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Import your project from GitHub to GitLab

DETAILS: Tier: Free, Premium, Ultimate Offering: GitLab.com, Self-managed, GitLab Dedicated

  • Introduced in GitLab 15.8, GitLab no longer automatically creates namespaces or groups that don't exist. GitLab also no longer falls back to using the user's personal namespace if the namespace or group name is taken.
  • Introduced in GitLab 15.10, you no longer need to add any users to the parent group in GitLab to successfully import the Require a pull request before merging - Allow specified actors to bypass required pull requests branch protection rule.
  • An Imported badge on some imported items introduced in GitLab 17.2.

You can import your GitHub projects from either GitHub.com or GitHub Enterprise. Importing projects does not migrate or import any types of groups or organizations from GitHub to GitLab.

Imported issues, merge requests, comments, and events have an Imported badge in GitLab.

The namespace is a user or group in GitLab, such as gitlab.com/sidney-jones or gitlab.com/customer-success.

Using the GitLab UI, the GitHub importer always imports from the github.com domain. If you are importing from a self-hosted GitHub Enterprise Server domain, use the GitLab Import API GitHub endpoint.

You can change the target namespace and target repository name before you import.

For an overview of the import process, see How to migrate from GitHub to GitLab including Actions.

Estimating import duration

Every import from GitHub is different, which affects the duration of imports you perform. However, in our testing we imported https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes in 76 hours. When we tested, that project comprised:

  • 80,000 pull requests.
  • 45,000 issues.
  • Approximately 1.5 million comments.

Prerequisites

To import projects from GitHub, you must enable the GitHub import source. If that import source is not enabled, ask your GitLab administrator to enable it. The GitHub import source is enabled by default on GitLab.com.

Permissions and roles

  • 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 use the GitHub importer, you must have:

  • Access to the GitHub project to import.
  • At least the Maintainer role on the destination GitLab group to import to.

Also, the organization the GitHub repository belongs to must not impose restrictions of a third-party application access policy on the GitLab instance you import to.

Accounts for user contribution mapping

For user contribution mapping between GitHub and GitLab to work:

  • Each GitHub author and assignee in the repository must have a public-facing email address.
  • The GitHub user's email address must match their GitLab email address.
  • If a user's email address in GitHub is set as their secondary email address in GitLab, they must confirm it.

GitHub Enterprise does not require a public email address, so you might have to add it to existing accounts.

If the above requirements are not met, the importer can't map the particular user's contributions. In that case:

  • The project creator is set as the author and assignee of issues and merge requests. The project creator is usually the user that initiated the import process. For some contributions that have a description or note such as pull requests, issue, notes, the importer amends the text with details of who originally created the contribution.
  • Reviewers and approvals added on pull requests in GitHub cannot be imported. In this case, the importer creates comments describing that non-existent users were added as reviewers and approvers. However, the actual reviewer status and approval are not applied to the merge request in GitLab.

Known issues

  • GitHub pull request comments (known as diff notes in GitLab) created before 2017 are imported in separate threads. This occurs because of a limitation of the GitHub API that doesn't include in_reply_to_id for comments before 2017.
  • Because of a known issue, Markdown attachments from repositories on GitHub Enterprise Server instances aren't imported.
  • Because of a known issue, when importing projects that used GitHub auto-merge, the imported project in GitLab can have merge commits labeled "unverified" if the commit was signed with GitHub's internal GPG key.
  • GitLab can't import GitHub Markdown image attachments that were uploaded to private repositories before 2023-05-09. If you encounter this problem, would like to help us resolve the problem, and are willing to provide a sample repository for us, please add a comment to issue 424046 and we'll contact you.

Import your GitHub repository into GitLab

Before you begin, ensure that any GitHub user you want to map to a GitLab user has a GitLab email address that matches their publicly visible email address on GitHub.

If a GitHub user's public email address doesn't match any GitLab user email address, the user's activity is associated with the user account that is performing the import.

You can import your GitHub repository by either:

If importing from github.com you can use any method to import. Self-hosted GitHub Enterprise Server customers must use the API.

Use GitHub OAuth

If you are importing to GitLab.com or to a self-managed GitLab that has GitHub OAuth configured, you can use GitHub OAuth to import your repository.

This method has an advantage over using a personal access token (PAT) because the backend exchanges the access token with the appropriate permissions.

  1. On the left sidebar, at the top, select Create new ({plus}) and New project/repository.
  2. Select Import project and then GitHub.
  3. Select Authorize with GitHub.
  4. Proceed to selecting which repositories to import.

To use a different method to perform an import after previously performing these steps, sign out of your GitLab account and sign in again.

Use a GitHub personal access token

To import your GitHub repository using a GitHub personal access token:

  1. Generate a GitHub personal access token. Only classic personal access tokens are supported.
    1. Go to https://github.com/settings/tokens/new.
    2. In the Note field, enter a token description.
    3. Select the repo scope.
    4. Optional. To import collaborators, or if your project has Git LFS files, select the read:org scope.
    5. Select Generate token.
  2. On the GitLab left sidebar, at the top, select Create new ({plus}) and New project/repository.
  3. Select Import project and then GitHub.
  4. Select Authorize with GitHub.
  5. In the Personal access token field, paste the GitHub personal access token.
  6. Select Authenticate.
  7. Proceed to selecting which repositories to import.

To use a different token to perform an import after previously performing these steps, sign out of your GitLab account and sign in again, or revoke the older token in GitHub.

Use the API

The GitLab REST API can be used to import a GitHub repository. It has some advantages over using the GitLab UI:

  • Can be used to import GitHub repositories that you do not own if they are public.
  • It can be used to import from a GitHub Enterprise Server that is self-hosted.
  • Can be used to set the timeout_strategy option that is not available to the UI.

The REST API is limited to authenticating with GitLab personal access tokens.

To import your GitHub repository using the GitLab REST API:

  1. Generate a GitHub personal access token. Only classic personal access tokens are supported.
    1. Go to https://github.com/settings/tokens/new.
    2. In the Note field, enter a token description.
    3. Select the repo scope.
    4. Optional. To import collaborators, or if your project has Git LFS files, select the read:org scope.
    5. Select Generate token.
  2. Use the GitLab REST API to import your GitHub repository.

Filter repositories list

After you authorize access to your GitHub repositories, GitLab redirects you to the importer page and your GitHub repositories are listed.

Use one of the following tabs to filter the list of repositories:

  • Owner (default): Filter the list to the repositories that you are the owner of.
  • Collaborated: Filter the list to the repositories that you have contributed to.
  • Organization: Filter the list to the repositories that belong to an organization you are a member of.

When the Organization tab is selected, you can further narrow down your search by selecting an available GitHub organization from a dropdown list.

Select additional items to import

  • Introduced in GitLab 15.5.
  • Importing collaborators as an additional item was introduced in GitLab 16.0.
  • Feature flag github_import_extended_events was introduced in GitLab 16.8. Disabled by default. This flag improves the performance of imports but removes the Import issue and pull request events option.
  • Feature flag github_import_extended_events was enabled on GitLab.com and self-managed in GitLab 16.9.
  • Improved import performance made generally available in GitLab 16.11. Feature flag github_import_extended_events removed.

To make imports as fast as possible, the following items aren't imported from GitHub by default:

  • More than approximately 30,000 comments because of a limitation of the GitHub API.
  • Markdown attachments from repository comments, release posts, issue descriptions, and pull request descriptions. These can include images, text, or binary attachments. If not imported, links in Markdown to attachments break after you remove the attachments from GitHub.

You can choose to import these items, but this could significantly increase import time. To import these items, select the appropriate fields in the UI:

  • Use alternative comments import method. If importing GitHub projects with more than approximately 30,000 comments across all issues and pull requests, you should enable this method because of a limitation of the GitHub API.
  • Import Markdown attachments.
  • Import collaborators (selected by default). Leaving it selected might result in new users using a seat in the group or namespace, and being granted permissions as high as project owner. Only direct collaborators are imported. Outside collaborators are never imported.

Select which repositories to import

  • Ability to cancel pending or active imports introduced in GitLab 15.7.
  • Ability to re-import projects introduced in GitLab 15.9.

By default, the proposed repository namespaces match the names as they exist in GitHub, but based on your permissions, you can choose to edit these names before you proceed to import any of them.

To select which repositories to import, next to any number of repositories select Import or select Import all repositories.

Additionally, you can filter projects by name. If a filter is applied, Import all repositories only imports matched repositories.

The Status column shows the import status of each repository. You can choose to keep the page open and watch updates in real time or you can return to it later.

To cancel imports that are pending or in progress, next to the imported project, select Cancel. If the import has already started, the imported files are kept.

To open an repository in GitLab URL after it has been imported, select its GitLab path.

Completed imports can be re-imported by selecting Re-import and specifying new name. This creates a new copy of the source project.

GitHub importer page

Check status of imports

  • Details of partially completed imports with a list of entities that failed to import introduced in GitLab 16.1.

After imports are completed, they can be in one of three states:

  • Complete: GitLab imported all repository entities.
  • Partially completed: GitLab failed to import some repository entities.
  • Failed: GitLab aborted the import after a critical error occurred.

Expand Details to see a list of repository entities that failed to import.

Mirror a repository and share pipeline status

DETAILS: Tier: Premium, Ultimate Offering: GitLab.com, Self-managed, GitLab Dedicated

Depending on your GitLab tier, repository mirroring can be set up to keep your imported repository in sync with its GitHub copy.

Additionally, you can configure GitLab to send pipeline status updates back to GitHub with the GitHub Project Integration.

If you import your project using CI/CD for external repository, then both of the above are automatically configured.

NOTE: Mirroring does not sync any new or updated pull requests from your GitHub project.

Improve the speed of imports on self-managed instances

Administrator access on the GitLab server is required for these steps.

Increase the number of Sidekiq workers

For large projects it may take a while to import all data. To reduce the time necessary, you can increase the number of Sidekiq workers that process the following queues:

  • github_importer
  • github_importer_advance_stage

For an optimal experience, it's recommended having at least 4 Sidekiq processes (each running a number of threads equal to the number of CPU cores) that only process these queues. It's also recommended that these processes run on separate servers. For 4 servers with 8 cores this means you can import up to 32 objects (for example, issues) in parallel.

Reducing the time spent in cloning a repository can be done by increasing network throughput, CPU capacity, and disk performance (by using high performance SSDs, for example) of the disks that store the Git repositories (for your GitLab instance). Increasing the number of Sidekiq workers does not reduce the time spent cloning repositories.

Enable GitHub OAuth using a GitHub Enterprise Cloud OAuth App

If you belong to a GitHub Enterprise Cloud organization you can configure your self-managed GitLab instance to obtain a higher GitHub API rate limit.

GitHub API requests are usually subject to a rate limit of 5,000 requests per hour. Using the steps below, you obtain a higher 15,000 requests per hour rate limit, resulting in a faster overall import time.

Prerequisites:

To enable a higher rate limit:

  • Create an OAuth app in GitHub. Ensure that the OAuth app is owned by the Enterprise Cloud Organization, not your personal GitHub account.
  • Perform the project import using GitHub OAuth.
  • Optional. By default, sign-in is enabled for all configured OAuth providers. If you want to enable GitHub OAuth for imports but you want to prevent the ability for users to sign in to your GitLab instance with GitHub, you can disable sign-in with GitHub.

Imported data

The following items of a project are imported:

  • Repository description.

  • Git repository data.

  • All project branches.

  • All branches of forks of the project related to open pull requests, but not closed pull requests. Branches from forks are imported with a naming scheme similar to GH-SHA-username/pull-request-number/fork-name/branch.

  • Branch protection rules. Introduced in GitLab 15.4.

  • Collaborators (members). Introduced in GitLab 15.10. From GitLab 16.0, can be imported as an additional item.

  • Issues.

  • Pull requests.

  • Wiki pages.

  • Milestones.

  • Labels.

  • Release notes content.

  • Attachments for:

    All attachment imports are disabled by default behind github_importer_attachments_import feature flag. From GitLab 15.5, can be imported as an additional item. The feature flag was removed.

  • Pull request review comments.

  • Regular issue and pull request comments.

  • Git Large File Storage (LFS) Objects.

  • Pull request reviews.

  • Pull request assigned reviewers. Introduced in GitLab 15.6.

  • Pull request "merged by" information.

  • Pull request comments replies in discussions. Introduced in GitLab 14.5.

  • Pull request review comments suggestions. Introduced in GitLab 14.7.

  • Issue events and pull requests events. Introduced in GitLab 15.4 with github_importer_issue_events_import feature flag disabled by default. From GitLab 15.5, can be imported as an additional item. The feature flag was removed.

References to pull requests and issues are preserved. Each imported repository maintains visibility level unless that visibility level is restricted, in which case it defaults to the default project visibility.

Branch protection rules and project settings

When they are imported, supported GitHub branch protection rules are mapped to either:

  • GitLab branch protection rules.
  • Project-wide GitLab settings.
GitHub rule GitLab rule Introduced in
Require conversation resolution before merging for the project's default branch All threads must be resolved project setting GitLab 15.5
Require a pull request before merging No one option in the Allowed to push and merge list of branch protection settings GitLab 15.5
Require signed commits for the project's default branch Reject unsigned commits GitLab push rule GitLab 15.5
Allow force pushes - Everyone Allowed to force push branch protection setting GitLab 15.6
Require a pull request before merging - Require review from Code Owners Require approval from code owners branch protection setting GitLab 15.6
Require a pull request before merging - Allow specified actors to bypass required pull requests List of users in the Allowed to push and merge list of branch protection settings. Without a Premium subscription, the list of users that are allowed to push and merge is limited to roles. GitLab 15.8

Mapping GitHub rule Require status checks to pass before merging to external status checks was considered in issue 370948. However, this rule is not imported during project import into GitLab due to technical difficulties. You can still create external status checks manually.

Collaborators (members)

These GitHub collaborator roles are mapped to these GitLab member roles:

GitHub role Mapped GitLab role
Read Guest
Triage Reporter
Write Developer
Maintain Maintainer
Admin Owner

GitHub Enterprise Cloud has custom repository roles. These roles aren't supported and cause partially completed imports.

To import GitHub collaborators, you must have at least the Write role on the GitHub project. Otherwise collaborators import is skipped.

Import from GitHub Enterprise on an internal network

If your GitHub Enterprise instance is on a internal network that is inaccessible to the internet, you can use a reverse proxy to allow GitLab.com to access the instance.

The proxy needs to:

  • Forward requests to the GitHub Enterprise instance.
  • Convert to the public proxy hostname all occurrences of the internal hostname in:
    • The API response body.
    • The API response Link header.

GitHub API uses the Link header for pagination.

After configuring the proxy, test it by making API requests. Below there are some examples of commands to test the API:

curl --header "Authorization: Bearer <YOUR-TOKEN>" "https://{PROXY_HOSTNAME}/user"

### URLs in the response body should use the proxy hostname

{
  "login": "example_username",
  "id": 1,
  "url": "https://{PROXY_HOSTNAME}/users/example_username",
  "html_url": "https://{PROXY_HOSTNAME}/example_username",
  "followers_url": "https://{PROXY_HOSTNAME}/api/v3/users/example_username/followers",
  ...
  "created_at": "2014-02-11T17:03:25Z",
  "updated_at": "2022-10-18T14:36:27Z"
}
curl --head --header "Authorization: Bearer <YOUR-TOKEN>" "https://{PROXY_DOMAIN}/api/v3/repos/{repository_path}/pulls?states=all&sort=created&direction=asc"

### Link header should use the proxy hostname

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 18 Oct 2022 21:42:55 GMT
Server: GitHub.com
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
Cache-Control: private, max-age=60, s-maxage=60
...
X-OAuth-Scopes: repo
X-Accepted-OAuth-Scopes:
github-authentication-token-expiration: 2022-11-22 18:13:46 UTC
X-GitHub-Media-Type: github.v3; format=json
X-RateLimit-Limit: 5000
X-RateLimit-Remaining: 4997
X-RateLimit-Reset: 1666132381
X-RateLimit-Used: 3
X-RateLimit-Resource: core
Link: <https://{PROXY_DOMAIN}/api/v3/repositories/1/pulls?page=2>; rel="next", <https://{PROXY_DOMAIN}/api/v3/repositories/1/pulls?page=11>; rel="last"

Also test that cloning the repository using the proxy does not fail:

git clone -c http.extraHeader="Authorization: basic <base64 encode YOUR-TOKEN>" --mirror https://{PROXY_DOMAIN}/{REPOSITORY_PATH}.git

Sample reverse proxy configuration

The following configuration is an example on how to configure Apache HTTP Server as a reverse proxy

WARNING: For simplicity, the snippet does not have configuration to encrypt the connection between the client and the proxy. However, for security reasons you should include that configuration. See sample Apache TLS/SSL configuration.

# Required modules
LoadModule filter_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_filter.so
LoadModule reflector_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_reflector.so
LoadModule substitute_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_substitute.so
LoadModule deflate_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_deflate.so
LoadModule headers_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_headers.so
LoadModule proxy_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy.so
LoadModule proxy_connect_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy_connect.so
LoadModule proxy_http_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_proxy_http.so
LoadModule ssl_module lib/httpd/modules/mod_ssl.so

<VirtualHost GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_HOSTNAME:80>
  ServerName GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_HOSTNAME

  # Enables reverse-proxy configuration with SSL support
  SSLProxyEngine On
  ProxyPass "/" "https://GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_HOSTNAME/"
  ProxyPassReverse "/" "https://GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_HOSTNAME/"

  # Replaces occurrences of the local GitHub Enterprise URL with the Proxy URL
  # GitHub Enterprise compresses the responses, the filters INFLATE and DEFLATE needs to be used to
  # decompress and compress the response back
  AddOutputFilterByType INFLATE;SUBSTITUTE;DEFLATE application/json
  Substitute "s|https://GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_HOSTNAME|https://PROXY_HOSTNAME|ni"
  SubstituteMaxLineLength 50M

  # GitHub API uses the response header "Link" for the API pagination
  # For example:
  #   <https://example.com/api/v3/repositories/1/issues?page=2>; rel="next", <https://example.com/api/v3/repositories/1/issues?page=3>; rel="last"
  # The directive below replaces all occurrences of the GitHub Enterprise URL with the Proxy URL if the
  # response header Link is present
  Header edit* Link "https://GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_HOSTNAME" "https://PROXY_HOSTNAME"
</VirtualHost>