- Migrate groups by direct transfer (recommended)
- Migrate groups by uploading an export file (deprecated)
- Automate group and project import
Migrating GitLab groups
You can migrate GitLab groups:
- From self-managed GitLab to GitLab.com.
- From GitLab.com to self-managed GitLab.
- From one self-managed GitLab instance to another.
- Between groups in the same GitLab instance.
You can migrate groups in two ways:
- By direct transfer (recommended).
- By uploading an export file.
If you migrate from GitLab.com to self-managed GitLab, an administrator can create users on the self-managed GitLab instance.
Migrate groups by direct transfer (recommended)
-
Introduced in GitLab 13.7 for group resources with a flag named
bulk_import
. Disabled by default. - Group items enabled on GitLab.com and self-managed in GitLab 14.3.
-
Introduced in GitLab 14.4 for project resources with a flag named
bulk_import_projects
. Disabled by default. - Enabled on GitLab.com in GitLab 15.6.
- New application setting
bulk_import_enabled
introduced in GitLab 15.8.bulk_import
feature flag removed. -
bulk_import_projects
feature flag removed in GitLab 15.10.
On self-managed GitLab, by default migrating group items is not available. To show the feature, an administrator can enable it in application settings.
Migrating groups by direct transfer copies the groups from one place to another. You can:
- Copy many groups at once.
- In the GitLab UI, copy top-level groups to:
- Another top-level group.
- The subgroup of any existing top-level group.
- Another GitLab instance, including GitLab.com.
- In the API, copy top-level groups and subgroups to these locations.
- Copy groups with projects (in Beta and not ready for production
use) or without projects. Copying projects with groups is available:
- On GitLab.com by default.
Not all group and project resources are copied. See list of copied resources below:
We invite you to leave your feedback about migrating by direct transfer in the feedback issue.
If you want to move groups instead of copying groups, you can transfer groups if the groups are in the same GitLab instance. Transferring groups is a faster and more complete option.
Known issues
See epic 6629 for a list of known issues for migrating by direct transfer.
Estimating migration duration
Estimating the duration of migration by direct transfer is difficult. The following factors affect migration duration:
- Hardware and database resources available on the source and destination GitLab instances. More resources on the source and destination instances can result in
shorter migration duration because:
- The source instance receives API requests, and extracts and serializes the entities to export.
- The destination instance runs the jobs and creates the entities in its database.
- Complexity and size of data to be exported. For example, imagine you want to migrate two different projects with 1000 merge requests each. The two projects can take very different amounts of time to migrate if one of the projects has a lot more attachments, comments, and other items on the merge requests. Therefore, the number of merge requests on a project is a poor predictor of how long a project will take to migrate.
There’s no exact formula to reliably estimate a migration. However, the average durations of each pipeline worker importing a project relation can help you to get an idea of how long importing your projects might take:
Project resource type | Average time (in seconds) to import a record |
---|---|
Empty Project | 2.4 |
Repository | 20 |
Project Attributes | 1.5 |
Members | 0.2 |
Labels | 0.1 |
Milestones | 0.07 |
Badges | 0.1 |
Issues | 0.1 |
Snippets | 0.05 |
Snippet Repositories | 0.5 |
Boards | 0.1 |
Merge Requests | 1 |
External Pull Requests | 0.5 |
Protected Branches | 0.1 |
Project Feature | 0.3 |
Container Expiration Policy | 0.3 |
Service Desk Setting | 0.3 |
Releases | 0.1 |
CI Pipelines | 0.2 |
Commit Notes | 0.05 |
Wiki | 10 |
Uploads | 0.5 |
LFS Objects | 0.5 |
Design | 0.1 |
Auto DevOps | 0.1 |
Pipeline Schedules | 0.5 |
References | 5 |
Push Rule | 0.1 |
If you are migrating large projects and encounter problems with timeouts or duration of the migration, see Reducing migration duration.
Limits
Hardcoded limits apply on migration by direct transfer.
Limit | Description |
---|---|
6 | Maximum number of migrations permitted by a destination GitLab instance per minute per user. Introduced in GitLab 15.9. |
5 GB | Maximum relation size that can be downloaded from the source instance. |
10 GB | Maximum size of a decompressed archive. |
210 seconds | Maximum number of seconds to wait for decompressing an archive file. |
50 MB | Maximum length an NDJSON row can have. |
5 minutes | Maximum number of seconds until an empty export status on source instance is raised. |
8 hours | Time until migration times out. |
You can test the maximum relation size limit using these APIs:
If either API produces files larger than the maximum relation size limit, group migration by direct transfer fails.
Visibility rules
After migration:
- Private groups and projects stay private.
- Internal groups and projects:
- Stay internal when copied into an internal group unless internal visibility is restricted. In that case, the groups and projects become private.
- Become private when copied into a private group.
- Public groups and projects:
- Stay public when copied into a public group unless public visibility is restricted. In that case, the groups and projects become internal.
- Become internal when copied into an internal group unless internal visibility is restricted. In that case, the groups and projects become private.
- Become private when copied into a private group.
If you used a private network on your source instance to hide content from the general public, make sure to have a similar setup on the destination instance, or to import into a private group.
Prerequisites
Requirement for Maintainer role instead of Developer role introduced in GitLab 16.0 and backported to GitLab 15.11.1 and GitLab 15.10.5.
To migrate groups by direct transfer:
- The network connection between instances or GitLab.com must support HTTPS.
- Any firewalls must not block the connection between the source and destination GitLab instances.
- Both GitLab instances must have group migration by direct transfer enabled in application settings by an instance administrator.
- The source GitLab instance must be running GitLab 14.0 or later.
- You must have a
personal access token for
the source GitLab instance:
- For GitLab 15.1 and later source instances, the personal access token must
have the
api
scope. - For GitLab 15.0 and earlier source instances, the personal access token must
have both the
api
andread_repository
scopes.
- For GitLab 15.1 and later source instances, the personal access token must
have the
- You must have the Owner role on the source group to migrate from.
- Your must have a role on the destination namespace the enables you to create a subgroup in that namespace.
Prepare user accounts
To ensure GitLab maps users and their contributions correctly:
- Create the required users on the destination GitLab instance. You can create users with the API only on self-managed instances because it requires
administrator access. When migrating to GitLab.com or a self-managed GitLab instance you can:
- Create users manually.
- Set up or use your existing SAML SSO provider and leverage user synchronization of SAML SSO groups supported through SCIM. You can bypass the GitLab user account verification with verified email domains.
- Ensure that users have a public email on the source GitLab instance that matches any confirmed email address on the destination GitLab instance. Most users receive an email asking them to confirm their email address.
- If users already exist on the destination instance and you use SAML SSO for GitLab.com groups, all users must link their SAML identity to their GitLab.com account.
Connect the source GitLab instance
Create the group you want to import to and connect the source GitLab instance:
- Create either:
- A new group. On the left sidebar, at the top, select Create new () and New group. Then select Import group.
- A new subgroup. On existing group’s page, either:
- Select New subgroup.
- On the left sidebar, at the top, select Create new () and New subgroup. Then select the import an existing group link.
- Enter the URL of a GitLab instance running GitLab 14.0 or later.
- Enter the personal access token for your source GitLab instance.
- Select Connect instance.
Select the groups and projects to import
Introduced in GitLab 15.8, option to import groups with or without projects.
After you have authorized access to the source GitLab instance, you are redirected to the GitLab group importer page. Here you can see a list of the top-level groups on the connected source instance where you have the Owner role.
- By default, the proposed group namespaces match the names as they exist in source instance, but based on your permissions, you can choose to edit these names before you proceed to import any of them.
- Next to the groups you want to import, select either:
- Import with projects.
- Import without projects.
- The Status column shows the import status of each group. If you leave the page open, it updates in real-time.
- After a group has been imported, select its GitLab path to open its GitLab URL.
Group import history
You can view all groups migrated by you by direct transfer listed on the group import history page. This list includes:
- Paths of source groups.
- Paths of destination groups.
- Start date of each import.
- Status of each import.
- Error details if any errors occurred.
To view group import history:
- Sign in to GitLab.
- On the left sidebar, at the top, select Create new () and New group.
- Select Import group.
- In the upper-right corner, select History.
- If there are any errors for a particular import, you can see them by selecting Details.
Migrated group items
The group items that are migrated depend on the version of GitLab you use on the destination. To determine if a specific group item is migrated:
- Check the
groups/stage.rb
file for all editions and thegroups/stage.rb
file for Enterprise Edition for your version on the destination. For example, for version 15.9: - Check the
group/import_export.yml
file for groups for your version on the destination. For example, for version 15.9: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/15-9-stable-ee/lib/gitlab/import_export/group/import_export.yml.
Any other group items are not migrated.
Group items that are migrated to the destination GitLab instance include:
Group item | Introduced in |
---|---|
Badges | GitLab 13.11 |
Boards | GitLab 13.7 |
Board lists | GitLab 13.7 |
Epics 1 | GitLab 13.7 |
Group labels 2 | GitLab 13.9 |
Iterations | GitLab 13.10 |
Iteration cadences | GitLab 15.4 |
Members 3 | GitLab 13.9 |
Group milestones | GitLab 13.10 |
Namespace settings | GitLab 14.10 |
Release milestones | GitLab 15.0 |
Subgroups | GitLab 13.7 |
Uploads | GitLab 13.7 |
- Epic resource state events introduced in GitLab 15.4, label associations introduced in GitLab 13.12, state and state ID introduced in GitLab 13.7, and system note metadata introduced in GitLab 14.0.
- Group Labels cannot retain any associated Label Priorities during import. These labels will need to be re-prioritized manually once the relevant Project is migrated to the destination instance.
- Group members are associated with the imported group if the user:
- Already exists in the destination GitLab instance.
- Has a public email in the source GitLab instance that matches a confirmed email in the destination GitLab instance.
Excluded items
Some group items are excluded from migration because they either:
- May contain sensitive information: CI/CD variables, webhooks, and deploy tokens.
- Are not supported: push rules.
Migrated project items
-
Introduced in GitLab 14.4 with a flag named
bulk_import_projects
. Disabled by default. - Enabled on GitLab.com in GitLab 15.6.
-
bulk_import_projects
feature flag removed in GitLab 15.10. - Project-only migrations using API added in GitLab 15.11.
If you choose to migrate projects when you select groups to migrate, project items are migrated with the projects.
The project items that are migrated depends on the version of GitLab you use on the destination. To determine if a specific project item is migrated:
- Check the
projects/stage.rb
file for all editions and theprojects/stage.rb
file for Enterprise Edition for your version on the destination. For example, for version 15.9: - Check the
project/import_export.yml
file for projects for your version on the destination. For example, for version 15.9: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/15-9-stable-ee/lib/gitlab/import_export/project/import_export.yml.
Any other project items are not migrated.
If you choose not to migrate projects along with groups or if you want to retry a project migration, you can initiate project-only migrations using the API.
Project items that are migrated to the destination GitLab instance include:
Project item | Introduced in |
---|---|
Projects | GitLab 14.4 |
Auto DevOps | GitLab 14.6 |
Badges | GitLab 14.6 |
Branches (including protected branches) | GitLab 14.7 |
CI Pipelines | GitLab 14.6 |
Commit comments | GitLab 15.10 |
Designs | GitLab 15.1 |
Issues | GitLab 14.4 |
Issue boards | GitLab 14.4 |
Labels | GitLab 14.4 |
LFS Objects | GitLab 14.8 |
Members | GitLab 14.8 |
Merge requests | GitLab 14.5 |
Push rules | GitLab 14.6 |
Milestones | GitLab 14.5 |
External pull requests | GitLab 14.5 |
Pipeline history | GitLab 14.6 |
Pipeline schedules | GitLab 14.8 |
Project features | GitLab 14.6 |
Releases | GitLab 15.1 |
Release evidences | GitLab 15.1 |
Repositories | GitLab 14.4 |
Snippets | GitLab 14.6 |
Settings | GitLab 14.6 |
Uploads | GitLab 14.5 |
Wikis | GitLab 14.6 |
Issue-related items
Issue-related project items that are migrated to the destination GitLab instance include:
Issue-related project item | Introduced in |
---|---|
Issue iterations | GitLab 15.4 |
Issue resource state events | GitLab 15.4 |
Issue resource milestone events | GitLab 15.4 |
Issue resource iteration events | GitLab 15.4 |
Merge request URL references | GitLab 15.6 |
Time tracking | GitLab 14.4 |
Merge request-related items
Merge request-related project items that are migrated to the destination GitLab instance include:
Merge request-related project item | Introduced in |
---|---|
Multiple merge request assignees | GitLab 15.3 |
Merge request reviewers | GitLab 15.3 |
Merge request approvers | GitLab 15.3 |
Merge request resource state events | GitLab 15.4 |
Merge request resource milestone events | GitLab 15.4 |
Issue URL references | GitLab 15.6 |
Time tracking | GitLab 14.5 |
Setting-related items
Setting-related project items that are migrated to the destination GitLab instance include:
Setting-related project item | Introduced in |
---|---|
Avatar | GitLab 14.6 |
Container expiration policy | GitLab 14.6 |
Project properties | GitLab 14.6 |
Service Desk | GitLab 14.6 |
Excluded items
Some project items are excluded from migration because they either:
- May contain sensitive information:
- CI/CD variables
- Deploy keys
- Deploy tokens
- Pipeline schedule variables
- Pipeline triggers
- Webhooks
- Are not supported:
- Agents
- Container Registry
- Environments
- Feature flags
- Infrastructure Registry
- Package Registry
- Pages domains
- Remote mirrors
Troubleshooting
In a rails console session, you can find the failure or error messages for the group import attempt using:
# Get relevant import records
import = BulkImports::Entity.where(namespace_id: Group.id).map(&:bulk_import).last
# Alternative lookup by user
import = BulkImport.where(user_id: User.find(...)).last
# Get list of import entities. Each entity represents either a group or a project
entities = import.entities
# Get a list of entity failures
entities.map(&:failures).flatten
# Alternative failure lookup by status
entities.where(status: [-1]).pluck(:destination_name, :destination_namespace, :status)
You can also see all migrated entities with any failures related to them using an API endpoint.
Stale imports
Introduced in GitLab 14.10.
When troubleshooting group migration, an import may not complete because the import workers took
longer than 8 hours to execute. In this case, the status
of either a BulkImport
or
BulkImport::Entity
is 3
(timeout
):
# Get relevant import records
import = BulkImports::Entity.where(namespace_id: Group.id).map(&:bulk_import)
import.status #=> 3 means that the import timed out.
Error: 404 Group Not Found
If you attempt to import a group that has a path comprised of only numbers (for example, 5000
), GitLab attempts to
find the group by ID instead of the path. This causes a 404 Group Not Found
error in GitLab 15.4 and earlier.
To solve this, you must change the source group path to include a non-numerical character using either:
-
The GitLab UI:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Settings > General.
- Expand Advanced.
- Under Change group URL, change the group URL to include non-numeric characters.
-
The Groups API.
Other 404
errors
You can receive other 404
errors when importing a group, for example:
"exception_message": "Unsuccessful response 404 from [FILTERED] Bo...",
"exception_class": "BulkImports::NetworkError",
This error indicates a problem transferring from the source instance. To solve this, check that you have met the prerequisites on the source instance.
Reducing migration duration
A single direct transfer migration runs 5 entities (groups or projects) per import at a time, independent of the number of workers available on the destination instance. That said, having more workers on the destination instance speeds up migration by decreasing the time it takes to import each entity.
Increasing the number of workers on the destination instance helps reduce the migration duration until the source instance hardware resources are saturated. Exporting and importing relations in batches (proposed in epic 9036) will make having enough available workers on the destination instance even more useful.
The number of workers on the source instance should be enough to export the 5 concurrent entities in parallel (for each running import). Otherwise, there can be delays and potential timeouts as the destination is waiting for exported data to become available.
Distributing projects in different groups helps to avoid timeouts. If several large projects are in the same group, you can:
- Move large projects to different groups or subgroups.
- Start separate migrations each group and subgroup.
The GitLab UI can only migrate top-level groups. Using the API, you can also migrate subgroups.
Migrate groups by uploading an export file (deprecated)
- Introduced in GitLab 13.0 as an experimental feature. May change in future releases.
- Deprecated in GitLab 14.6.
Prerequisites:
- Owner role on the group to migrate.
Using file exports, you can:
- Export any group to a file and upload that file to another GitLab instance or to another location on the same instance.
- Use either the GitLab UI or the API.
- Migrate groups one by one, then export and import each project for the groups one by one.
GitLab maps user contributions correctly when an admin access token is used to perform the import. GitLab does not map user contributions correctly when you are importing from a self-managed instance to GitLab.com. Correct mapping of user contributions when importing from a self-managed instance to GitLab.com can be preserved with paid involvement of Professional Services team.
Note the following:
- Exports are stored in a temporary directory and are deleted every 24 hours by a specific worker.
- To preserve group-level relationships from imported projects, export and import groups first so that projects can be imported into the desired group structure.
- Imported groups are given a
private
visibility level, unless imported into a parent group. - If imported into a parent group, a subgroup inherits the same level of visibility unless otherwise restricted.
- You can export groups from the Community Edition to the Enterprise Edition and vice versa. The Enterprise Edition retains some group data that isn’t part of the Community Edition. If you’re exporting a group from the Enterprise Edition to the Community Edition, you may lose this data. For more information, see downgrading from EE to CE.
Compatibility
Support for JSON-formatted project file exports removed in GitLab 15.8.
Group file exports are in NDJSON format.
You can import group file exports that were exported from a version of GitLab up to two minor versions behind, which is similar to our process for security releases.
For example:
Destination version | Compatible source versions |
---|---|
13.0 | 13.0, 12.10, 12.9 |
13.1 | 13.1, 13.0, 12.10 |
Exported contents
The import_export.yml
file for groups lists items exported and imported when migrating groups using file exports. View this file in the branch
for your version of GitLab to check which items can be imported to the destination GitLab instance. For example,
import_export.yml
on the 14-10-stable-ee
branch.
Group items that are exported include:
- Milestones
- Group Labels (without associated label priorities)
- Boards and Board Lists
- Badges
- Subgroups (including all the aforementioned data)
- Epics
- Epic resource state events (Introduced in GitLab 15.4)
- Events
- Wikis (Introduced in GitLab 13.9)
- Iterations cadences (Introduced in 15.4)
Items that are not exported include:
- Projects
- Runner tokens
- SAML discovery tokens
Preparation
- To preserve the member list and their respective permissions on imported groups, review the users in these groups. Make sure these users exist before importing the desired groups.
- Users must set a public email in the source GitLab instance that matches their confirmed primary email in the destination GitLab instance. Most users receive an email asking them to confirm their email address.
Enable export for a group
Prerequisite:
- You must have the Owner role for the group.
To enable import and export for a group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to.
- Select Admin Area.
- On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
- Expand Visibility and access controls.
- In the Import sources section, select the checkboxes for the sources you want.
Export a group
Prerequisites:
- You must have the Owner role for the group.
To export the contents of a group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Settings > General.
- In the Advanced section, select Export group.
- After the export is generated, you should receive an email with a link to the exported contents in a compressed tar archive, with contents in NDJSON format.
-
Alternatively, you can download the export from the UI:
- Return to your group’s Settings > General page.
- In the Advanced section, select Download export. You can also generate a new file by selecting Regenerate export.
You can also export a group using the API.
Import the group
- On the left sidebar, at the top, select Create new () and New subgroup.
- Select the import an existing group link.
- Enter your group name.
- Accept or modify the associated group URL.
- Select Choose file….
- Select the file that you exported in the Export a group section.
- To begin importing, select Import.
Your newly imported group page appears after the operation completes.
0
(unlimited).
As an administrator, you can modify the maximum import file size. To do so, use the max_import_size
option in the
Application settings API or the
Admin Area.
Default modified from 50 MB to 0 in GitLab 13.8.Rate limits
To help avoid abuse, by default, users are rate limited to:
Request Type | Limit |
---|---|
Export | 6 groups per minute |
Download export | 1 download per group per minute |
Import | 6 groups per minute |
Automate group and project import
For information on automating user, group, and project import API calls, see Automate group and project import.