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Most work in GitLab is done in a project. Files and code are saved in projects, and most features are in the scope of projects.

View all projects for the instance

To view all projects for the GitLab instance:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to.
  2. Select Explore.

On the left sidebar, Projects is selected. On the right, the list shows all projects for the instance.

If you are not authenticated, then the list shows public projects only.

View projects you are a member of

To view projects you are a member of:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to.
  2. Select Your work.

On the left sidebar, Projects is selected. On the list, on the Yours tab, all the projects you are a member of are displayed.

View personal projects

Personal projects are projects created under your personal namespace.

For example, if you create an account with the username alex, and create a project called my-project under your username, the project is created at https://gitlab.example.com/alex/my-project.

To view your personal projects:

  1. On the left sidebar, select your avatar and then your username.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Personal projects.

View starred projects

To view projects you have starred:

  1. On the left sidebar, select your avatar and then your username.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Starred projects.

Edit project name and description

Use the project general settings to edit your project details.

Prerequisites:

  • You must have at least the Maintainer role for the project.
  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. Select Settings > General.
  3. In the Project name text box, enter your project name. See the limitations on project names.
  4. In the Project description text box, enter your project description. The description is limited to 500 characters.
  5. Under Project avatar, to change your project avatar, select Choose file.

Star a project

You can add a star to projects you use frequently to make them easier to find.

To add a star to a project:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. In the upper-right corner of the page, select Star.

Delete a project

Version history

You can mark a project to be deleted. After you delete a project:

  • Projects in personal namespaces are deleted immediately.
  • Projects in groups are deleted after a retention period.

Prerequisites:

  • You must have the Owner role for a project.

To delete a project:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. Select Settings > General.
  3. Expand Advanced.
  4. In the Delete this project section, select Delete project.
  5. On the confirmation dialog, enter the project name and select Yes, delete project.

This action deletes the project and all associated resources (such as issues and merge requests).

You can also delete projects using the Rails console.

Delayed project deletion Premium All offerings

Version history

Prerequisites:

  • You must have the Owner role for the project.

Projects in a group (not a personal namespace) can be deleted after a delay period.

On self-managed instances, group administrators can define a deletion delay period of between 1 and 90 days. On SaaS, there is a non-adjustable default retention period of seven days.

You can view projects that are pending deletion, and use the Rails console to find projects that are pending deletion.

Delete a project immediately

Version history

Prerequisites:

If you don’t want to wait for delayed deletion, you can delete a project immediately. To do this, perform the steps for deleting a projects again.

In the first cycle of deleting a project, the project is moved to the delayed deletion queue and automatically deleted after the retention period has passed. If during this delayed deletion time you run a second deletion cycle, the project is deleted immediately.

To immediately delete a project marked for deletion:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. Select Settings > General.
  3. Expand Advanced.
  4. In the Delete this project section, select Delete project.
  5. On the confirmation dialog, enter the project name and select Yes, delete project.

View projects pending deletion

Version history

To view a list of all projects that are pending deletion:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to.
  2. Select View all my projects.
  3. Based on your GitLab version:
    • GitLab 14.6 and later: select the Pending deletion tab.
    • GitLab 14.5 and earlier: select the Deleted projects tab.

Each project in the list shows:

  • The time the project was marked for deletion.
  • The time the project is scheduled for final deletion.
  • A Restore link to stop the project being eventually deleted.

View project activity

To view the activity of a project:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. Select Manage > Activity.
  3. Optional. To filter activity by contribution type, select a tab:

    • All: All contributions by project members.
    • Push events: Push events in the project.
    • Merge events: Accepted merge requests in the project.
    • Issue events: Issues opened and closed in the project.
    • Comments: Comments posted by project members.
    • Designs: Designs added, updated, and removed in the project.
    • Team: Members who joined and left the project.

Search in projects

To search through your projects, on the left sidebar, select Search or go to. GitLab filters as you type.

You can also look for the projects you starred (Starred projects).

You can Explore all public and internal projects available in GitLab.com, from which you can filter by visibility, through Trending, best rated with Most stars, or All of them.

You can sort projects by:

  • Name
  • Created date
  • Updated date
  • Owner

You can also choose to hide or show archived projects.

Filter projects by language

Version history

You can filter projects by the programming language they use. To do this:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to.
  2. Select either:
    • View all your projects, to filter your projects.
    • Explore, to filter all projects you can access.
  3. From the Language dropdown list, select the language you want to filter projects by.

A list of projects that use the selected language is displayed.

Rename a repository

A project’s repository name defines its URL and its place on the file disk where GitLab is installed.

Prerequisites:

  • You must be an administrator or have the Maintainer or Owner role for the project.
note
When you change the repository path, users may experience issues if they push to, or pull from, the old URL. For more information, see redirects when renaming repositories.

To rename a repository:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. Select Settings > General.
  3. Expand Advanced.
  4. In the Change path text box, edit the path.
  5. Select Change path.

Access the project overview page by using the project ID

Project ID moved to the Actions menu in GitLab 16.7.

To access a project by using the project ID instead of its name, go to https://gitlab.example.com/projects/<id>.

To copy the project ID:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. On the project overview page, in the upper-right corner, select Actions ().
  3. Select Copy project ID.

For example, if in your personal namespace alex you have a project my-project with the ID 123456, you can access the project either at https://gitlab.example.com/alex/my-project or https://gitlab.example.com/projects/123456.

You might also need the project ID if you want to interact with it using the GitLab API.

Who can view the Project overview page

When you select a project, the Project overview page shows the project contents.

For public projects, and members of internal and private projects with permissions to view the project’s code, the project landing page shows:

For users without permission to view the project’s code, the landing page shows:

  • The wiki homepage.
  • The list of issues in the project.

Leave a project

The button to leave a project moved to the Actions menu in GitLab 16.7.

When you leave a project:

  • You are no longer a project member and cannot contribute.
  • All the issues and merge requests that were assigned to you are unassigned.

Prerequisites:

  • You can leave a project this way only when a project is part of a group under a group namespace.
  • You must be a direct member of the project.

To leave a project:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. On the project overview page, in the upper-right corner, select Actions ().
  3. Select Leave project, then Leave project again.

Add a compliance framework to a project Premium

You can add compliance frameworks to projects in a group that has a compliance framework.

Manage project access through LDAP groups

You can use LDAP to manage group membership.

You cannot use LDAP groups to manage project access, but you can use the following workaround.

Prerequisites:

  1. Create a group to track membership of your project.
  2. Set up LDAP synchronization for that group.
  3. To use LDAP groups to manage access to a project, add the LDAP-synchronized group as a member to the project.

Troubleshooting

When working with projects, you might encounter the following issues, or require alternate methods to complete specific tasks.

An error occurred while fetching commit data

When you visit a project, the message An error occurred while fetching commit data might be displayed if you use an ad blocker in your browser. The solution is to disable your ad blocker for the GitLab instance you are trying to access.

Find projects using an SQL query

While in a Rails console session, you can find and store an array of projects based on a SQL query:

# Finds projects that end with '%ject'
projects = Project.find_by_sql("SELECT * FROM projects WHERE name LIKE '%ject'")
=> [#<Project id:12 root/my-first-project>>, #<Project id:13 root/my-second-project>>]

Clear a project’s or repository’s cache

If a project or repository has been updated but the state is not reflected in the UI, you may need to clear the project’s or repository’s cache. You can do so through a Rails console session and one of the following:

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.
## Clear project cache
ProjectCacheWorker.perform_async(project.id)

## Clear repository .exists? cache
project.repository.expire_exists_cache

Find projects that are pending deletion

If you need to find all projects marked for deletion but that have not yet been deleted, start a Rails console session and run the following:

projects = Project.where(pending_delete: true)
projects.each do |p|
  puts "Project ID: #{p.id}"
  puts "Project name: #{p.name}"
  puts "Repository path: #{p.repository.full_path}"
end

Delete a project using console

If a project cannot be deleted, you can attempt to delete it through Rails console.

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.
project = Project.find_by_full_path('<project_path>')
user = User.find_by_username('<username>')
ProjectDestroyWorker.new.perform(project.id, user.id, {})

If this fails, display why it doesn’t work with:

project = Project.find_by_full_path('<project_path>')
project.delete_error

Toggle a feature for all projects within a group

While toggling a feature in a project can be done through the projects API, you may need to do this for a large number of projects.

To toggle a specific feature, you can start a Rails console session and run the following function:

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.
projects = Group.find_by_name('_group_name').projects
projects.each do |p|
  ## replace <feature-name> with the appropriate feature name in all instances
  state = p.<feature-name>

  if state != 0
    puts "#{p.name} has <feature-name> already enabled. Skipping..."
  else
    puts "#{p.name} didn't have <feature-name> enabled. Enabling..."
    p.project_feature.update!(<feature-name>: ProjectFeature::PRIVATE)
  end
end

To find features that can be toggled, run pp p.project_feature. Available permission levels are listed in concerns/featurable.rb.