- Create a custom role
- Billing and seat usage
- Add a user to your group with a custom role
- Remove a custom role
- Known issues
Custom roles
-
Introduced in GitLab 15.7 with a flag named
customizable_roles
. - Enabled by default in GitLab 15.9.
- Feature flag removed in GitLab 15.10.
- The ability for a custom role to view a vulnerability report introduced in GitLab 16.1 with a flag named
custom_roles_vulnerability
. - Ability to view a vulnerability report enabled by default in GitLab 16.1.
-
Feature flag
custom_roles_vulnerability
removed in GitLab 16.2. - Ability to create and remove a custom role with the UI introduced in GitLab 16.4.
- Ability to manage group members introduced in GitLab 16.5.
- Ability to manage project access tokens introduced in GitLab 16.5 with a flag named
manage_project_access_tokens
. - Ability to archive projects introduced in GitLab 16.7.
- Ability to use the UI to add a user to your group with a custom role, change a user’s custom role, or remove a custom role from a group member introduced in GitLab 16.7.
Custom roles allow group Owners or instance administrators to create roles specific to the needs of their organization.
For a demo of the custom roles feature, see [Demo] Ultimate Guest can view code on private repositories via custom role.
You can discuss individual custom role and permission requests in issue 391760.
Create a custom role
Prerequisites:
- You must be an administrator for the self-managed instance, or have the Owner role in the group you are creating the custom role in.
- The group must be in the Ultimate tier.
- You must have:
- At least one private project so that you can see the effect of giving a user a custom role. The project can be in the group itself or one of that group’s subgroups.
- If you are using the API to create the custom role, a personal access token with the API scope.
You create a custom role by selecting permissions to add to a base role.
You can select any number of permissions. For example, you can create a custom role with the ability to:
- View vulnerability reports.
- Change the status of vulnerabilities.
- Approve merge requests.
GitLab SaaS
Prerequisites:
- You must have the Owner role in the group you are creating the custom role in.
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Settings > Roles and Permissions.
- Select Add new role.
- In Base role to use as template, select an existing non-custom role.
- In Role name, enter the custom role’s title.
- Optional. In Description, enter a description for the custom role.
- Select the Permissions for the new custom role.
- Select Create new role.
In Settings > Roles and Permissions, the list of all custom roles displays the:
- Custom role name.
- Role ID.
- Base role that the custom role uses as a template.
- Permissions.
Self Managed GitLab Instances
Prerequisites:
- You must be an administrator for the self-managed instance you are creating the custom role in.
- On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
- Select Settings > Roles and Permissions.
- From the top dropdown list, select the group you want to create a custom role in.
- Select Add new role.
- In Base role to use as template, select an existing non-custom role.
- In Role name, enter the custom role’s title.
- Optional. In Description, enter a description for the custom role.
- Select the Permissions for the new custom role.
- Select Create new role.
In Settings > Roles and Permissions, the list of all custom roles displays the:
- Custom role name.
- Role ID.
- Base role that the custom role uses as a template.
- Permissions.
To create a custom role, you can also use the API.
Available permissions
The following permissions are available. You can add these permissions in any combination to a base role to create a custom role.
Some permissions require having other permissions enabled first. For example, administration of vulnerabilities (admin_vulnerability
) can only be enabled if reading vulnerabilities (read_vulnerability
) is also enabled.
These requirements are documented in the Required permission
column in the following table.
Permission | Version | Required permission | Description |
---|---|---|---|
read_code
| GitLab 15.7 and later | Not applicable | View project code. Does not include the ability to pull code. |
read_vulnerability
| GitLab 16.1 and later | Not applicable | View vulnerability reports. |
admin_vulnerability
| GitLab 16.1 and later | read_vulnerability
| Change the status of vulnerabilities. |
read_dependency
| GitLab 16.3 and later | Not applicable | View project dependencies. |
admin_merge_request
| GitLab 16.4 and later | Not applicable | View and approve merge requests, revoke merge request approval, and view the associated merge request code. Does not allow users to view or change merge request approval rules. |
manage_project_access_tokens
| GitLab 16.5 and later | Not applicable | Create, delete, and list project access tokens. |
admin_group_member
| GitLab 16.5 and later | Not applicable | Add or remove group members. |
archive_project
| GitLab 16.6 and later | Not applicable | Archive and unarchive projects. |
Billing and seat usage
When you enable a custom role for a user with the Guest role, that user has access to elevated permissions over the base role, and therefore:
- Is considered a billable user on self-managed GitLab.
- Uses a seat on GitLab.com.
This does not apply when the user’s custom role only has the read_code
permission
enabled. Guest users with that specific permission only are not considered billable users
and do not use a seat.
Add a user to your group with a custom role
Prerequisites:
- You must be an administrator, or have the Owner role in the group you are creating the custom role in.
To add a user to your group with a custom role:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Manage > Members.
- Select Invite members.
- In Username or email address, if the user:
- Has a GitLab account, enter their username.
- Does not have a GitLab account, enter their email address.
- In Select a role, select a static or custom role.
- Optional. In Access expiration date (optional), enter or select a date. From that date onward, the user can no longer access the group.
- Select Invite. If you invite the user by their:
- GitLab username, the user is added to the member list.
- Email address, the user receives an email invitation and is prompted to create an account. If the invitation is not accepted, GitLab sends reminder emails two, five, and ten days later. Unaccepted invites are automatically deleted after 90 days.
The new member with custom role and custom permissions appears on the group’s members list.
Change a member’s custom role
To change a group member’s custom role:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Manage > Members.
- Select the Max role dropdown list for the member you want to select a custom role for.
- On the Change role dialog, select a different custom role.
Associate a custom role with an existing group member
You can use the API to associate a custom role with an existing group member.
Prerequisites:
- You must have the Owner role for the group.
To associate a custom role with an existing group member, a group member with the Owner role:
- Invites a user as a direct member to the root group or any subgroup or project in the root group’s hierarchy as a Guest. At this point, this Guest user cannot see any code on the projects in the group or subgroup.
-
Optional. If the Owner does not know the
id
of the Guest user receiving a custom role, finds thatid
by making an API request. -
Associates the member with the Guest+1 role using the Group and Project Members API endpoint
# to update a project membership curl --request PUT --header "Content-Type: application/json" --header "Authorization: Bearer <your_access_token>" --data '{"member_role_id": '<member_role_id>', "access_level": 10}' "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<project_id>/members/<user_id>" # to update a group membership curl --request PUT --header "Content-Type: application/json" --header "Authorization: Bearer <your_access_token>" --data '{"member_role_id": '<member_role_id>', "access_level": 10}' "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/groups/<group_id>/members/<user_id>"
Where:
-
<project_id
and<group_id>
: Theid
or URL-encoded path of the project or group associated with the membership receiving the custom role. -
<member_role_id>
: Theid
of the member role created in the previous section. -
<user_id>
: Theid
of the user receiving a custom role.
Now the Guest+1 user can view code on all projects associated with this membership.
-
Remove a custom role
Prerequisites:
- You must be an administrator, or have the Owner role in the group you are removing the custom role from.
You can remove a custom role from a group only if no group members have that role.
To do this, you can either remove the custom role from all group members with that custom role, or remove those members from the group.
Remove a custom role from a group member
To remove a custom role from a group member:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Manage > Members.
- Select the Max role dropdown list for the member you want to remove a custom role from.
- On the Change role dialog, select a static role.
You can update or remove a custom role from a group member also with the Group and Project Members API endpoint.
and pass an empty member_role_id
value:
# to update a project membership
curl --request PUT --header "Content-Type: application/json" --header "Authorization: Bearer <your_access_token>" --data '{"member_role_id": null, "access_level": 10}' "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<project_id>/members/<user_id>"
# to update a group membership
curl --request PUT --header "Content-Type: application/json" --header "Authorization: Bearer <your_access_token>" --data '{"member_role_id": null, "access_level": 10}' "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/groups/<group_id>/members/<user_id>"
Remove a group member with a custom role from the group
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Manage > Members.
- On the member row you want to remove, select the vertical ellipsis () and select Remove member.
- In the Remove member confirmation dialog, do not select any checkboxes.
- Select Remove member.
Delete the custom role
After you have made sure no group members have that custom role, delete the custom role.
- On the left sidebar, at the bottom, select Admin Area.
- Select Settings > Roles and Permissions.
- Select Custom Roles.
- In the Actions column, select Delete role () and confirm.
To delete a custom role, you can also use the API.
To use the API, you must know the id
of the custom role. If you do not know this
id
, find it by making an API request.
Known issues
- If a user with a custom role is shared with a group or project, their custom role is not transferred over with them. The user has the regular Guest role in the new group or project.
- You cannot use an Auditor user as a template for a custom role.