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Gitlab Webhook: Custom Templates

This project aims to provide a simple webserver companion/receiver to a local Gitlab instance that listens for System Events.

Currently supported:

  • Enforcing Groups on newly created projects.
  • Injecting a new Project repository with template files (such as README.md, .gitignore).

This is achieved by using Gitlabs "System Hooks" (not to be confused with server hooks or file hooks) that perform HTTP POST requests and are triggered by various Gitlab system events. You can see a complete list on Gitlabs System Hooks page.

Configuration

Environment Variables

Before running the webhook, you need to set the following environment variables:

  • GITLAB_URL: Required. The URL of your Gitlab instance (e.g., https://your.gitlab.domain).
  • GITLAB_ACCESS_TOKEN: Required. Gitlab access token with admin privileges.
  • GITLAB_DEFAULT_BRANCH: Optional. The default branch to use when creating commits (e.g., "main" or "master"). (Default value: Main)
  • CONFIG_FILE_PATH: Optional. The path to the configuration file (config.yml) that defines the injection rules for new projects. (Default value: 'config.yml')
  • LISTEN_PORT: Optional: The port on which the webhook will listen for incoming requests. (Default value: 3002)

Config.yaml

The config.yml file defines the injection rules for new projects. It consists of an array of objects, each representing a specific rule for project injection. Below is an explanation of the properties used in the configuration:

regex (required)

This property specifies the regular expression pattern to match against the project namespace. If a project's namespace matches this pattern, the corresponding injection rule will be applied. For example, the following rule will match any project with a namespace that starts with "documentation/":

- regex: "^documentation/"
  # Rest of the properties...

groups (optional)

This property defines the groups to be added to the project along with their access levels. It should be an array of objects, where each object has a name and an access property. The name specifies the group's name as defined in Gitlab, and the access specifies the access level for the group. Follow Gitlabs documentation for more on Access Levels. But right now, Access levels can be one of the following values:

0: No access
5: Minimal access
10: Guest
20: Reporter
30: Developer
40: Maintainer
50: Owner

For example, to add two groups with different access levels to a project:

- regex: "example-project"
  groups:
    - name: managers
      access: 40
    - name: developers
      access: 30
  # Rest of the properties...

commits

Commit files that you'd like to be injected into the project. You then define the message and paths for that commit.

message (optional)

This property defines the default commit message that will be used when creating commits for new projects. If not specified, a default placeholder commit message will be used. For example:

- regex: "example-project"
  message: "Initial commit for example project."
  # Rest of the properties...

paths (required)

This property specifies the files to be injected into the project. It should be an array of objects, where each object has a source and a target property. The source property specifies the path to the file that will be injected, and the target property specifies the path where the file will be placed in the new project. For example:

- regex: "example-project"
  commit:
    paths:
      - source: "includes/.gitignore"
        target: ".gitignore"
      - source: "includes/README.md"
        target: "README.md"
  # Rest of the properties...

Complete Example config.yml

- regex: "^documentation/"
  groups:
    - name: managers
      access: 30
    - name: developers
      access: 10
  commit:
    message: "This is a commit for documentation repositories..."
    paths: []

- regex: "^game/"
  groups:
    - name: managers
      access: 30
  commit:
    message: "This is a commit for games repositories..."
    paths:
      - source: "includes/games/.gitignore"
        target: ".gitignore"

- regex: ".*"  # Default regex
  commit:
    message: "This is a commit for default repositories..."
    paths:
      - source: "includes/default/.gitignore"
        target: ".gitignore"
      - source: "includes/default/.gitlab-ci.yml"
        target: ".gitlab-ci.yml"
      - source: "includes/default/README.md"
        target: "README.md"

Usage

Endpoints

Endpoint Type Purpose
/ POST Verfiy the server is working
/hook GET Trigger the action on server
/config POST Get a printout of the current configuration yaml

Gitlab Instance

GitLab API Tokens

To authorise the hook within Gitlabs API's, you need to pass a Personal Access Tokens.

  1. Open the intended Gitlab instance you want to trigger events on.
  2. Log in with the intended account you wish to generate the Personal Access Tokens for.
  3. Select Profile.
  4. On the left sidebar, select Personal Access Tokens.
  5. Provide the Name.
  6. Select the checkbox next to each optional Scope you want to enable.
  7. Click the Create personal access token button.

Note: You may want to do this step with a unique account that doesn't belong to an actual user. This prevents problems if the token holder's user leaves your org and their account has to be deleted.

To create a system hook:

You must have Administrative access to the Gitlab instance you wish to configure the System Hook.

The URL should be: yourdomain.tld/hook/

  1. Open the intended Gitlab instance you want to trigger events on.
  2. On the left sidebar, expand the top-most chevron.
  3. Select Admin Area.
  4. On the left sidebar, select System Hooks.
  5. Provide the URL and Secret Token.
  6. Select the checkbox next to each optional Trigger you want to enable.
  7. Select Enable SSL verification, if desired.
  8. Select Add system hook.

You can easily debug your system hook receiver by going to Admin Area -> System Hooks > Edit, On the bottom of the screen there are “Recent Deliveries”. You can go to “View details” on each one of the requests in order to get additional debugging information— you can check the “Request headers” & “Response headers” of your request, the “Response body” that came back from your receiver and the JSON itself.

Docker

Usage with Docker

If you prefer to run the webhook in a Docker container, you can use the following command:

docker run -d \
    --name gitlab-template-project-hook \
    --restart=always \
    -e GITLAB_URL=https://your.gitlab.domain \
    -e GITLAB_ACCESS_TOKEN=<Personal Access Token> \
    -e DEFAULT_BRANCH=main \
    -e CONFIG_FILE_PATH=config.yml \
    -p 3002:3002 \
    -v /path/to/config:/config \
    ghcr.io/keiranlovett/gitlab-server-hook:main

Usage without Docker

If you want to run the webhook without Docker, follow these steps:

  1. Make sure you have Node.js installed.
  2. Run npm install to install the required dependencies.
  3. Set the environment variables mentioned above in the app.js file.
  4. Run node app.js to start the webhook server.
  5. Add a system hook in Gitlab that points to the webhook's URL to receive project creation events.
  6. Create a new project in Gitlab, and it will automatically be shared with the specified default group.

TODO / Contributing

  • Support for adding specific Members to a project.
  • Enforce a project naming convention.
  • Custom logging support???
  • Pulling or changing data in LDAP servers.