python-gitlab is a Python module providing access to the GitLab server API.
It supports the v3 api of GitLab.
A CLI tool is also provided (called gitlab).
python-gitlab depends on:
python-gitlab >= 0.3 is considered stable.
Please report bugs and feature requests at https://github.com/gpocentek/python-gitlab/issues
- Improve documentation
- Write unit tests
# See https://github.com/gitlabhq/gitlabhq/tree/master/doc/api for the source.
# Register a connection to a gitlab instance, using its URL and a user private
# token
gl = Gitlab('http://192.168.123.107', 'JVNSESs8EwWRx5yDxM5q')
# Connect to get the current user
gl.auth()
# Print the user informations
print gl.user
# Get a list of projects
for p in gl.Project():
print (p.name)
# get associated issues
issues = p.Issue()
for issue in issues:
closed = 0 if not issue.closed else 1
print (" %d => %s (closed: %d)" % (issue.id, issue.title, closed))
# and close them all
issue.closed = 1
issue.save()
# Get the first 10 groups (pagination)
for g in gl.Group(page=1, per_page=10):
print (g)
# Create a new project
p = gl.Project({'name': 'myCoolProject', 'wiki_enabled': False})
p.save()
print p
To use the command line tool, you need to define which GitLab server(s) can be accessed. this can be done in 2 files:
- /etc/python-gitlab.cfg
- ~/.python-gitlab.cfg
Here's an example of the syntax:
[global]
default = local
ssl_verify = true
[local]
url = http://10.0.3.2:8080
private_token = vTbFeqJYCY3sibBP7BZM
[distant]
url = https://some.whe.re
private_token = thisisaprivatetoken
ssl_verify = false
The [global] section define which server is accesed by default. Each other section defines how to access a server. Only private token authentication is supported (not user/password).
The ssl_verify
option defines if the server SSL certificate should be
validated (use false for self signed certificates, only useful with https).
Choosing a different server than the default one can be done at run time:
gitlab --gitlab=distant [command]
gitlab always requires 2 mandatory arguments.
The first argument is the object type on which we will act, the second one is the action:
gitlab project list
Get help with:
# global help
gitlab --help
# object help
gitlab project help
Some examples:
# list all the projects:
gitlab project list
# limit to 5 items per request, display the 1st page only
gitlab project list --page=1 --per-page=5
# get a specific project (id 2):
gitlab project get --id=2
# get a list of snippets for this project:
gitlab project-issue list --project-id=2
# delete a Snippet (id 3):
gitlab project-snippet delete --id=3 --project-id=2
# update a Snippet:
gitlab project-snippet update --id=4 --project-id=2 --code="My New Code"
# create a Snippet:
gitlab project-snippet create --project-id=2
Impossible to create object (Missing attribute(s): title, file-name, code)
# oops, let's add the attributes:
gitlab project-snippet create --project-id=2 --title="the title" --file-name="the name" --code="the code"