Merge requests

To incorporate changes from a source branch to a target branch, you use a merge request (MR).

When you open a merge request, you can visualize and collaborate on the changes before merge. Merge requests include:

  • A description of the request.
  • Code changes and inline code reviews.
  • Information about CI/CD pipelines.
  • A comment section for discussion threads.
  • The list of commits.

For a quick overview of merge requests, view this GitLab Flow video.

Create a merge request

Learn the various ways to create a merge request.

Use merge request templates

When you create a merge request, GitLab checks for the existence of a description template to add data to your merge request. GitLab checks these locations in order from 1 to 5, and applies the first template found to your merge request:

NameProject UI
setting
Group
default.md
Instance
default.md
Project
default.md
No template
Standard commit message12345
Commit message with an issue closing pattern like Closes #1234 12345 *
Branch name prefixed with an issue ID, like 1234-example 1 *2 *3 *4 *5 *
note
Items marked with an asterisk (*) also append an issue closing pattern.

View merge requests

You can view merge requests for your project, group, or yourself.

For a project

To view all merge requests for a project:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Projects and find your project.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Merge requests.

Or, to use a keyboard shortcut, press g + m.

For all projects in a group

To view merge requests for all projects in a group:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Groups and find your group.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Merge requests.

If your group contains subgroups, this view also displays merge requests from the subgroup projects.

Assigned to you

To view all merge requests assigned to you:

  1. On the top bar, put your cursor in the Search box.
  2. From the dropdown list, select Merge requests assigned to me.

or:

or:

  1. On the top bar, in the upper-right corner, select Merge requests ().
  2. From the dropdown list, select Assigned to you.

Filter the list of merge requests

Version history
  • Filtering by approved-by introduced in GitLab 13.0.
  • Filtering by reviewer introduced in GitLab 13.7.
  • Filtering by potential approvers was moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.
  • Filtering by approved-by moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

To filter the list of merge requests:

  1. Above the list of merge requests, select Search or filter results….
  2. From the dropdown list, select the attribute you wish to filter by. Some examples:
    • By environment or deployment date.
    • ID: Enter filter #30 to return only merge request 30.
    • User filters: Type (or select from the dropdown list) any of these filters to display a list of users:
      • Approved-By, for merge requests already approved by a user. .
      • Approver, for merge requests that this user is eligible to approve. (For more information, read about Code owners).
      • Reviewer, for merge requests reviewed by this user.
  3. Select or type the operator to use for filtering the attribute. The following operators are available:
    • =: Is
    • !=: Is not
  4. Enter the text to filter the attribute by. You can filter some attributes by None or Any.
  5. Repeat this process to filter by multiple attributes. Multiple attributes are joined by a logical AND.
  6. Select a Sort direction, either for descending order, or for ascending order.

GitLab displays the results on-screen, but you can also retrieve them as an RSS feed.

By environment or deployment date

Introduced in GitLab 13.6.

To filter merge requests by deployment data, such as the environment or a date, you can type (or select from the dropdown list) the following:

  • Environment
  • Deployed-before
  • Deployed-after
note
Projects using a fast-forward merge method do not return results, as this method does not create a merge commit.

When filtering by an environment, a dropdown list presents all environments that you can choose from:

Filter MRs by their environment

When filtering by Deployed-before or Deployed-after, the date refers to when the deployment to an environment (triggered by the merge commit) completed successfully. You must enter the deploy date manually. Deploy dates use the format YYYY-MM-DD, and must be quoted if you wish to specify both a date and time ("YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM"):

Filter MRs by a deploy date

Add changes to a merge request

If you have permission to add changes to a merge request, you can add your changes to an existing merge request in several ways, depending on the complexity of your change and whether you need access to a development environment:

Assign a user to a merge request

To assign the merge request to a user, use the /assign @user quick action in a text area in a merge request, or:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Projects and find your project.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Merge requests and find your merge request.
  3. On the right sidebar, expand the right sidebar and locate the Assignees section.
  4. Select Edit.
  5. Search for the user you want to assign, and select the user.

The merge request is added to the user’s assigned merge request list.

Assign multiple users

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

GitLab enables multiple assignees for merge requests, if multiple people are accountable for it:

multiple assignees for merge requests sidebar

To assign multiple assignees to a merge request, use the /assign @user quick action in a text area, or:

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Projects and find your project.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Merge requests and find your merge request.
  3. On the right sidebar, expand the right sidebar and locate the Assignees section.
  4. Select Edit and, from the dropdown list, select all users you want to assign the merge request to.

To remove an assignee, clear the user from the same dropdown list.

Close a merge request

If you decide to permanently stop work on a merge request, GitLab recommends you close the merge request rather than delete it. The author and assignees of a merge request, and users with Developer, Maintainer, or Owner roles in a project can close merge requests in the project:

  1. Go to the merge request you want to close.
  2. Scroll to the comment box at the bottom of the page.
  3. Following the comment box, select Close merge request.

GitLab closes the merge request, but preserves records of the merge request, its comments, and any associated pipelines.

Delete a merge request

GitLab recommends you close, rather than delete, merge requests.

caution
You cannot undo the deletion of a merge request.

To delete a merge request:

  1. Sign in to GitLab as a user with the project Owner role. Only users with this role can delete merge requests in a project.
  2. Go to the merge request you want to delete, and select Edit.
  3. Scroll to the bottom of the page, and select Delete merge request.

Delete the source branch on merge

You can delete the source branch for a merge request:

  • When you create a merge request, by selecting Delete source branch when merge request accepted.
  • When you merge a merge request, if you have the Maintainer role, by selecting Delete source branch.

An administrator can make this option the default in the project’s settings.

Update merge requests when target branch merges

Version history

Merge requests are often chained together, with one merge request depending on the code added or changed in another merge request. To support keeping individual merge requests small, GitLab can update up to four open merge requests when their target branch merges into main. For example:

  • Merge request 1: merge feature-alpha into main.
  • Merge request 2: merge feature-beta into feature-alpha.

If these merge requests are open at the same time, and merge request 1 (feature-alpha) merges into main, GitLab updates the destination of merge request 2 from feature-alpha to main.

Merge requests with interconnected content updates are usually handled in one of these ways:

  • Merge request 1 is merged into main first. Merge request 2 is then retargeted to main.
  • Merge request 2 is merged into feature-alpha. The updated merge request 1, which now contains the contents of feature-alpha and feature-beta, is merged into main.

This feature works only when a merge request is merged. Selecting Remove source branch after merging does not retarget open merge requests. This improvement is proposed as a follow-up.

Move sidebar actions

Version history
  • Introduced in GitLab 14.10 with a flag named moved_mr_sidebar. Disabled by default.
  • Changed to also move actions on issues, incidents, and epics in GitLab 16.0.
On self-managed GitLab, by default this feature is not available. To make it available per project or for your entire instance, ask an administrator to enable the feature flag named moved_mr_sidebar. On GitLab.com, this feature is enabled in the following projects: gitlab-org/gitlab, gitlab-com/www-gitlab-com, and gitlab-org/customers-gitlab-com.

When this feature flag is enabled, in the upper-right corner, Merge request actions () contains the following actions:

In GitLab 16.0 and later, similar action menus are available on issues, incidents, and epics.

When this feature flag is disabled, these actions are in the right sidebar.

Merge request workflows

For a software developer working in a team:

  1. You check out a new branch, and submit your changes through a merge request.
  2. You gather feedback from your team.
  3. You work on the implementation optimizing code with Code Quality reports.
  4. You verify your changes with Unit test reports in GitLab CI/CD.
  5. You avoid using dependencies whose license is not compatible with your project with License Compliance reports.
  6. You request the approval from your manager.
  7. Your manager:
    1. Pushes a commit with their final review.
    2. Approves the merge request.
    3. Sets it to merge when pipeline succeeds.
  8. Your changes get deployed to production with manual jobs for GitLab CI/CD.
  9. Your implementations were successfully shipped to your customer.

For a web developer writing a webpage for your company’s website:

  1. You check out a new branch and submit a new page through a merge request.
  2. You gather feedback from your reviewers.
  3. You preview your changes with Review Apps.
  4. You request your web designers for their implementation.
  5. You request the approval from your manager.
  6. Once approved, your merge request is squashed and merged, and deployed to staging with GitLab Pages.
  7. Your production team cherry-picks the merge commit into production.

Filter activity in a merge request

Introduced in GitLab 15.11 with a flag named mr_activity_filters. Disabled by default.

On self-managed GitLab, by default this feature is not available. To make it available per user, ask an administrator to enable the feature flag named mr_activity_filters for individual or groups of users. On GitLab.com, this feature unavailable.

To understand the history of a merge request, filter its activity feed to show you only the items that are relevant to you.

  1. On the top bar, select Main menu > Projects and find your project.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Merge requests.
  3. Select a merge request.
  4. Scroll to Activity.
  5. On the right side of the page, select Activity filter to show the filter options. If you’ve selected filter options previously, this field shows a summary of your choices, like Activity + 5 more.
  6. Select the types of activity you want to see. Options include:

    • Assignees & Reviewers
    • Approvals
    • Comments
    • Commits & branches
    • Edits
    • Labels
    • Lock status
    • Mentions
    • Merge request status
    • Tracking
  7. Optional. Select Sort () to reverse the sort order.

Your selection persists across all merge requests. You can also change the sort order by clicking the sort button on the right.

Troubleshooting

Rebase a merge request from the Rails console

In addition to the /rebase quick action, users with access to the Rails console can rebase a merge request from the Rails console. Replace <username>, <namespace/project>, and <iid> with appropriate values:

caution
Any command that changes data directly could be damaging if not run correctly, or under the right conditions. We highly recommend running them in a test environment with a backup of the instance ready to be restored, just in case.
u = User.find_by_username('<username>')
p = Project.find_by_full_path('<namespace/project>')
m = p.merge_requests.find_by(iid: <iid>)
MergeRequests::RebaseService.new(project: m.target_project, current_user: u).execute(m)

Fix incorrect merge request status

If a merge request remains Open after its changes are merged, users with access to the Rails console can correct the merge request’s status. Replace <username>, <namespace/project>, and <iid> with appropriate values:

caution
Any command that changes data directly could be damaging if not run correctly, or under the right conditions. We highly recommend running them in a test environment with a backup of the instance ready to be restored, just in case.
u = User.find_by_username('<username>')
p = Project.find_by_full_path('<namespace/project>')
m = p.merge_requests.find_by(iid: <iid>)
MergeRequests::PostMergeService.new(project: p, current_user: u).execute(m)

Running this command against a merge request with unmerged changes causes the merge request to display an incorrect message: merged into <branch-name>.

Close a merge request from the Rails console

If closing a merge request doesn’t work through the UI or API, you may want to attempt to close it in a Rails console session:

caution
Commands that change data can cause damage if not run correctly or under the right conditions. Always run commands in a test environment first and have a backup instance ready to restore.
u = User.find_by_username('<username>')
p = Project.find_by_full_path('<namespace/project>')
m = p.merge_requests.find_by(iid: <iid>)
MergeRequests::CloseService.new(project: p, current_user: u).execute(m)

Delete a merge request from the Rails console

If deleting a merge request doesn’t work through the UI or API, you may want to attempt to delete it in a Rails console session:

caution
Any command that changes data directly could be damaging if not run correctly, or under the right conditions. We highly recommend running them in a test environment with a backup of the instance ready to be restored, just in case.
u = User.find_by_username('<username>')
p = Project.find_by_full_path('<namespace/project>')
m = p.merge_requests.find_by(iid: <iid>)
Issuable::DestroyService.new(container: m.project, current_user: u).execute(m)