14.0, Auto Build uses Cloud Native Buildpacks by default.
Because Cloud Native Buildpacks do not support automatic testing, the Auto Test feature of Auto DevOps is also deprecated.
Browser Performance Testing is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Due to limited customer usage, Browser Performance Testing is deprecated and will be removed. There is no planned replacement and users should stop using Browser Performance Testing before GitLab 17.0.
Deprecate legacy shell escaping and quoting runner shell executor
- Announced in: GitLab 15.11
- End of Support: GitLab 17.9
The runner’s legacy escape sequence mechanism to handle variable expansion implements a sub-optimal implementation of Ansi-C quoting. This method means that the runner would expand arguments included in double quotes. As of 15.11, we are deprecating the legacy escaping and quoting methods in the runner shell executor.
DingTalk OmniAuth provider
- Announced in: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
The omniauth-dingtalk
gem that provides GitLab with the DingTalk OmniAuth provider will be removed in our next
major release, GitLab 17.0. This gem sees very little use and is better suited for JiHu edition.
Filepath field in Releases and Release Links APIs
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Support for specifying a filepath
for a direct asset link in the Releases API
and Release Links API is deprecated in GitLab 15.9 and will be
removed in GitLab 17.0. GitLab introduced a new field called direct_asset_path
in GitLab 15.9 to replace filepath
until it is finally removed.
To avoid any disruptions, you should replace filepath
with direct_asset_path
in your calls to the following endpoints:
- Releases API:
- Release Links API:
GitLab Helm chart values gitlab.kas.privateApi.*
are deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
We introduced the global.kas.tls.*
Helm values to facilitate TLS communication between KAS and your Helm chart components.
The old values gitlab.kas.privateApi.tls.enabled
and gitlab.kas.privateApi.tls.secretName
are deprecated and scheduled for removal in GitLab 17.0.
Because the new values provide a streamlined, comprehensive method to enable TLS for KAS, you should use global.kas.tls.*
instead of gitlab.kas.privateApi.tls.*
. The gitlab.kas.privateApi.tls.*
For more information, see:
- The merge request that introduces the
global.kas.tls.*
values. - The deprecated
gitlab.kas.privateApi.tls.*
documentation. - The new
global.kas.tls.*
documentation.
GitLab Runner platforms and setup instructions in GraphQL API
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The runnerPlatforms
and runnerSetup
queries to get GitLab Runner platforms and installation instructions
are deprecated and will be removed from the GraphQL API. For installation instructions, you should use the
GitLab Runner documentation
GitLab Runner registration token in Runner Operator
- Announced in: GitLab 15.6
- End of Support: GitLab 17.0
- Breaking change
The runner-registration-token
parameter that uses the OpenShift and k8s Vanilla Operator to install a runner on Kubernetes is deprecated.
We plan to implement a new method to bind runners to a GitLab instance
as part of the new GitLab Runner token architecture.
The work is planned in this epic.
Load Performance Testing is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Due to low customer usage, Load Performance Testing is deprecated and will be removed. There is no planned replacement and users should stop using Load Performance Testing before GitLab 17.0.
Queue selector for running Sidekiq is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
Running Sidekiq with a queue selector (having multiple processes listening to a set of queues) and negate settings is deprecated and will be fully removed in 17.0.
You can migrate away from queue selectors to listening to all queues in all processes. For example, if Sidekiq is currently running with 4 processes (denoted by 4 elements in sidekiq['queue_groups']
in /etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
) with queue selector (sidekiq['queue_selector'] = true
), you can change Sidekiq to listen to all queues in all 4 processes,for example sidekiq['queue_groups'] = ['*'] * 4
. This approach is also recommended in our Reference Architecture. Note that Sidekiq can effectively run as many processes as the number of CPUs in the machine.
While the above approach is recommended for most instances, Sidekiq can also be run using routing rules which is also being used on GitLab.com. You can follow the migration guide from queue selectors to routing rules. You need to take care with the migration to avoid losing jobs entirely.
Registration tokens and server-side runner arguments in POST /api/v4/runners
endpoint
- Announced in: GitLab 15.6
- End of Support: GitLab 17.0
- Breaking change
The support for registration tokens and certain runner configuration arguments in the POST
method operation on the /api/v4/runners
endpoint is deprecated.
This endpoint registers a runner
with a GitLab instance at the instance, group, or project level through the API. We plan to remove the support for
registration tokens and certain configuration arguments in this endpoint in GitLab 17.0.
We plan to implement a new method to bind runners to a GitLab instance as part of the new GitLab Runner token architecture. The work is planned in this epic. This new architecture introduces a new method for registering runners and will eliminate the legacy runner registration token. From GitLab 17.0 and later, the runner registration methods implemented by the new GitLab Runner token architecture will be the only supported methods.
Registration tokens and server-side runner arguments in gitlab-runner register
command
- Announced in: GitLab 15.6
- End of Support: GitLab 17.0
- Breaking change
The support for registration tokens and certain configuration arguments in the command to register a runner, gitlab-runner register
is deprecated.
We plan to implement a new method to bind runners to a GitLab instance
as part of the new GitLab Runner token architecture.
The work is planned in this epic.
The new method will involve creating the runner in the GitLab UI and passing the
runner authentication token
to the gitlab-runner register
command.
Self-managed certificate-based integration with Kubernetes
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
The certificate-based integration with Kubernetes will be deprecated and removed.
As a self-managed customer, we are introducing the feature flag certificate_based_clusters
in GitLab 15.0 so you can keep your certificate-based integration enabled. However, the feature flag will be disabled by default, so this change is a breaking change.
In GitLab 17.0 we will remove both the feature and its related code. Until the final removal in 17.0, features built on this integration will continue to work, if you enable the feature flag. Until the feature is removed, GitLab will continue to fix security and critical issues as they arise.
For a more robust, secure, forthcoming, and reliable integration with Kubernetes, we recommend you use the agent for Kubernetes to connect Kubernetes clusters with GitLab. How do I migrate?
Although an explicit removal date is set, we don’t plan to remove this feature until the new solution has feature parity. For more information about the blockers to removal, see this issue.
For updates and details about this deprecation, follow this epic.
Single database connection is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Previously, GitLab’s database
configuration had a single main:
section. This is being deprecated. The new
configuration has both a main:
and a ci:
section.
This deprecation affects users compiling GitLab from source, who will need
to add the ci:
section.
Omnibus, the Helm chart, and Operator will handle this configuration
automatically from GitLab 16.0 onwards.
Slack notifications integration
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- End of Support: GitLab 17.0
- Breaking change
As we’re consolidating all Slack capabilities into the GitLab for Slack app, we’re deprecating the Slack notifications integration. GitLab.com users can now use the GitLab for Slack app to manage notifications to their Slack workspace. For self-managed users of the Slack notifications integration, we’ll be introducing support in this epic.
Support for REST API endpoints that reset runner registration tokens
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- End of Support: GitLab 17.0
- Breaking change
The support for runner registration tokens is deprecated. As a consequence, the REST API endpoints to reset a registration token are also deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 17.0. The deprecated endpoints are:
POST /runners/reset_registration_token
POST /projects/:id/runners/reset_registration_token
POST /groups/:id/runners/reset_registration_token
We plan to implement a new method to bind runners to a GitLab instance as part of the new GitLab Runner token architecture. The work is planned in this epic. This new architecture introduces a new method for registering runners and will eliminate the legacy runner registration token. From GitLab 17.0 and later, the runner registration methods implemented by the new GitLab Runner token architecture will be the only supported methods.
The GitLab legacy requirement IID is deprecated in favor of work item IID
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
We will be transitioning to a new IID as a result of moving requirements to a work item type. Users should begin using the new IID as support for the legacy IID and existing formatting will end in GitLab 17.0. The legacy requirement IID remains available until its removal in GitLab 17.0.
The Visual Reviews tool is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
Due to limited customer usage and capabilities, the Visual Reviews feature for Review Apps is deprecated and will be removed. There is no planned replacement and users should stop using Visual Reviews before GitLab 17.0.
The gitlab-runner exec
command is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- End of Support: GitLab 17.0
- Breaking change
The gitlab-runner exec
command is deprecated and will be fully removed from GitLab Runner in 16.0. The gitlab-runner exec
feature was initially developed to provide the ability to validate a GitLab CI pipeline on a local system without needing to commit the updates to a GitLab instance. However, with the continued evolution of GitLab CI, replicating all GitLab CI features into gitlab-runner exec
was no longer viable. Pipeline syntax and validation simulation are available in the GitLab pipeline editor.
Trigger jobs can mirror downstream pipeline status exactly
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
In some cases, like when a downstream pipeline had the passed with warnings
status, trigger jobs that were using strategy: depend
did not mirror the status of the downstream pipeline exactly. In GitLab 17.0 trigger jobs will show the exact same status as the the downstream pipeline. If your pipeline relied on this behavior, you should update your pipeline to handle the more accurate status.
runnerRegistrationToken
parameter for GitLab Runner Helm Chart
- Announced in: GitLab 15.6
- End of Support: GitLab 17.0
- Breaking change
The runnerRegistrationToken
parameter to use the GitLab Helm Chart to install a runner on Kubernetes is deprecated.
We plan to implement a new method to bind runners to a GitLab instance leveraging runnerToken
as part of the new GitLab Runner token architecture.
The work is planned in this epic.
From GitLab 17.0 and later, the methods to register runners introduced by the new GitLab Runner token architecture will be the only supported methods.
GitLab 16.6
Error Tracking UI in GitLab Rails is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The Error Tracking UI is deprecated in 15.9 and will be removed in 16.6 (milestone might change) once GitLab Observability UI is made available. In future versions, you should use the GitLab Observability UI, which will gradually be made available on GitLab.com over the next few releases.
During the transition to the GitLab Observability UI, we will migrate the GitLab Observability Backend from a per-cluster deployment model to a per-tenant deployment model. Because Integrated Error Tracking is in Open Beta, we will not migrate any existing user data. For more details about the migration, see the direction pages for:
GitLab 16.0
Atlassian Crowd OmniAuth provider
- Announced in: GitLab 15.3
- Breaking change
The omniauth_crowd
gem that provides GitLab with the Atlassian Crowd OmniAuth provider will be removed in our
next major release, GitLab 16.0. This gem sees very little use and its
lack of compatibility with OmniAuth 2.0 is
blocking our upgrade.
Auto DevOps no longer provisions a PostgreSQL database by default
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
Currently, Auto DevOps provisions an in-cluster PostgreSQL database by default. In GitLab 16.0, databases will be provisioned only for users who opt in. This change supports production deployments that require more robust database management.
If you want Auto DevOps to provision an in-cluster database,
set the POSTGRES_ENABLED
CI/CD variable to true
.
Azure Storage Driver defaults to the correct root prefix
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
The Azure Storage Driver writes to //
as the default root directory. This default root directory appears in some places within the Azure UI as /<no-name>/
. We have maintained this legacy behavior to support older deployments using this storage driver. However, when moving to Azure from another storage driver, this behavior hides all your data until you configure the storage driver to build root paths without an extra leading slash by setting trimlegacyrootprefix: true
.
The new default configuration for the storage driver will set trimlegacyrootprefix: true
, and /
will be the default root directory. You can add trimlegacyrootprefix: false
to your current configuration to avoid any disruptions.
This breaking change will happen in GitLab 16.0.
Bundled Grafana Helm Chart is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
The Grafana Helm chart that is bundled with the GitLab Helm Chart is deprecated and will be removed in the GitLab Helm Chart 7.0 release (releasing along with GitLab 16.0).
The bundled Grafana Helm chart is an optional service that can be turned on to provide the Grafana UI connected to the GitLab Helm Chart’s Prometheus metrics.
The version of Grafana that the GitLab Helm Chart is currently providing is no longer a supported Grafana version. If you’re using the bundled Grafana, you should switch to the newer chart version from Grafana Labs or a Grafana Operator from a trusted provider.
In your new Grafana instance, you can configure the GitLab provided Prometheus as a data source and connect Grafana to the GitLab UI.
CAS OmniAuth provider
- Announced in: GitLab 15.3
- Breaking change
The omniauth-cas3
gem that provides GitLab with the CAS OmniAuth provider will be removed in our next major
release, GitLab 16.0. This gem sees very little use and its lack of upstream maintenance is preventing GitLab’s
upgrade to OmniAuth 2.0.
CI/CD jobs will fail when no secret is returned from Hashicorp Vault
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
When using the native HashiCorp Vault integration, CI/CD jobs will fail when no secret is returned from Vault. Make sure your configuration always return a secret, or update your pipeline to handle this change, before GitLab 16.0.
Changing merge request approvals with the /approvals
API endpoint
- Announced in: GitLab 14.0
- Breaking change
To change the approvals required for a merge request, you should no longer use the /approvals
API endpoint, which was deprecated in GitLab 14.0.
Instead, use the /approval_rules
endpoint to create or update the approval rules for a merge request.
CiCdSettingsUpdate mutation renamed to ProjectCiCdSettingsUpdate
- Announced in: GitLab 15.0
- Breaking change
The CiCdSettingsUpdate
mutation was renamed to ProjectCiCdSettingsUpdate
in GitLab 15.0.
The CiCdSettingsUpdate
mutation will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
Any user scripts that use the CiCdSettingsUpdate
mutation must be updated to use ProjectCiCdSettingsUpdate
instead.
Conan project-level search endpoint returns project-specific results
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
You can use the GitLab Conan repository with project-level or instance-level endpoints. Each level supports the conan search command. However, the search endpoint for the project level is also returning packages from outside the target project.
This unintended functionality is deprecated in GitLab 15.8 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. The search endpoint for the project level will only return packages from the target project.
Configuration fields in GitLab Runner Helm Chart
- Announced in: GitLab 15.6
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
From GitLab 13.6, users can specify any runner configuration in the GitLab Runner Helm chart. When we implemented this feature, we deprecated values in the GitLab Helm Chart configuration that were specific to GitLab Runner. These fields are deprecated and we plan to remove them in v1.0 of the GitLab Runner Helm chart.
Configuring Redis config file paths using environment variables is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
You can no longer specify Redis configuration file locations
using the environment variables like GITLAB_REDIS_CACHE_CONFIG_FILE
or
GITLAB_REDIS_QUEUES_CONFIG_FILE
. Use the default
config file locations instead, for example config/redis.cache.yml
or
config/redis.queues.yml
.
Container Registry pull-through cache
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
The Container Registry pull-through cache is deprecated in GitLab 15.8 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. While the Container Registry pull-through cache functionality is useful, we have not made significant changes to this feature. You can use the upstream version of the container registry to achieve the same functionality. Removing the pull-through cache allows us also to remove the upstream client code without sacrificing functionality.
Container Scanning variables that reference Docker
- Announced in: GitLab 15.4
- Breaking change
All Container Scanning variables that are prefixed by DOCKER_
in variable name are deprecated. This includes the DOCKER_IMAGE
, DOCKER_PASSWORD
, DOCKER_USER
, and DOCKERFILE_PATH
variables. Support for these variables will be removed in the GitLab 16.0 release. Use the new variable names CS_IMAGE
, CS_REGISTRY_PASSWORD
, CS_REGISTRY_USER
, and CS_DOCKERFILE_PATH
in place of the deprecated names.
Cookie authorization in the GitLab for Jira Cloud app
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
Cookie authentication in the GitLab for Jira Cloud app is now deprecated in favor of OAuth authentication. On self-managed, you must set up OAuth authentication to continue to use the GitLab for Jira Cloud app. Without OAuth, you can’t manage linked namespaces.
DAST API scans using DAST template is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- Breaking change
With the move to the new DAST API analyzer and the DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
template for DAST API scans, we will be removing the ability to scan APIs with the DAST analyzer. Use of the DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
or DAST-latest.gitlab-ci.yml
templates for API scans is deprecated as of GitLab 15.7 and will no longer work in GitLab 16.0. Please use DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
template and refer to the DAST API analyzer documentation for configuration details.
DAST API variables
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- Breaking change
With the switch to the new DAST API analyzer in GitLab 15.6, two legacy DAST API variables are being deprecated. The variables DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE
and DAST_API_SPECIFICATION
will no longer be used for DAST API scans.
DAST_API_HOST_OVERRIDE
has been deprecated in favor of using the DAST_API_TARGET_URL
to automatically override the host in the OpenAPI specification.
DAST_API_SPECIFICATION
has been deprecated in favor of DAST_API_OPENAPI
. To continue using an OpenAPI specification to guide the test, users must replace the DAST_API_SPECIFICATION
variable with the DAST_API_OPENAPI
variable. The value can remain the same, but the variable name must be replaced.
These two variables will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
DAST ZAP advanced configuration variables deprecation
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- Breaking change
With the new browser-based DAST analyzer GA in GitLab 15.7, we are working towards making it the default DAST analyzer at some point in the future. In preparation for this, the following legacy DAST variables are being deprecated and scheduled for removal in GitLab 16.0: DAST_ZAP_CLI_OPTIONS
and DAST_ZAP_LOG_CONFIGURATION
. These variables allowed for advanced configuration of the legacy DAST analyzer, which was based on OWASP ZAP. The new browser-based analyzer will not include the same functionality, as these were specific to how ZAP worked.
These three variables will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
DAST report variables deprecation
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- Breaking change
With the new browser-based DAST analyzer GA in GitLab 15.7, we are working towards making it the default DAST analyzer at some point in the future. In preparation for this, the following legacy DAST variables are being deprecated and scheduled for removal in GitLab 16.0: DAST_HTML_REPORT
, DAST_XML_REPORT
, and DAST_MARKDOWN_REPORT
. These reports relied on the legacy DAST analyzer and we do not plan to implement them in the new browser-based analyzer. As of GitLab 16.0, these report artifacts will no longer be generated.
These three variables will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
Default CI/CD job token (CI_JOB_TOKEN
) scope changed
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
In GitLab 14.4 we introduced the ability to limit the “outbound” scope of the CI/CD job token (CI_JOB_TOKEN
) to make it more secure. You can prevent job tokens from your project’s pipelines from being used to access other projects. If needed, you can list specific projects that you want to access with your project’s job tokens.
In 15.9 we extended this functionality with a better solution, an “inbound” scope limit. You can prevent the job tokens from other projects from being used to access your project. With this feature, you can optionally list specific projects that you want to allow to access your project with their job token.
In 16.0, this inbound scope limit will be the only option available for all projects, and the outbound limit setting will be disabled. To prepare for this change, you can enable the “inbound” CI/CD job token limit feature now, and list any projects that need to access your project.
Dependency Scanning support for Java 13, 14, 15, and 16
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
GitLab has deprecated Dependency Scanning support for Java versions 13, 14, 15, and 16 and plans to remove that support in the upcoming GitLab 16.0 release. This is consistent with Oracle’s support policy as Oracle Premier and Extended Support for these versions has ended. This also allows GitLab to focus Dependency Scanning Java support on LTS versions moving forward.
Deployment API returns error when updated_at
and updated_at
are not used together
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
The Deployment API will now return an error when updated_at
filtering and updated_at
sorting are not used together. Some users were using filtering by updated_at
to fetch “latest” deployment without using updated_at
sorting, which may produce wrong results. You should instead use them together, or migrate to filtering by finished_at
and sorting by finished_at
which will give you “latest deployments” in a consistent way.
Deprecate legacy Gitaly configuration methods
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
Using environment variables GIT_CONFIG_SYSTEM
and GIT_CONFIG_GLOBAL
to configure Gitaly is deprecated.
These variables are being replaced with standard config.toml
Gitaly configuration.
GitLab instances that use GIT_CONFIG_SYSTEM
and GIT_CONFIG_GLOBAL
to configure Gitaly should switch to configuring using
config.toml
.
Deprecated Consul http metrics
- Announced in: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
The Consul provided in the GitLab Omnibus package will no longer provide older deprecated Consul metrics starting in GitLab 16.0.
In GitLab 14.0, Consul was updated to 1.9.6,
which deprecated some telemetry metrics from being at the consul.http
path. In GitLab 16.0, the consul.http
path will be removed.
If you have monitoring that consumes Consul metrics, update them to use consul.api.http
instead of consul.http
.
For more information, see the deprecation notes for Consul 1.9.0.
Deprecation and planned removal for CI_PRE_CLONE_SCRIPT
variable on GitLab SaaS
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
The CI_PRE_CLONE_SCRIPT
variable supported by GitLab SaaS Runners is deprecated as of GitLab 15.9 and will be removed in 16.0. The CI_PRE_CLONE_SCRIPT
variable enables you to run commands in your CI/CD job prior to the runner executing Git init and get fetch. For more information about how this feature works, see Pre-clone script. As an alternative, you can use the pre_get_sources_script
.
Developer role providing the ability to import projects to a group
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
The ability for users with the Developer role for a group to import projects to that group is deprecated in GitLab 15.8 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. From GitLab 16.0, only users with at least the Maintainer role for a group will be able to import projects to that group.
Development dependencies reported for PHP and Python
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
In GitLab 16.0 the GitLab Dependency Scanning analyzer will begin reporting development dependencies for both Python/pipenv and PHP/composer projects. Users who do not wish to have these development dependencies reported should set DS_INCLUDE_DEV_DEPENDENCIES: false
in their CI/CD file.
Embedding Grafana panels in Markdown is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The ability to add Grafana panels in GitLab Flavored Markdown is deprecated in 15.9 and will be removed in 16.0. We intend to replace this feature with the ability to embed charts with the GitLab Observability UI.
Enforced validation of CI/CD parameter character lengths
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
While CI/CD job names have a strict 255 character limit, other CI/CD parameters do not yet have validations ensuring they also stay under the limit.
In GitLab 16.0, validation will be added to strictly limit the following to 255 characters as well:
- The
stage
keyword. - The
ref
, which is the Git branch or tag name for the pipeline. - The
description
andtarget_url
parameter, used by external CI/CD integrations.
Users on self-managed instances should update their pipelines to ensure they do not use parameters that exceed 255 characters. Users on GitLab.com do not need to make any changes, as these are already limited in that database.
Environment search query requires at least three characters
- Announced in: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
From GitLab 16.0, when you search for environments with the API, you must use at least three characters. This change helps us ensure the scalability of the search operation.
External field in GraphQL ReleaseAssetLink type
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
In the GraphQL API, the external
field of ReleaseAssetLink
type was used to indicate whether a release link is internal or external to your GitLab instance.
As of GitLab 15.9, we treat all release links as external, and therefore, this field is deprecated in GitLab 15.9, and will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
To avoid any disruptions to your workflow, please stop using the external
field because it will be removed and will not be replaced.
External field in Releases and Release Links APIs
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
In Releases API and Release Links API, the external
field was used to indicate whether a release link is internal or external to your GitLab instance.
As of GitLab 15.9, we treat all release links as external, and therefore, this field is deprecated in GitLab 15.9, and will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
To avoid any disruptions to your workflow, please stop using the external
field because it will be removed and will not be replaced.
Geo: Project repository redownload is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.11
In secondary Geo sites, the button to “Redownload” a project repository is deprecated. The redownload logic has inherent data consistency issues which are difficult to resolve when encountered. The button will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
GitLab self-monitoring project
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
- Breaking change
GitLab self-monitoring gives administrators of self-hosted GitLab instances the tools to monitor the health of their instances. This feature is deprecated in GitLab 14.9, and is scheduled for removal in 16.0.
GitLab.com importer
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
The GitLab.com importer is deprecated in GitLab 15.8 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
The GitLab.com importer was introduced in 2015 for importing a project from GitLab.com to a self-managed GitLab instance through the UI. This feature is available on self-managed instances only. Migrating GitLab groups and projects by direct transfer supersedes the GitLab.com importer and provides a more cohesive importing functionality.
See migrated group items and migrated project items for an overview.
GraphQL API Runner status will not return paused
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
The GitLab Runner GraphQL API endpoints will not return paused
or active
as a status in GitLab 16.0.
In a future v5 of the REST API, the endpoints for GitLab Runner will also not return paused
or active
.
A runner’s status will only relate to runner contact status, such as:
online
, offline
, or not_connected
. Status paused
or active
will no longer appear.
When checking if a runner is paused
, API users are advised to check the boolean attribute
paused
to be true
instead. When checking if a runner is active
, check if paused
is false
.
GraphQL API legacyMode argument for Runner status
- Announced in: GitLab 15.0
- Breaking change
The legacyMode
argument to the status
field in RunnerType
will be rendered non-functional in the 16.0 release
as part of the deprecations details in the issue.
In GitLab 16.0 and later, the status
field will act as if legacyMode
is null. The legacyMode
argument will
be present during the 16.x cycle to avoid breaking the API signature, and will be removed altogether in the
17.0 release.
GraphQL field confidential
changed to internal
on notes
- Announced in: GitLab 15.5
- Breaking change
The confidential
field for a Note
will be deprecated and renamed to internal
.
GraphQL: The DISABLED_WITH_OVERRIDE
value of the SharedRunnersSetting
enum is deprecated. Use DISABLED_AND_OVERRIDABLE
instead
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
In GitLab 16.0, the DISABLED_WITH_OVERRIDE
value of the SharedRunnersSetting
GraphQL enum type will be replaced with the value, DISABLED_AND_OVERRIDABLE
.
HashiCorp Vault integration will no longer use CI_JOB_JWT by default
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
As part of our effort to improve the security of your CI workflows using JWT and OIDC, the native HashiCorp integration is also being updated in GitLab 16.0. Any projects that use the secrets:vault
keyword to retrieve secrets from Vault will need to be configured to use ID tokens.
To be prepared for this change, you should do the following before GitLab 16.0:
- Disable the use of JSON web tokens in the pipeline.
- Ensure the bound audience is prefixed with
https://
. - Use the new
id_tokens
keyword and configure theaud
claim.
Jira DVCS connector for Jira Cloud
- Announced in: GitLab 15.1
- Breaking change
The Jira DVCS connector for Jira Cloud has been deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. If you’re using the Jira DVCS connector with Jira Cloud, migrate to the GitLab for Jira Cloud app.
The Jira DVCS connector is also deprecated for Jira 8.13 and earlier. You can only use the Jira DVCS connector with Jira Server or Jira Data Center in Jira 8.14 and later.
KAS Metrics Port in GitLab Helm Chart
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
The gitlab.kas.metrics.port
has been deprecated in favor of the new gitlab.kas.observability.port
configuration field for the GitLab Helm Chart.
This port is used for much more than just metrics, which warranted this change to avoid confusion in configuration.
Legacy Gitaly configuration method
- Announced in: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
Gitaly configuration within Omnibus GitLab has been updated such that all Gitaly related configuration keys are in a single configuration structure that matches the standard Gitaly configuration. As such, the previous configuration structure is deprecated.
The single configuration structure is available from GitLab 15.10, though backwards compatibility is maintained. Once removed, Gitaly must be configured using the single configuration structure. You should update the configuration of Gitaly at your earliest convenience.
The change improves consistency between Omnibus GitLab and source installs and enables us to provide better documentation and tooling for both.
You should update to the new configuration structure as soon as possible using the upgrade instructions.
Legacy Praefect configuration method
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Previously, Praefect configuration keys were scattered throughout the configuration file. Now, these are in a single configuration structure that matches Praefect configuration so the previous configuration method is deprecated.
The single configuration structure available from GitLab 15.9, though backwards compatibility is maintained. Once removed, Praefect must be configured using the single configuration structure. You should update your Praefect configuration as soon as possible using the upgrade instructions.
This change brings Praefect configuration in Omnibus GitLab in line with the configuration structure of Praefect. Previously, the hierarchies and configuration keys didn’t match. The change improves consistency between Omnibus GitLab and source installs and enables us to provide better documentation and tooling for both.
Legacy URLs replaced or removed
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
GitLab 16.0 removes legacy URLs from the GitLab application.
When subgroups were introduced in GitLab 9.0, a /-/
delimiter was added to URLs to signify the end of a group path. All GitLab URLs now use this delimiter for project, group, and instance level features.
URLs that do not use the /-/
delimiter are planned for removal in GitLab 16.0. For the full list of these URLs, along with their replacements, see issue 28848.
Update any scripts or bookmarks that reference the legacy URLs. GitLab APIs are not affected by this change.
License Compliance CI Template
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The GitLab License Compliance CI template is now deprecated and is scheduled for removal in the GitLab 16.0 release. Users who wish to continue using GitLab for License Compliance should remove the License Compliance template from their CI pipeline and add the Dependency Scanning template. The Dependency Scanning template is now capable of gathering the required license information so it is no longer necessary to run a separate License Compliance job. The License Compliance CI template should not be removed prior to verifying that the license_scanning_sbom_scanner
and package_metadata_synchronization
flags are enabled for the instance and that the instance has been upgraded to a version that supports the new method of license scanning.
CI Pipeline Includes | GitLab <= 15.8 | 15.9 <= GitLab < 16.0 | GitLab >= 16.0 |
---|---|---|---|
Both DS and LS templates | License data from LS job is used | License data from LS job is used | License data from DS job is used |
DS template is included but LS template is not | No license data | License data from DS job is used | License data from DS job is used |
LS template is included but DS template is not | License data from LS job is used | License data from LS job is used | No license data |
License-Check and the Policies tab on the License Compliance page
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The License-Check feature is now deprecated and is scheduled for removal in GitLab 16.0. Additionally, the Policies tab on the License Compliance page and all APIs related to the License-Check feature are deprecated and planned for removal in GitLab 16.0. Users who wish to continue to enforce approvals based on detected licenses are encouraged to create a new License Approval policy instead.
Limit personal access token and deploy token’s access with external authorization
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
With external authorization enabled, personal access tokens (PATs) and deploy tokens must no longer be able to access container or package registries. This defense-in-depth security measure will be deployed in 16.0. For users that use PATs and deploy tokens to access these registries, this measure breaks this use of these tokens. Disable external authorization to use tokens with container or package registries.
Maintainer role providing the ability to change Package settings using GraphQL API
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
The ability for users with the Maintainer role to change the Packages and registries settings for a group using the GraphQL API is deprecated in GitLab 15.8 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. These settings include:
- Allowing or preventing duplicate package uploads.
- Package request forwarding.
- Enabling lifecycle rules for the Dependency Proxy.
In GitLab 16.0 and later, you must have Owner role for a group to change the Packages and registries settings for the group using either the GitLab UI or GraphQL API.
Major bundled Helm Chart updates for the GitLab Helm Chart
- Announced in: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
To coincide with GitLab 16.0, the GitLab Helm Chart will release the 7.0 major version. The following major bundled chart updates will be included:
- In GitLab 16.0, PostgreSQL 12 support is being removed, and PostgreSQL 13 is becoming the new minimum.
- Installs using production-ready external databases will need to complete their migration to a newer PostgreSQL version before upgrading.
- Installs using the non-production bundled PostgreSQL 12 chart will have the chart upgraded to the new version. For more information, see issue 4118
- Installs using the non-production bundled Redis chart will have the chart upgraded to a newer version. For more information, see issue 3375
- Installs using the bundled cert-manager chart will have the chart upgraded to a newer version. For more information, see issue 4313
The full GitLab Helm Chart 7.0 upgrade steps will be available in the upgrade docs.
Managed Licenses API
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The Managed Licenses API is now deprecated and is scheduled for removal in GitLab 16.0.
Maximum number of active pipelines per project limit (ci_active_pipelines
)
- Announced in: GitLab 15.3
The Maximum number of active pipelines per project limit was never enabled by default and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. This limit can also be configured in the Rails console under ci_active_pipelines
. Instead, use the other recommended rate limits that offer similar protection:
Monitor performance metrics through Prometheus
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
- Breaking change
By displaying data stored in a Prometheus instance, GitLab allows users to view performance metrics. GitLab also displays visualizations of these metrics in dashboards. The user can connect to a previously-configured external Prometheus instance, or set up Prometheus as a GitLab Managed App. However, since certificate-based integration with Kubernetes clusters is deprecated in GitLab, the metrics functionality in GitLab that relies on Prometheus is also deprecated. This includes the metrics visualizations in dashboards. GitLab is working to develop a single user experience based on Opstrace. An issue exists for you to follow work on the Opstrace integration.
Non-expiring access tokens
- Announced in: GitLab 15.4
- Breaking change
Access tokens that have no expiration date are valid indefinitely, which presents a security risk if the access token is divulged. Because access tokens that have an exipiration date are better, from GitLab 15.3 we populate a default expiration date.
In GitLab 16.0, any personal, project, or group access token that does not have an expiration date will automatically have an expiration date set at one year.
We recommend giving your access tokens an expiration date in line with your company’s security policies before the default is applied:
- On GitLab.com during the 16.0 milestone.
- On GitLab self-managed instances when they are upgraded to 16.0.
Non-standard default Redis ports are deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
If GitLab starts without any Redis configuration file present,
GitLab assumes it can connect to three Redis servers at localhost:6380
,
localhost:6381
and localhost:6382
. We are changing this behavior
so GitLab assumes there is one Redis server at localhost:6379
.
Administrators who want to keep the three servers must configure
the Redis URLs by editing the config/redis.cache.yml
,config/redis.queues.yml
and config/redis.shared_state.yml
files.
Null value for private_profile
attribute in User API is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
When creating and updating users through the API, null
was a valid value for the private_profile
attribute, which would internally be converted to the default value. Starting with 16.0, null
will no longer be a valid value for this parameter, and the response will be a 400 if used. Now the only valid values are true
and false
.
Old versions of JSON web tokens are deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Now that we have released ID tokens
with OIDC support, the old JSON web tokens are deprecated and will be removed.
Both the CI_JOB_JWT
and CI_JOB_JWT_V2
tokens, exposed to jobs as predefined variables,
will no longer be available in GitLab 16.0.
To prepare for this change, you should:
- Configure your pipelines to use the fully configurable and more secure
id_token
keyword instead. - Enable the Limit JSON Web Token (JWT) access setting, which prevents the old tokens from being exposed to any jobs. This setting will be permanently enabled for all projects in GitLab 16.0.
Option to delete projects immediately is deprecated from deletion protection settings
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The group and project deletion protection setting in the Admin Area had an option to delete groups and projects immediately. Starting with 16.0, this option will no longer be available, and delayed group and project deletion will become the default behavior.
The option will no longer appear as a group setting. Self-managed users will still have the option to define the deletion delay period, and SaaS users have a non-adjustable default retention period of 7 days. Users can still immediately delete the project from the project settings, and the group from the group settings.
The option to delete groups and projects immediately by default was deprecated to prevent users from accidentally taking this action and permanently losing groups and projects.
Package pipelines in API payload is paginated
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
A request to the API for /api/v4/projects/:id/packages
returns a paginated result of packages. Each package lists all of its pipelines in this response. This is a performance concern, as it’s possible for a package to have hundreds or thousands of associated pipelines.
In milestone 16.0, we will remove the pipelines
attribute from the API response.
PipelineSecurityReportFinding name GraphQL field
- Announced in: GitLab 15.1
- Breaking change
Previously, the PipelineSecurityReportFinding GraphQL type was updated to include a new title
field. This field is an alias for the current name
field, making the less specific name
field redundant. The name
field will be removed from the PipelineSecurityReportFinding type in GitLab 16.0.
PipelineSecurityReportFinding projectFingerprint GraphQL field
- Announced in: GitLab 15.1
- Breaking change
The project_fingerprint
attribute of vulnerability findings is being deprecated in favor of a uuid
attribute. By using UUIDv5 values to identify findings, we can easily associate any related entity with a finding. The project_fingerprint
attribute is no longer being used to track findings, and will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
PostgreSQL 12 deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.0
- Breaking change
Support for PostgreSQL 12 is scheduled for removal in GitLab 16.0. In GitLab 16.0, PostgreSQL 13 becomes the minimum required PostgreSQL version.
PostgreSQL 12 will be supported for the full GitLab 15 release cycle. PostgreSQL 13 will also be supported for instances that want to upgrade prior to GitLab 16.0.
Support for PostgreSQL 13 was added to Geo in GitLab 15.2.
Projects API field operations_access_level
is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
We are deprecating the operations_access_level
field in the Projects API. This field has been replaced by fields to control specific features: releases_access_level
, environments_access_level
, feature_flags_access_level
, infrastructure_access_level
, and monitor_access_level
.
Rake task for importing bare repositories
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
The Rake task for importing bare repositories gitlab:import:repos
is deprecated in GitLab 15.8 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
This Rake task imports a directory tree of repositories into a GitLab instance. These repositories must have been
managed by GitLab previously, because the Rake task relies on the specific directory structure or a specific custom Git setting in order to work (gitlab.fullpath
).
Importing repositories using this Rake task has limitations. The Rake task:
- Only knows about project and project wiki repositories and doesn’t support repositories for designs, group wikis, or snippets.
- Permits you to import non-hashed storage projects even though these aren’t supported.
- Relies on having Git config
gitlab.fullpath
set. Epic 8953 proposes removing support for this setting.
Alternatives to using the gitlab:import:repos
Rake task include:
- Migrating projects using either an export file or direct transfer migrate repositories as well.
- Importing a repository by URL.
- Importing a repositories from a non-GitLab source.
Redis 5 deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.3
- End of Support: GitLab 15.6
- Breaking change
With GitLab 13.9, in the Omnibus GitLab package and GitLab Helm chart 4.9, the Redis version was updated to Redis 6. Redis 5 has reached the end of life in April 2022 and will no longer be supported as of GitLab 15.6. If you are using your own Redis 5.0 instance, you should upgrade it to Redis 6.0 or higher before upgrading to GitLab 16.0 or higher.
Remove job_age
parameter from POST /jobs/request
Runner endpoint
- Announced in: GitLab 15.2
- Breaking change
The job_age
parameter, returned from the POST /jobs/request
API endpoint used in communication with GitLab Runner, was never used by any GitLab or Runner feature. This parameter will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
This could be a breaking change for anyone that developed their own runner that relies on this parameter being returned by the endpoint. This is not a breaking change for anyone using an officially released version of GitLab Runner, including public shared runners on GitLab.com.
Required Pipeline Configuration is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Required Pipeline Configuration will be removed in the 16.0 release. This impacts self-managed users on the Ultimate license.
We recommend replacing this with an alternative compliance solution that is available now. We recommend this alternative solution because it provides greater flexibility, allowing required pipelines to be assigned to specific compliance framework labels.
SAST analyzer coverage changing in GitLab 16.0
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
GitLab SAST uses various analyzers to scan code for vulnerabilities.
We’re reducing the number of supported analyzers used by default in GitLab SAST. This is part of our long-term strategy to deliver a faster, more consistent user experience across different programming languages.
Starting in GitLab 16.0, the GitLab SAST CI/CD template will no longer use the following analyzers, and they will enter End of Support status:
- Security Code Scan (.NET)
- PHPCS Security Audit (PHP)
We’ll remove these analyzers from the SAST CI/CD template and replace them with GitLab-supported detection rules and the Semgrep-based analyzer. Effective immediately, these analyzers will receive only security updates; other routine improvements or updates are not guaranteed. After these analyzers reach End of Support, no further updates will be provided. However, we won’t delete container images previously published for these analyzers or remove the ability to run them by using a custom CI/CD pipeline job.
We will also remove Scala from the scope of the SpotBugs-based analyzer and replace it with the Semgrep-based analyzer. This change will make it simpler to scan Scala code; compilation will no longer be required. This change will be reflected in the automatic language detection portion of the GitLab-managed SAST CI/CD template. Note that the SpotBugs-based analyzer will continue to cover Groovy and Kotlin.
If you’ve already dismissed a vulnerability finding from one of the deprecated analyzers, the replacement attempts to respect your previous dismissal. The system behavior depends on:
- whether you’ve excluded the Semgrep-based analyzer from running in the past.
- which analyzer first discovered the vulnerabilities shown in the project’s Vulnerability Report.
See Vulnerability translation documentation for further details.
If you applied customizations to any of the affected analyzers or if you currently disable the Semgrep analyzer in your pipelines, you must take action as detailed in the deprecation issue for this change.
Secure analyzers major version update
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
The Secure stage will be bumping the major versions of its analyzers in tandem with the GitLab 16.0 release. This bump will enable a clear delineation for analyzers, between:
- Those released prior to May 22, 2023
- Those released after May 22, 2023
If you are not using the default included templates, or have pinned your analyzer versions you will need to update your CI/CD job definition to either remove the pinned version or to update the latest major version. Users of GitLab 13.0-15.10 will continue to experience analyzer updates as normal until the release of GitLab 16.0, following which all newly fixed bugs and released features will be released only in the new major version of the analyzers. We do not backport bugs and features to deprecated versions as per our maintenance policy. As required, security patches will be backported within the latest 3 minor releases. Specifically, the following are being deprecated and will no longer be updated after 16.0 GitLab release:
- API Fuzzing: version 2
- Container Scanning: version 5
- Coverage-guided fuzz testing: version 3
- Dependency Scanning: version 3
- Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST): version 3
- DAST API: version 2
- IaC Scanning: version 3
- License Scanning: version 4
- Secret Detection: version 4
- Static Application Security Testing (SAST): version 3 of all analyzers
-
brakeman
: version 3 -
flawfinder
: version 3 -
kubesec
: version 3 -
mobsf
: version 3 -
nodejs-scan
: version 3 -
phpcs-security-audit
: version 3 -
pmd-apex
: version 3 -
security-code-scan
: version 3 -
semgrep
: version 3 -
sobelow
: version 3 -
spotbugs
: version 3
-
Secure scanning CI/CD templates will use new job rules
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
GitLab-managed CI/CD templates for security scanning will be updated in the GitLab 16.0 release. The updates will include improvements already released in the Latest versions of the CI/CD templates. We released these changes in the Latest template versions because they have the potential to disrupt customized CI/CD pipeline configurations.
In all updated templates, we’re:
- Adding support for running scans in merge request (MR) pipelines.
- Updating the definition of variables like
SAST_DISABLED
andDEPENDENCY_SCANNING_DISABLED
to disable scanning only if the value is"true"
. Previously, even if the value were"false"
, scanning would be disabled.
The following templates will be updated:
- API Fuzzing:
API-Fuzzing.gitlab-ci.yml
- Container Scanning:
Container-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml
- Coverage-Guided Fuzzing:
Coverage-Fuzzing.gitlab-ci.yml
- DAST:
DAST.gitlab-ci.yml
- DAST API:
DAST-API.gitlab-ci.yml
- Dependency Scanning:
Dependency-Scanning.gitlab-ci.yml
- IaC Scanning:
SAST-IaC.gitlab-ci.yml
- SAST:
SAST.gitlab-ci.yml
- Secret Detection:
Secret-Detection.gitlab-ci.yml
We recommend that you test your pipelines before the 16.0 release if you use one of the templates listed above and you do any of the following:
- You override
rules
for your security scanning jobs. - You use the
_DISABLED
variables but set a value other than"true"
.
Security report schemas version 14.x.x
- Announced in: GitLab 15.3
- Breaking change
Version 14.x.x security report schemas are deprecated.
In GitLab 15.8 and later, security report scanner integrations that use schema version 14.x.x will display a deprecation warning in the pipeline’s Security tab.
In GitLab 16.0 and later, the feature will be removed. Security reports that use schema version 14.x.x will cause an error in the pipeline’s Security tab.
For more information, refer to security report validation.
Shimo integration
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
The Shimo Workspace integration has been deprecated and will be moved to the JiHu GitLab codebase.
Starboard directive in the config for the GitLab Agent for Kubernetes
- Announced in: GitLab 15.4
- Breaking change
GitLab’s operational container scanning capabilities no longer require starboard to be installed. Consequently, use of the starboard:
directive in the configuration file for the GitLab Agent for Kubernetes is now deprecated and is scheduled for removal in GitLab 16.0. Update your configuration file to use the container_scanning:
directive.
Support for Praefect custom metrics endpoint configuration
- Announced in: GitLab 15.9
- Breaking change
Support for using the prometheus_exclude_database_from_default_metrics
configuration value is deprecated in GitLab
15.9 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. We are removing this configuration value because using it is non-performant.
This change means the following metrics will become unavailable on /metrics
:
-
gitaly_praefect_unavailable_repositories
. -
gitaly_praefect_verification_queue_depth
. -
gitaly_praefect_replication_queue_depth
.
This may require updating your metrics collection targets to also scrape /db_metrics
.
Support for periods (.
) in Terraform state names might break existing states
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
Previously, Terraform state names containing periods were not supported. However, you could still use state names with periods via a workaround.
GitLab 15.7 adds full support for state names that contain periods. If you used a workaround to handle these state names, your jobs might fail, or it might look like you’ve run Terraform for the first time.
To resolve the issue:
- Change any references to the state file by excluding the period and any characters that follow.
- For example, if your state name is
state.name
, change all references tostate
.
- For example, if your state name is
- Run your Terraform commands.
To use the full state name, including the period, migrate to the full state file.
Support for third party registries
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
Support for third-party container registries is deprecated in GitLab 15.8 and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. Supporting both GitLab’s Container Registry and third-party container registries is challenging for maintenance, code quality, and backward compatibility. This hinders our ability to stay efficient.
Since we released the new GitLab Container Registry version for GitLab.com, we’ve started to implement additional features that are not available in third-party container registries. These new features have allowed us to achieve significant performance improvements, such as cleanup policies. We are focusing on delivering new features, most of which will require functionalities only available on the GitLab Container Registry. This deprecation allows us to reduce fragmentation and user frustration in the long term by focusing on delivering a more robust integrated registry experience and feature set.
Moving forward, we’ll continue to invest in developing and releasing new features that will only be available in the GitLab Container Registry.
Test system hook endpoint
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
The test system hook endpoint returns dummy data. This endpoint is now deprecated and will be removed from the GitLab codebase.
The API no longer returns revoked tokens for the agent for Kubernetes
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
Currently, GET requests to the Cluster Agents API endpoints can return revoked tokens. In GitLab 16.0, GET requests will not return revoked tokens.
You should review your calls to these endpoints and ensure you do not use revoked tokens.
This change affects the following REST and GraphQL API endpoints:
- REST API:
- GraphQL:
The Phabricator task importer is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- Breaking change
The Phabricator task importer is being deprecated. Phabricator itself as a project is no longer actively maintained since June 1, 2021. We haven’t observed imports using this tool. There has been no activity on the open related issues on GitLab.
The latest Terraform templates will overwrite current stable templates
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
With every major GitLab version, we update the stable Terraform templates with the current latest templates. This change affects the quickstart and the base templates.
Because the new templates ship with default rules, the update might break your Terraform pipelines. For example, if your Terraform jobs are triggered as a downstream pipeline, the rules won’t trigger your jobs in GitLab 16.0.
To accommodate the changes, you might need to adjust the rules
in your
.gitlab-ci.yml
file.
Toggle behavior of /draft
quick action in merge requests
- Announced in: GitLab 15.4
- Breaking change
In order to make the behavior of toggling the draft status of a merge request more clear via a quick action, we’re deprecating and removing the toggle behavior of the /draft
quick action. Beginning with the 16.0 release of GitLab, /draft
will only set a merge request to Draft and a new /ready
quick action will be used to remove the draft status.
Toggle notes confidentiality on APIs
- Announced in: GitLab 14.10
- Breaking change
Toggling notes confidentiality with REST and GraphQL APIs is being deprecated. Updating notes confidential attribute is no longer supported by any means. We are changing this to simplify the experience and prevent private information from being unintentionally exposed.
Use of id
field in vulnerabilityFindingDismiss mutation
- Announced in: GitLab 15.3
- Breaking change
You can use the vulnerabilityFindingDismiss GraphQL mutation to set the status of a vulnerability finding to Dismissed
. Previously, this mutation used the id
field to identify findings uniquely. However, this did not work for dismissing findings from the pipeline security tab. Therefore, using the id
field as an identifier has been dropped in favor of the uuid
field. Using the ‘uuid’ field as an identifier allows you to dismiss the finding from the pipeline security tab.
Vulnerability confidence field
- Announced in: GitLab 15.4
- Breaking change
In GitLab 15.3, security report schemas below version 15 were deprecated.
The confidence
attribute on vulnerability findings exists only in schema versions before 15-0-0
, and therefore is effectively deprecated since GitLab 15.4 supports schema version 15-0-0
. To maintain consistency
between the reports and our public APIs, the confidence
attribute on any vulnerability-related components of our GraphQL API is now deprecated and will be
removed in 16.0.
Work items path with global ID at the end of the path is deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
Usage of global IDs in work item URLs is deprecated. In the future, only internal IDs (IID) will be supported.
Because GitLab supports multiple work item types, a path such as https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/work_items/<global_id>
can display, for example, a task or an OKR.
In GitLab 15.10 we added support for using internal IDs (IID) in that path by appending a query param at
the end (iid_path
) in the following format: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/work_items/<iid>?iid_path=true
.
In GitLab 16.0 we will remove the ability to use a global ID in the work items path. The number at the end of the path will be considered an internal ID (IID) without the need of adding a query param at the end. Only the following format will be supported: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/work_items/<iid>
.
ZenTao integration
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- End of Support: GitLab 16.0
- Breaking change
The ZenTao product integration has been deprecated and will be moved to the JiHu GitLab codebase.
CI_BUILD_*
predefined variables
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The predefined CI/CD variables that start with CI_BUILD_*
were deprecated in GitLab 9.0, and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. If you still use these variables, be sure to change to the replacement predefined variables which are functionally identical:
Removed variable | Replacement variable |
---|---|
CI_BUILD_BEFORE_SHA |
CI_COMMIT_BEFORE_SHA |
CI_BUILD_ID |
CI_JOB_ID |
CI_BUILD_MANUAL |
CI_JOB_MANUAL |
CI_BUILD_NAME |
CI_JOB_NAME |
CI_BUILD_REF |
CI_COMMIT_SHA |
CI_BUILD_REF_NAME |
CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME |
CI_BUILD_REF_SLUG |
CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG |
CI_BUILD_REPO |
CI_REPOSITORY_URL |
CI_BUILD_STAGE |
CI_JOB_STAGE |
CI_BUILD_TAG |
CI_COMMIT_TAG |
CI_BUILD_TOKEN |
CI_JOB_TOKEN |
CI_BUILD_TRIGGERED |
CI_PIPELINE_TRIGGERED |
POST ci/lint
API endpoint deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.7
- Breaking change
The POST ci/lint
API endpoint is deprecated in 15.7, and will be removed in 16.0. This endpoint does not validate the full range of CI/CD configuration options. Instead, use POST /projects/:id/ci/lint
, which properly validates CI/CD configuration.
environment_tier
parameter for DORA API
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
To avoid confusion and duplication, the environment_tier
parameter is deprecated in favor of the environment_tiers
parameter. The new environment_tiers
parameter allows DORA APIs to return aggregated data for multiple tiers at the same time. The environment_tier
parameter will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
project.pipeline.securityReportFindings GraphQL query
- Announced in: GitLab 15.1
- Breaking change
Previous work helped align the vulnerabilities calls for pipeline security tabs to match the vulnerabilities calls for project-level and group-level vulnerability reports. This helped the frontend have a more consistent interface. The old project.pipeline.securityReportFindings
query was formatted differently than other vulnerability data calls. Now that it has been replaced with the new project.pipeline.vulnerabilities
field, the old project.pipeline.securityReportFindings
is being deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 16.0.
vulnerabilityFindingDismiss GraphQL mutation
- Announced in: GitLab 15.5
- Breaking change
The VulnerabilityFindingDismiss
GraphQL mutation is being deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 16.0. This mutation was not used often as the Vulnerability Finding ID was not available to users (this field was deprecated in 15.3). Users should instead use VulnerabilityDismiss
to dismiss vulnerabilities in the Vulnerability Report or SecurityFindingDismiss
for security findings in the CI Pipeline Security tab.
GitLab 15.11
openSUSE Leap 15.3 packages
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
Distribution support and security updates for openSUSE Leap 15.3 ended December 2022.
Starting in GitLab 15.7 we started providing packages for openSUSE Leap 15.4, and will stop providing packages for openSUSE Leap 15.3 in the 15.11 milestone.
- Switch from the openSUSE Leap 15.3 packages to the provided 15.4 packages.
GitLab 15.10
Automatic backup upload using Openstack Swift and Rackspace APIs
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- End of Support: GitLab 15.10
- Breaking change
We are deprecating support for uploading backups to remote storage using Openstack Swift and Rackspace APIs. The support for these APIs depends on third-party libraries that are no longer actively maintained and have not been updated for Ruby 3. GitLab is switching over to Ruby 3 prior to EOL of Ruby 2 in order to stay up to date on security patches.
- If you’re using OpenStack, you need to change you configuration to use the S3 API instead of Swift.
- If you’re using Rackspace storage, you need to switch to a different provider or manually upload the backup file after the backup task is complete.
GitLab 15.9
Live Preview no longer available in the Web IDE
- Announced in: GitLab 15.8
- Breaking change
The Live Preview feature of the Web IDE was intended to provide a client-side preview of static web applications. However, complex configuration steps and a narrow set of supported project types have limited its utility. With the introduction of the Web IDE Beta in GitLab 15.7, you can now connect to a full server-side runtime environment. With upcoming support for installing extensions in the Web IDE, we’ll also support more advanced workflows than those available with Live Preview. As of GitLab 15.9, Live Preview is no longer available in the Web IDE.
SaaS certificate-based integration with Kubernetes
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
The certificate-based integration with Kubernetes will be deprecated and removed. As a GitLab SaaS customer, on new namespaces, you will no longer be able to integrate GitLab and your cluster using the certificate-based approach as of GitLab 15.0. The integration for current users will be enabled per namespace.
For a more robust, secure, forthcoming, and reliable integration with Kubernetes, we recommend you use the agent for Kubernetes to connect Kubernetes clusters with GitLab. How do I migrate?
Although an explicit removal date is set, we don’t plan to remove this feature until the new solution has feature parity. For more information about the blockers to removal, see this issue.
For updates and details about this deprecation, follow this epic.
GitLab self-managed customers can still use the feature with a feature flag.
GitLab 15.7
File Type variable expansion in .gitlab-ci.yml
- Announced in: GitLab 15.5
- Breaking change
Previously, variables that referenced or applied alias file variables expanded the value of the File
type variable. For example, the file contents. This behavior was incorrect because it did not comply with typical shell variable expansion rules. To leak secrets or sensitive information stored in File
type variables, a user could run an $echo command with the variable as an input parameter.
This breaking change fixes this issue but could disrupt user workflows that work around the behavior. With this change, job variable expansions that reference or apply alias file variables, expand to the file name or path of the File
type variable, instead of its value, such as the file contents.
GitLab 15.6
NFS for Git repository storage
- Announced in: GitLab 14.0
With the general availability of Gitaly Cluster (introduced in GitLab 13.0), we have deprecated development (bugfixes, performance improvements, etc) for NFS for Git repository storage in GitLab 14.0. We will continue to provide technical support for NFS for Git repositories throughout 14.x, but we will remove all support for NFS on November 22, 2022. This was originally planned for May 22, 2022, but in an effort to allow continued maturity of Gitaly Cluster, we have chosen to extend our deprecation of support date. Please see our official Statement of Support for further information.
Gitaly Cluster offers tremendous benefits for our customers such as:
We encourage customers currently using NFS for Git repositories to plan their migration by reviewing our documentation on migrating to Gitaly Cluster.
GitLab 15.4
Bundled Grafana deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 15.3
In GitLab 15.4, we will be swapping the bundled Grafana to a fork of Grafana maintained by GitLab.
There was an identified CVE for Grafana, and to mitigate this security vulnerability, we must swap to our own fork because the older version of Grafana we were bundling is no longer receiving long-term support.
This is not expected to cause any incompatibilities with the previous version of Grafana. Neither when using our bundled version, nor when using an external instance of Grafana.
SAST analyzer consolidation and CI/CD template changes
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
GitLab SAST uses various analyzers to scan code for vulnerabilities.
We are reducing the number of analyzers used in GitLab SAST as part of our long-term strategy to deliver a better and more consistent user experience. Streamlining the set of analyzers will also enable faster iteration, better results, and greater efficiency (including a reduction in CI runner usage in most cases).
In GitLab 15.4, GitLab SAST will no longer use the following analyzers:
These analyzers will be removed from the GitLab-managed SAST CI/CD template and replaced with the Semgrep-based analyzer. Effective immediately, they will receive only security updates; other routine improvements or updates are not guaranteed. After these analyzers reach End of Support, no further updates will be provided. We will not delete container images previously published for these analyzers; any such change would be announced as a deprecation, removal, or breaking change announcement.
We will also remove Java from the scope of the SpotBugs analyzer and replace it with the Semgrep-based analyzer. This change will make it simpler to scan Java code; compilation will no longer be required. This change will be reflected in the automatic language detection portion of the GitLab-managed SAST CI/CD template. Note that the SpotBugs-based analyzer will continue to cover Groovy, Kotlin, and Scala.
If you’ve already dismissed a vulnerability finding from one of the deprecated analyzers, the replacement attempts to respect your previous dismissal. The system behavior depends on:
- whether you’ve excluded the Semgrep-based analyzer from running in the past.
- which analyzer first discovered the vulnerabilities shown in the project’s Vulnerability Report.
See Vulnerability translation documentation for further details.
If you applied customizations to any of the affected analyzers or if you currently disable the Semgrep analyzer in your pipelines, you must take action as detailed in the deprecation issue for this change.
GitLab 15.3
Vulnerability Report sort by State
- Announced in: GitLab 15.0
The ability to sort the Vulnerability Report by the State
column was disabled and put behind a feature flag in GitLab 14.10 due to a refactor
of the underlying data model. The feature flag has remained off by default as further refactoring will be required to ensure sorting
by this value remains performant. Due to very low usage of the State
column for sorting, the feature flag will instead be removed to simplify the codebase and prevent any unwanted performance degradation.
Vulnerability Report sort by Tool
- Announced in: GitLab 15.1
The ability to sort the Vulnerability Report by the Tool
column (scan type) was disabled and put behind a feature flag in GitLab 14.10 due to a refactor
of the underlying data model. The feature flag has remained off by default as further refactoring will be required to ensure sorting
by this value remains performant. Due to very low usage of the Tool
column for sorting, the feature flag will instead be removed in
GitLab 15.3 to simplify the codebase and prevent any unwanted performance degradation.
GitLab 15.1
Deprecate support for Debian 9
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
Long term service and support (LTSS) for Debian 9 Stretch ends in July 2022. Therefore, we will no longer support the Debian 9 distribution for the GitLab package. Users can upgrade to Debian 10 or Debian 11.
GitLab 15.0
Audit events for repository push events
- Announced in: GitLab 14.3
- Breaking change
Audit events for repository events are now deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 15.0.
These events have always been disabled by default and had to be manually enabled with a feature flag. Enabling them can cause too many events to be generated which can dramatically slow down GitLab instances. For this reason, they are being removed.
Background upload for object storage
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
- Breaking change
To reduce the overall complexity and maintenance burden of GitLab’s object storage feature, support for using background_upload
to upload files is deprecated and will be fully removed in GitLab 15.0. Review the 15.0 specific changes for the removed background uploads settings for object storage.
This impacts a small subset of object storage providers:
- OpenStack Customers using OpenStack need to change their configuration to use the S3 API instead of Swift.
- RackSpace Customers using RackSpace-based object storage need to migrate data to a different provider.
GitLab will publish additional guidance to assist affected customers in migrating.
CI/CD job name length limit
- Announced in: GitLab 14.6
- Breaking change
In GitLab 15.0 we are going to limit the number of characters in CI/CD job names to 255. Any pipeline with job names that exceed the 255 character limit will stop working after the 15.0 release.
Changing an instance (shared) runner to a project (specific) runner
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
In GitLab 15.0, you can no longer change an instance (shared) runner to a project (specific) runner.
Users often accidentally change instance runners to project runners, and they’re unable to change them back. GitLab does not allow you to change a project runner to a shared runner because of the security implications. A runner meant for one project could be set to run jobs for an entire instance.
Administrators who need to add runners for multiple projects can register a runner for one project, then go to the Admin view and choose additional projects.
Container Network and Host Security
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
All functionality related to GitLab’s Container Network Security and Container Host Security categories is deprecated in GitLab 14.8 and scheduled for removal in GitLab 15.0. Users who need a replacement for this functionality are encouraged to evaluate the following open source projects as potential solutions that can be installed and managed outside of GitLab: AppArmor, Cilium, Falco, FluentD, Pod Security Admission. To integrate these technologies into GitLab, add the desired Helm charts into your copy of the Cluster Management Project Template. Deploy these Helm charts in production by calling commands through GitLab CI/CD.
As part of this change, the following specific capabilities within GitLab are now deprecated, and are scheduled for removal in GitLab 15.0:
- The Security & Compliance > Threat Monitoring page.
- The
Network Policy
security policy type, as found on the Security & Compliance > Policies page. - The ability to manage integrations with the following technologies through GitLab: AppArmor, Cilium, Falco, FluentD, and Pod Security Policies.
- All APIs related to the above functionality.
For additional context, or to provide feedback regarding this change, please reference our open deprecation issue.
Container scanning schemas below 14.0.0
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
Container scanning report schemas versions earlier than 14.0.0 will no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0. Reports that do not pass validation against the schema version declared in the report will also no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0.
Third-party tools that integrate with GitLab by outputting a container scanning security report as a pipeline job artifact are affected. You must ensure that all output reports adhere to the correct schema with a minimum version of 14.0.0. Reports with a lower version or that fail to validate against the declared schema version will not be processed, and vulnerability findings will not display in MRs, pipelines, or Vulnerability Reports.
To help with the transition, from GitLab 14.10, non-compliant reports will display a warning in the Vulnerability Report.
Coverage guided fuzzing schemas below 14.0.0
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
Coverage guided fuzzing report schemas below version 14.0.0 will no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0. Reports that do not pass validation against the schema version declared in the report will also no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0.
Third-party tools that integrate with GitLab by outputting a coverage guided fuzzing security report as a pipeline job artifact are affected. You must ensure that all output reports adhere to the correct schema with a minimum version of 14.0.0. Any reports with a lower version or that fail to validate against the declared schema version will not be processed, and vulnerability findings will not display in MRs, pipelines, or Vulnerability Reports.
To help with the transition, from GitLab 14.10, non-compliant reports will display a warning in the Vulnerability Report.
DAST schemas below 14.0.0
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
DAST report schemas versions earlier than 14.0.0 will no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0. Reports that do not pass validation against the schema version declared in the report will also no longer be supported as of GitLab 15.0.
Third-party tools that integrate with GitLab by outputting a DAST security report as a pipeline job artifact are affected. You must ensure that all output reports adhere to the correct schema with a minimum version of 14.0.0. Reports with a lower version or that fail to validate against the declared schema version will not be processed, and vulnerability findings will not display in MRs, pipelines, or Vulnerability Reports.
To help with the transition, from GitLab 14.10, non-compliant reports will cause a warning to be displayed in the Vulnerability Report.
Dependency Scanning Python 3.9 and 3.6 image deprecation
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
For those using Dependency Scanning for Python projects, we are deprecating the default gemnasium-python:2
image which uses Python 3.6 as well as the custom gemnasium-python:2-python-3.9
image which uses Python 3.9. The new default image as of GitLab 15.0 will be for Python 3.9 as it is a supported version and 3.6 is no longer supported.
For users using Python 3.9 or 3.9-compatible projects, you should not need to take action and dependency scanning should begin to work in GitLab 15.0. If you wish to test the new container now please run a test pipeline in your project with this container (which will be removed in 15.0). Use the Python 3.9 image:
gemnasium-python-dependency_scanning:
image:
name: registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/gemnasium-python:2-python-3.9
For users using Python 3.6, as of GitLab 15.0 you will no longer be able to use the default template for dependency scanning. You will need to switch to use the deprecated gemnasium-python:2
analyzer image. If you are impacted by this please comment in this issue so we can extend the removal if needed.
For users using the 3.9 special exception image, you must instead use the default value and no longer override your container. To verify if you are using the 3.9 special exception image, check your .gitlab-ci.yml
file for the following reference:
gemnasium-python-dependency_scanning:
image:
name: registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers/gemnasium-python:2-python-3.9
Dependency Scanning default Java version changed to 17
- Announced in: GitLab 14.10
- Breaking change
In GitLab 15.0, for Dependency Scanning, the default version of Java that the scanner expects will be updated from 11 to 17. Java 17 is the most up-to-date Long Term Support (LTS) version. Dependency scanning continues to support the same range of versions (8, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17), only the default version is changing. If your project uses the previous default of Java 11, be sure to set the DS_Java_Version
variable to match.
Dependency scanning schemas below 14.0.0
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
Dependency scanning report schemas versions earlier than 14.0.0 will no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0. Reports that do not pass validation against the schema version declared in the report will also no longer be supported as of GitLab 15.0.
Third-party tools that integrate with GitLab by outputting a Dependency scanning security report as a pipeline job artifact are affected. You must ensure that all output reports adhere to the correct schema with a minimum version of 14.0.0. Reports with a lower version or that fail to validate against the declared schema version will not be processed, and vulnerability findings will not display in MRs, pipelines, or Vulnerability Reports.
To help with the transition, from GitLab 14.10, non-compliant reports will cause a warning to be displayed in the Vulnerability Report.
Deprecate Geo Admin UI Routes
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
In GitLab 13.0, we introduced new project and design replication details routes in the Geo Admin UI. These routes are /admin/geo/replication/projects
and /admin/geo/replication/designs
. We kept the legacy routes and redirected them to the new routes. In GitLab 15.0, we will remove support for the legacy routes /admin/geo/projects
and /admin/geo/designs
. Please update any bookmarks or scripts that may use the legacy routes.
Deprecate custom Geo:db:* Rake tasks
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
In GitLab 14.8, we are replacing the geo:db:*
Rake tasks with built-in tasks that are now possible after switching the Geo tracking database to use Rails’ 6 support of multiple databases.
The following geo:db:*
tasks will be replaced with their corresponding db:*:geo
tasks:
-
geo:db:drop
->db:drop:geo
-
geo:db:create
->db:create:geo
-
geo:db:setup
->db:setup:geo
-
geo:db:migrate
->db:migrate:geo
-
geo:db:rollback
->db:rollback:geo
-
geo:db:version
->db:version:geo
-
geo:db:reset
->db:reset:geo
-
geo:db:seed
->db:seed:geo
-
geo:schema:load:geo
->db:schema:load:geo
-
geo:db:schema:dump
->db:schema:dump:geo
-
geo:db:migrate:up
->db:migrate:up:geo
-
geo:db:migrate:down
->db:migrate:down:geo
-
geo:db:migrate:redo
->db:migrate:redo:geo
-
geo:db:migrate:status
->db:migrate:status:geo
-
geo:db:test:prepare
->db:test:prepare:geo
-
geo:db:test:load
->db:test:load:geo
-
geo:db:test:purge
->db:test:purge:geo
Deprecate feature flag PUSH_RULES_SUPERSEDE_CODE_OWNERS
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The feature flag PUSH_RULES_SUPERSEDE_CODE_OWNERS
is being removed in GitLab 15.0. Upon its removal, push rules will supersede Code Owners. Even if Code Owner approval is required, a push rule that explicitly allows a specific user to push code supersedes the Code Owners setting.
Elasticsearch 6.8
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
Elasticsearch 6.8 is deprecated in GitLab 14.8 and scheduled for removal in GitLab 15.0. Customers using Elasticsearch 6.8 need to upgrade their Elasticsearch version to 7.x prior to upgrading to GitLab 15.0. We recommend using the latest version of Elasticsearch 7 to benefit from all Elasticsearch improvements.
Elasticsearch 6.8 is also incompatible with Amazon OpenSearch, which we plan to support in GitLab 15.0.
Enforced validation of security report schemas
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
Security report schemas versions earlier than 14.0.0 will no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0. Reports that do not pass validation against the schema version declared in the report will also no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0.
Security tools that integrate with GitLab by outputting security reports as pipeline job artifacts are affected. You must ensure that all output reports adhere to the correct schema with a minimum version of 14.0.0. Reports with a lower version or that fail to validate against the declared schema version will not be processed, and vulnerability findings will not display in MRs, pipelines, or Vulnerability Reports.
To help with the transition, from GitLab 14.10, non-compliant reports will display a warning in the Vulnerability Report.
External status check API breaking changes
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The external status check API was originally implemented to support pass-by-default requests to mark a status check as passing. Pass-by-default requests are now deprecated. Specifically, the following are deprecated:
- Requests that do not contain the
status
field. - Requests that have the
status
field set toapproved
.
Beginning in GitLab 15.0, status checks will only be updated to a passing state if the status
field is both present
and set to passed
. Requests that:
- Do not contain the
status
field will be rejected with a422
error. For more information, see the relevant issue. - Contain any value other than
passed
will cause the status check to fail. For more information, see the relevant issue.
To align with this change, API calls to list external status checks will also return the value of passed
rather than
approved
for status checks that have passed.
GitLab Pages running as daemon
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
In 15.0, support for daemon mode for GitLab Pages will be removed.
GitLab Serverless
- Announced in: GitLab 14.3
- Breaking change
GitLab Serverless is a feature set to support Knative-based serverless development with automatic deployments and monitoring.
We decided to remove the GitLab Serverless features as they never really resonated with our users. Besides, given the continuous development of Kubernetes and Knative, our current implementations do not even work with recent versions.
Godep support in License Compliance
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
The Godep dependency manager for Golang was deprecated in 2020 by Go and has been replaced with Go modules. To reduce our maintenance cost we are deprecating License Compliance for Godep projects as of 14.7 and will remove it in GitLab 15.0
GraphQL ID and GlobalID compatibility
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
We are removing a non-standard extension to our GraphQL processor, which we added for backwards compatibility. This extension modifies the validation of GraphQL queries, allowing the use of the ID
type for arguments where it would normally be rejected.
Some arguments originally had the type ID
. These were changed to specific
kinds of ID
. This change may be a breaking change if you:
- Use GraphQL.
- Use the
ID
type for any argument in your query signatures.
Some field arguments still have the ID
type. These are typically for
IID values, or namespace paths. An example is Query.project(fullPath: ID!)
.
For a list of affected and unaffected field arguments, see the deprecation issue.
You can test if this change affects you by validating
your queries locally, using schema data fetched from a GitLab server.
You can do this by using the GraphQL explorer tool for the relevant GitLab
instance. For example: https://gitlab.com/-/graphql-explorer
.
For example, the following query illustrates the breaking change:
# a query using the deprecated type of Query.issue(id:)
# WARNING: This will not work after GitLab 15.0
query($id: ID!) {
deprecated: issue(id: $id) {
title, description
}
}
The query above will not work after GitLab 15.0 is released, because the type
of Query.issue(id:)
is actually IssueID!
.
Instead, you should use one of the following two forms:
# This will continue to work
query($id: IssueID!) {
a: issue(id: $id) {
title, description
}
b: issue(id: "gid://gitlab/Issue/12345") {
title, description
}
}
This query works now, and will continue to work after GitLab 15.0.
You should convert any queries in the first form (using ID
as a named type in the signature)
to one of the other two forms (using the correct appropriate type in the signature, or using
an inline argument expression).
GraphQL permissions change for Package settings
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
- Breaking change
The GitLab Package stage offers a Package Registry, Container Registry, and Dependency Proxy to help you manage all of your dependencies using GitLab. Each of these product categories has a variety of settings that can be adjusted using the API.
The permissions model for GraphQL is being updated. After 15.0, users with the Guest, Reporter, and Developer role can no longer update these settings:
Known host required for GitLab Runner SSH executor
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
In GitLab 14.3, we added a configuration setting in the GitLab Runner config.toml
file. This setting, [runners.ssh.disable_strict_host_key_checking]
, controls whether or not to use strict host key checking with the SSH executor.
In GitLab 15.0 and later, the default value for this configuration option will change from true
to false
. This means that strict host key checking will be enforced when using the GitLab Runner SSH executor.
Legacy approval status names from License Compliance API
- Announced in: GitLab 14.6
- Breaking change
We deprecated legacy names for approval status of license policy (blacklisted, approved) in the managed_licenses
API but they are still used in our API queries and responses. They will be removed in 15.0.
If you are using our License Compliance API you should stop using the approved
and blacklisted
query parameters, they are now allowed
and denied
. In 15.0 the responses will also stop using approved
and blacklisted
so you need to adjust any of your custom tools to use the old and new values so they do not break with the 15.0 release.
Legacy database configuration
- Announced in: GitLab 14.3
- Breaking change
The syntax of GitLabs database
configuration located in database.yml
is changing and the legacy format is deprecated. The legacy format
supported using a single PostgreSQL adapter, whereas the new format is changing to support multiple databases. The main:
database needs to be defined as a first configuration item.
This deprecation mainly impacts users compiling GitLab from source because Omnibus will handle this configuration automatically.
Logging in GitLab
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
- Breaking change
The logging features in GitLab allow users to install the ELK stack (Elasticsearch, Logstash, and Kibana) to aggregate and manage application logs. Users can search for relevant logs in GitLab. However, since deprecating certificate-based integration with Kubernetes clusters and GitLab Managed Apps, we don’t have a recommended solution for logging within GitLab. For more information, you can follow the issue for integrating Opstrace with GitLab.
Move custom_hooks_dir
setting from GitLab Shell to Gitaly
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
The custom_hooks_dir
setting is now configured in Gitaly, and will be removed from GitLab Shell in GitLab 15.0.
OAuth implicit grant
- Announced in: GitLab 14.0
- Breaking change
The OAuth implicit grant authorization flow will be removed in our next major release, GitLab 15.0. Any applications that use OAuth implicit grant should switch to alternative supported OAuth flows.
OAuth tokens without expiration
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
By default, all new applications expire access tokens after 2 hours. In GitLab 14.2 and earlier, OAuth access tokens had no expiration. In GitLab 15.0, an expiry will be automatically generated for any existing token that does not already have one.
You should opt in to expiring tokens before GitLab 15.0 is released:
- Edit the application.
- Select Expire access tokens to enable them. Tokens must be revoked or they don’t expire.
OmniAuth Kerberos gem
- Announced in: GitLab 14.3
- Breaking change
The omniauth-kerberos
gem will be removed in our next major release, GitLab 15.0.
This gem has not been maintained and has very little usage. We therefore plan to remove support for this authentication method and recommend using the Kerberos SPNEGO integration instead. You can follow the upgrade instructions to upgrade from the omniauth-kerberos
integration to the supported one.
Note that we are not deprecating the Kerberos SPNEGO integration, only the old password-based Kerberos integration.
Optional enforcement of PAT expiration
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The feature to disable enforcement of PAT expiration is unusual from a security perspective. We have become concerned that this unusual feature could create unexpected behavior for users. Unexpected behavior in a security feature is inherently dangerous, so we have decided to remove this feature.
Optional enforcement of SSH expiration
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The feature to disable enforcement of SSH expiration is unusual from a security perspective. We have become concerned that this unusual feature could create unexpected behavior for users. Unexpected behavior in a security feature is inherently dangerous, so we have decided to remove this feature.
Out-of-the-box SAST support for Java 8
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The GitLab SAST SpotBugs analyzer scans Java, Scala, Groovy, and Kotlin code for security vulnerabilities. For technical reasons, the analyzer must first compile the code before scanning. Unless you use the pre-compilation strategy, the analyzer attempts to automatically compile your project’s code.
In GitLab versions prior to 15.0, the analyzer image includes Java 8 and Java 11 runtimes to facilitate compilation.
In GitLab 15.0, we will:
- Remove Java 8 from the analyzer image to reduce the size of the image.
- Add Java 17 to the analyzer image to make it easier to compile with Java 17.
If you rely on Java 8 being present in the analyzer environment, you must take action as detailed in the deprecation issue for this change.
Outdated indices of Advanced Search migrations
- Announced in: GitLab 14.10
- Breaking change
As Advanced Search migrations usually require support multiple code paths for a long period of time, it’s important to clean those up when we safely can. We use GitLab major version upgrades as a safe time to remove backward compatibility for indices that have not been fully migrated. See the upgrade documentation for details.
Pseudonymizer
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
The Pseudonymizer feature is generally unused, can cause production issues with large databases, and can interfere with object storage development. It is now considered deprecated, and will be removed in GitLab 15.0.
Querying Usage Trends via the instanceStatisticsMeasurements
GraphQL node
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The instanceStatisticsMeasurements
GraphQL node has been renamed to usageTrendsMeasurements
in 13.10 and the old field name has been marked as deprecated. To fix the existing GraphQL queries, replace instanceStatisticsMeasurements
with usageTrendsMeasurements
.
Request profiling
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
Request profiling is deprecated in GitLab 14.8 and scheduled for removal in GitLab 15.0.
We’re working on consolidating our profiling tools and making them more easily accessible. We evaluated the use of this feature and we found that it is not widely used. It also depends on a few third-party gems that are not actively maintained anymore, have not been updated for the latest version of Ruby, or crash frequently when profiling heavy page loads.
For more information, check the summary section of the deprecation issue.
Required pipeline configurations in Premium tier
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The required pipeline configuration feature is deprecated in GitLab 14.8 for Premium customers and is scheduled for removal in GitLab 15.0. This feature is not deprecated for GitLab Ultimate customers.
This change to move the feature to GitLab’s Ultimate tier is intended to help our features better align with our pricing philosophy as we see demand for this feature originating primarily from executives.
This change will also help GitLab remain consistent in its tiering strategy with the other related Ultimate-tier features of: Security policies and compliance framework pipelines.
Retire-JS Dependency Scanning tool
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
As of 14.8 the retire.js job is being deprecated from Dependency Scanning. It will continue to be included in our CI/CD template while deprecated. We are removing retire.js from Dependency Scanning on May 22, 2022 in GitLab 15.0. JavaScript scanning functionality will not be affected as it is still being covered by Gemnasium.
If you have explicitly excluded retire.js using DS_EXCLUDED_ANALYZERS you will need to clean up (remove the reference) in 15.0. If you have customized your pipeline’s Dependency Scanning configuration related to the retire-js-dependency_scanning
job you will want to switch to gemnasium-dependency_scanning before the removal in 15.0, to prevent your pipeline from failing. If you have not used the DS_EXCLUDED_ANALYZERS to reference retire.js, or customized your template specifically for retire.js, you will not need to take action.
SAST schemas below 14.0.0
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
SAST report schemas versions earlier than 14.0.0 will no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0. Reports that do not pass validation against the schema version declared in the report will also no longer be supported as of GitLab 15.0.
Third-party tools that integrate with GitLab by outputting a SAST security report as a pipeline job artifact are affected. You must ensure that all output reports adhere to the correct schema with a minimum version of 14.0.0. Reports with a lower version or that fail to validate against the declared schema version will not be processed, and vulnerability findings will not display in MRs, pipelines, or Vulnerability Reports.
To help with the transition, from GitLab 14.10, non-compliant reports will display a warning in the Vulnerability Report.
SAST support for .NET 2.1
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The GitLab SAST Security Code Scan analyzer scans .NET code for security vulnerabilities. For technical reasons, the analyzer must first build the code to scan it.
In GitLab versions prior to 15.0, the default analyzer image (version 2) includes support for:
- .NET 2.1
- .NET 3.0 and .NET Core 3.0
- .NET Core 3.1
- .NET 5.0
In GitLab 15.0, we will change the default major version for this analyzer from version 2 to version 3. This change:
- Adds severity values for vulnerabilities along with other new features and improvements.
- Removes .NET 2.1 support.
- Adds support for .NET 6.0, Visual Studio 2019, and Visual Studio 2022.
Version 3 was announced in GitLab 14.6 and made available as an optional upgrade.
If you rely on .NET 2.1 support being present in the analyzer image by default, you must take action as detailed in the deprecation issue for this change.
Secret Detection configuration variables deprecated
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
To make it simpler and more reliable to customize GitLab Secret Detection, we’re deprecating some of the variables that you could previously set in your CI/CD configuration.
The following variables currently allow you to customize the options for historical scanning, but interact poorly with the GitLab-managed CI/CD template and are now deprecated:
SECRET_DETECTION_COMMIT_FROM
SECRET_DETECTION_COMMIT_TO
SECRET_DETECTION_COMMITS
SECRET_DETECTION_COMMITS_FILE
The SECRET_DETECTION_ENTROPY_LEVEL
previously allowed you to configure rules that only considered the entropy level of strings in your codebase, and is now deprecated.
This type of entropy-only rule created an unacceptable number of incorrect results (false positives) and is no longer supported.
In GitLab 15.0, we’ll update the Secret Detection analyzer to ignore these deprecated options.
You’ll still be able to configure historical scanning of your commit history by setting the SECRET_DETECTION_HISTORIC_SCAN
CI/CD variable.
For further details, see the deprecation issue for this change.
Secret detection schemas below 14.0.0
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
Secret detection report schemas versions earlier than 14.0.0 will no longer be supported in GitLab 15.0. Reports that do not pass validation against the schema version declared in the report will also no longer be supported as of GitLab 15.0.
Third-party tools that integrate with GitLab by outputting a Secret detection security report as a pipeline job artifact are affected. You must ensure that all output reports adhere to the correct schema with a minimum version of 14.0.0. Reports with a lower version or that fail to validate against the declared schema version will not be processed, and vulnerability findings will not display in MRs, pipelines, or Vulnerability Reports.
To help with the transition, from GitLab 14.10, non-compliant reports will display a warning in the Vulnerability Report.
Secure and Protect analyzer images published in new location
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
GitLab uses various analyzers to scan for security vulnerabilities. Each analyzer is distributed as a container image.
Starting in GitLab 14.8, new versions of GitLab Secure and Protect analyzers are published to a new registry location under registry.gitlab.com/security-products
.
We will update the default value of GitLab-managed CI/CD templates to reflect this change:
- For all analyzers except Container Scanning, we will update the variable
SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX
to the new image registry location. - For Container Scanning, the default image address is already updated. There is no
SECURE_ANALYZERS_PREFIX
variable for Container Scanning.
In a future release, we will stop publishing images to registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/security-products/analyzers
.
Once this happens, you must take action if you manually pull images and push them into a separate registry. This is commonly the case for offline deployments.
Otherwise, you won’t receive further updates.
See the deprecation issue for more details.
Secure and Protect analyzer major version update
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The Secure and Protect stages will be bumping the major versions of their analyzers in tandem with the GitLab 15.0 release. This major bump will enable a clear delineation for analyzers, between:
- Those released prior to May 22, 2022, which generate reports that are not subject to stringent schema validation.
- Those released after May 22, 2022, which generate reports that are subject to stringent schema validation.
If you are not using the default inclusion templates, or have pinned your analyzer versions you will need to update your CI/CD job definition to either remove the pinned version or to update the latest major version. Users of GitLab 12.0-14.10 will continue to experience analyzer updates as normal until the release of GitLab 15.0, following which all newly fixed bugs and newly released features in the new major versions of the analyzers will not be available in the deprecated versions because we do not backport bugs and new features as per our maintenance policy. As required security patches will be backported within the latest 3 minor releases. Specifically, the following are being deprecated and will no longer be updated after 15.0 GitLab release:
- API Security: version 1
- Container Scanning: version 4
- Coverage-guided fuzz testing: version 2
- Dependency Scanning: version 2
- Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST): version 2
- Infrastructure as Code (IaC) Scanning: version 1
- License Scanning: version 3
- Secret Detection: version 3
- Static Application Security Testing (SAST): version 2 of all analyzers, except
gosec
which is currently at version 3-
bandit
: version 2 -
brakeman
: version 2 -
eslint
: version 2 -
flawfinder
: version 2 -
gosec
: version 3 -
kubesec
: version 2 -
mobsf
: version 2 -
nodejs-scan
: version 2 -
phpcs-security-audit
: version 2 -
pmd-apex
: version 2 -
security-code-scan
: version 2 -
semgrep
: version 2 -
sobelow
: version 2 -
spotbugs
: version 2
-
Sidekiq metrics and health checks configuration
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
- Breaking change
Exporting Sidekiq metrics and health checks using a single process and port is deprecated. Support will be removed in 15.0.
We have updated Sidekiq to export metrics and health checks from two separate processes
to improve stability and availability and prevent data loss in edge cases.
As those are two separate servers, a configuration change will be required in 15.0
to explicitly set separate ports for metrics and health-checks.
The newly introduced settings for sidekiq['health_checks_*']
should always be set in gitlab.rb
.
For more information, check the documentation for configuring Sidekiq.
These changes also require updates in either Prometheus to scrape the new endpoint or k8s health-checks to target the new health-check port to work properly, otherwise either metrics or health-checks will disappear.
For the deprecation period those settings are optional
and GitLab will default the Sidekiq health-checks port to the same port as sidekiq_exporter
and only run one server (not changing the current behaviour).
Only if they are both set and a different port is provided, a separate metrics server will spin up
to serve the Sidekiq metrics, similar to the way Sidekiq will behave in 15.0.
Static Site Editor
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
The Static Site Editor will no longer be available starting in GitLab 15.0. Improvements to the Markdown editing experience across GitLab will deliver smiliar benefit but with a wider reach. Incoming requests to the Static Site Editor will be redirected to the Web IDE.
Current users of the Static Site Editor can view the documentation for more information, including how to remove the configuration files from existing projects.
Support for SLES 12 SP2
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
Long term service and support (LTSS) for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) 12 SP2 ended on March 31, 2021. The CA certificates on SP2 include the expired DST root certificate, and it’s not getting new CA certificate package updates. We have implemented some workarounds, but we will not be able to continue to keep the build running properly.
Support for gRPC-aware proxy deployed between Gitaly and rest of GitLab
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
Although not recommended or documented, it was possible to deploy a gRPC-aware proxy between Gitaly and the rest of GitLab. For example, NGINX and Envoy. The ability to deploy a gRPC-aware proxy is deprecated. If you currently use a gRPC-aware proxy for Gitaly connections, you should change your proxy configuration to use TCP or TLS proxying (OSI layer 4) instead.
Gitaly Cluster became incompatible with gRPC-aware proxies in GitLab 13.12. Now all GitLab installations will be incompatible with gRPC-aware proxies, even without Gitaly Cluster.
By sending some of our internal RPC traffic through a custom protocol (instead of gRPC) we increase throughput and reduce Go garbage collection latency. For more information, see the relevant epic.
Test coverage project CI/CD setting
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
To simplify setting a test coverage pattern, in GitLab 15.0 the project setting for test coverage parsing is being removed.
Instead, using the project’s .gitlab-ci.yml
, provide a regular expression with the coverage
keyword to set
testing coverage results in merge requests.
Tracing in GitLab
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
- Breaking change
Tracing in GitLab is an integration with Jaeger, an open-source end-to-end distributed tracing system. GitLab users can navigate to their Jaeger instance to gain insight into the performance of a deployed application, tracking each function or microservice that handles a given request. Tracing in GitLab is deprecated in GitLab 14.7, and scheduled for removal in 15.0. To track work on a possible replacement, see the issue for Opstrace integration with GitLab.
Update to the Container Registry group-level API
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
In milestone 15.0, support for the tags
and tags_count
parameters will be removed from the Container Registry API that gets registry repositories from a group.
The GET /groups/:id/registry/repositories
endpoint will remain, but won’t return any info about tags. To get the info about tags, you can use the existing GET /registry/repositories/:id
endpoint, which will continue to support the tags
and tag_count
options as it does today. The latter must be called once per image repository.
Value Stream Analytics filtering calculation change
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
We are changing how the date filter works in Value Stream Analytics. Instead of filtering by the time that the issue or merge request was created, the date filter will filter by the end event time of the given stage. This will result in completely different figures after this change has rolled out.
If you monitor Value Stream Analytics metrics and rely on the date filter, to avoid losing data, you must save the data prior to this change.
Vulnerability Check
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The vulnerability check feature is deprecated in GitLab 14.8 and scheduled for removal in GitLab 15.0. We encourage you to migrate to the new security approvals feature instead. You can do so by navigating to Security & Compliance > Policies and creating a new Scan Result Policy.
The new security approvals feature is similar to vulnerability check. For example, both can require approvals for MRs that contain security vulnerabilities. However, security approvals improve the previous experience in several ways:
- Users can choose who is allowed to edit security approval rules. An independent security or compliance team can therefore manage rules in a way that prevents development project maintainers from modifying the rules.
- Multiple rules can be created and chained together to allow for filtering on different severity thresholds for each scanner type.
- A two-step approval process can be enforced for any desired changes to security approval rules.
- A single set of security policies can be applied to multiple development projects to allow for ease in maintaining a single, centralized ruleset.
Versions
on base PackageType
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
As part of the work to create a Package Registry GraphQL API, the Package group deprecated the Version
type for the basic PackageType
type and moved it to PackageDetailsType
.
In milestone 15.0, we will completely remove Version
from PackageType
.
artifacts:reports:cobertura
keyword
- Announced in: GitLab 14.7
- Breaking change
Currently, test coverage visualizations in GitLab only support Cobertura reports. Starting 15.0, the
artifacts:reports:cobertura
keyword will be replaced by
artifacts:reports:coverage_report
. Cobertura will be the
only supported report file in 15.0, but this is the first step towards GitLab supporting other report types.
defaultMergeCommitMessageWithDescription
GraphQL API field
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
The GraphQL API field defaultMergeCommitMessageWithDescription
has been deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 15.0. For projects with a commit message template set, it will ignore the template.
dependency_proxy_for_private_groups
feature flag
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
We added a feature flag because GitLab-#11582 changed how public groups use the Dependency Proxy. Prior to this change, you could use the Dependency Proxy without authentication. The change requires authentication to use the Dependency Proxy.
In milestone 15.0, we will remove the feature flag entirely. Moving forward, you must authenticate when using the Dependency Proxy.
pipelines
field from the version
field
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
In GraphQL, there are two pipelines
fields that you can use in a PackageDetailsType
to get the pipelines for package versions:
- The
versions
field’spipelines
field. This returns all the pipelines associated with all the package’s versions, which can pull an unbounded number of objects in memory and create performance concerns. - The
pipelines
field of a specificversion
. This returns only the pipelines associated with that single package version.
To mitigate possible performance problems, we will remove the versions
field’s pipelines
field in milestone 15.0. Although you will no longer be able to get all pipelines for all versions of a package, you can still get the pipelines of a single version through the remaining pipelines
field for that version.
projectFingerprint
in PipelineSecurityReportFinding
GraphQL
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The projectFingerprint
field in the PipelineSecurityReportFinding
GraphQL object is being deprecated. This field contains a “fingerprint” of security findings used to determine uniqueness.
The method for calculating fingerprints has changed, resulting in different values. Going forward, the new values will be
exposed in the UUID field. Data previously available in the projectFingerprint field will eventually be removed entirely.
promote-db
command from gitlab-ctl
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
In GitLab 14.5, we introduced the command gitlab-ctl promote
to promote any Geo secondary node to a primary during a failover. This command replaces gitlab-ctl promote-db
which is used to promote database nodes in multi-node Geo secondary sites. gitlab-ctl promote-db
will continue to function as-is and be available until GitLab 15.0. We recommend that Geo customers begin testing the new gitlab-ctl promote
command in their staging environments and incorporating the new command in their failover procedures.
promote-to-primary-node
command from gitlab-ctl
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
- Breaking change
In GitLab 14.5, we introduced the command gitlab-ctl promote
to promote any Geo secondary node to a primary during a failover. This command replaces gitlab-ctl promote-to-primary-node
which was only usable for single-node Geo sites. gitlab-ctl promote-to-primary-node
will continue to function as-is and be available until GitLab 15.0. We recommend that Geo customers begin testing the new gitlab-ctl promote
command in their staging environments and incorporating the new command in their failover procedures.
started
iterations API field
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
- Breaking change
The started
field in the iterations API is being deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 15.0. This field is being replaced with the current
field (already available) which aligns with the naming for other time-based entities, such as milestones.
type
and types
keyword in CI/CD configuration
- Announced in: GitLab 14.6
- Breaking change
The type
and types
CI/CD keywords will be removed in GitLab 15.0. Pipelines that use these keywords will stop working, so you must switch to stage
and stages
, which have the same behavior.
apiFuzzingCiConfigurationCreate GraphQL mutation
- Announced in: GitLab 14.6
- Breaking change
The API Fuzzing configuration snippet is now being generated client-side and does not require an
API request anymore. We are therefore deprecating the apiFuzzingCiConfigurationCreate
mutation
which isn’t being used in GitLab anymore.
bundler-audit Dependency Scanning tool
- Announced in: GitLab 14.6
- Breaking change
As of 14.6 bundler-audit is being deprecated from Dependency Scanning. It will continue to be in our CI/CD template while deprecated. We are removing bundler-audit from Dependency Scanning on May 22, 2022 in 15.0. After this removal Ruby scanning functionality will not be affected as it is still being covered by Gemnasium.
If you have explicitly excluded bundler-audit using DS_EXCLUDED_ANALYZERS you will need to clean up (remove the reference) in 15.0. If you have customized your pipeline’s Dependency Scanning configuration, for example to edit the bundler-audit-dependency_scanning
job, you will want to switch to gemnasium-dependency_scanning before removal in 15.0, to prevent your pipeline from failing. If you have not used the DS_EXCLUDED_ANALYZERS to reference bundler-audit, or customized your template specifically for bundler-audit, you will not need to take action.
htpasswd Authentication for the Container Registry
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
- Breaking change
The Container Registry supports authentication with htpasswd
. It relies on an Apache htpasswd
file, with passwords hashed using bcrypt
.
Since it isn’t used in the context of GitLab (the product), htpasswd
authentication will be deprecated in GitLab 14.9 and removed in GitLab 15.0.
user_email_lookup_limit API field
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
- Breaking change
The user_email_lookup_limit
API field is deprecated and will be removed in GitLab 15.0. Until GitLab 15.0, user_email_lookup_limit
is aliased to search_rate_limit
and existing workflows will continue to work.
Any API calls attempting to change the rate limits for user_email_lookup_limit
should use search_rate_limit
instead.
GitLab 14.10
Permissions change for downloading Composer dependencies
- Announced in: GitLab 14.9
- Breaking change
The GitLab Composer repository can be used to push, search, fetch metadata about, and download PHP dependencies. All these actions require authentication, except for downloading dependencies.
Downloading Composer dependencies without authentication is deprecated in GitLab 14.9, and will be removed in GitLab 15.0. Starting with GitLab 15.0, you must authenticate to download Composer dependencies.
GitLab 14.9
Configurable Gitaly per_repository
election strategy
- Announced in: GitLab 14.8
Configuring the per_repository
Gitaly election strategy is deprecated.
per_repository
has been the only option since GitLab 14.0.
This change is part of regular maintenance to keep our codebase clean.
GitLab 14.8
openSUSE Leap 15.2 packages
- Announced in: GitLab 14.5
Distribution support and security updates for openSUSE Leap 15.2 are ending December 2021.
Starting in 14.5 we are providing packages for openSUSE Leap 15.3, and will stop providing packages for openSUSE Leap 15.2 in the 14.8 milestone.
GitLab 14.6
Release CLI distributed as a generic package
- Announced in: GitLab 14.2
The release-cli will be released as a generic package starting in GitLab 14.2. We will continue to deploy it as a binary to S3 until GitLab 14.5 and stop distributing it in S3 in GitLab 14.6.
GitLab 14.5
Rename Task Runner pod to Toolbox
- Announced in: GitLab 14.2
The Task Runner pod is used to execute periodic housekeeping tasks within the GitLab application and is often confused with the GitLab Runner. Thus, Task Runner will be renamed to Toolbox.
This will result in the rename of the sub-chart: gitlab/task-runner
to gitlab/toolbox
. Resulting pods will be named along the lines of {{ .Release.Name }}-toolbox
, which will often be gitlab-toolbox
. They will be locatable with the label app=toolbox
.