- Add a new built-in project template
- Update an existing built-in project template
- Test your built-in project with the GitLab Development Kit
- For GitLab team members
Contribute to built-in project templates
GitLab provides some built-in project templates that you can use when creating a new project.
Built-in templates are sourced from the following groups:
Prerequisites:
- You must have a working GitLab Development Kit (GDK) environment.
In particular, PostgreSQL, Praefect, and
sshd
must be working. -
wget
should be installed.
Add a new built-in project template
If you’d like to contribute a new built-in project template to be distributed with GitLab, there are a few steps to follow.
Create the project
- Create a new public project with the project content you’d like to contribute in a namespace of your choosing. You can view a working example.
- Projects should be free of any unnecessary assets or dependencies.
- When the project is ready for review, create a new issue with a link to your project.
- In your issue,
@
mention the relevant Backend Engineering Manager and Product Manager for the Create:Source Code group.
- In your issue,
Add the logo in gitlab-svgs
All templates fetch their icons from the
gitlab-svgs
library, so if the
icon of the template you add is not present, you have to submit one.
See how to add a third-party logo.
After the logo is added to the main
branch,
the bot picks the
new release up and create an MR in gitlab-org/gitlab
. You can now proceed to
the next step.
Add the template details
Two types of built-in templates are available in GitLab:
- Standard templates: Available in all GitLab tiers.
- Enterprise templates: Available only in GitLab Premium and Ultimate.
To make the project template available when creating a new project, you must follow the vendoring process to create a working template.
Standard template
To contribute a standard template:
-
Add the details of the template in the
localized_templates_table
method inlib/gitlab/project_template.rb
using the following scheme:ProjectTemplate.new('<template_name>', '<template_short_description>', _('<template_long_description>'), '<template_project_link>', 'illustrations/logos/<template_logo_name>.svg'),
- Add the details of the template in
app/assets/javascripts/projects/default_project_templates.js
. - Add the template name to
spec/support/helpers/project_template_test_helper.rb
.
Enterprise template
To contribute an Enterprise template:
-
Add details of the template in the
localized_ee_templates_table
method inee/lib/ee/gitlab/project_template.rb
using the following scheme:ProjectTemplate.new('<template_name>', '<template_short_description>', _('<template_long_description>'), '<template_project_link>', 'illustrations/logos/<template_logo_name>.svg'),
- Add the template name in the list of
let(:enterprise_templates)
inee/spec/lib/gitlab/project_template_spec.rb
. - Add details of the template in
ee/app/assets/javascripts/projects/default_project_templates.js
.
Populate the template details
-
Start GDK:
gdk start
-
Run the following in the
gitlab
project, where<template_name>
is the name you gave the template ingitlab/project_template.rb
:bin/rake "gitlab:update_project_templates[<template_name>]"
-
Regenerate the localization file in the
gitlab
project and commit the new.pot
file:bin/rake gettext:regenerate
-
Add a changelog entry in the commit message (for example,
Changelog: added
). For more information, see Changelog entries.
Update an existing built-in project template
To contribute a change:
-
Open a merge request in the relevant project, and leave the following comment when you are ready for a review:
@gitlab-org/manage/import/backend this is a contribution to update the project template and is ready for review! @gitlab-bot ready
-
If your merge request gets accepted:
- Either open an issue to ask for it to get updated.
-
Or update the vendored template and open a merge request:
bin/rake "gitlab:update_project_templates[<template_name>]"
Test your built-in project with the GitLab Development Kit
Complete the following steps to test the project template in your own GDK instance:
-
Start GDK:
gdk start
-
Run the following Rake task, where
<template_name>
is the name of the template inlib/gitlab/project_template.rb
:bin/rake "gitlab:update_project_templates[<template_name>]"
-
Visit GitLab in your browser and create a new project by selecting the project template.
For GitLab team members
Ensure all merge requests have been reviewed by the Security counterpart before merging.
Update all templates
Starting a project from a template needs this project to be exported. On a up to date default branch run:
gdk start # postgres, praefect, and sshd are required
bin/rake gitlab:update_project_templates
git checkout -b update-project-templates
git add vendor/project_templates
git commit
git push -u origin update-project-templates
Now create a merge request and assign to a Security counterpart to merge.
Update a single template
To update just a single template instead of all of them, specify the template name
between square brackets. For example, for the jekyll
template, run:
bin/rake "gitlab:update_project_templates[jekyll]"
Review a template merge request
To review a merge request which changes one or more vendored project templates,
run the check-template-changes
script:
scripts/check-template-changes vendor/project_templates/<template_name>.tar.gz
This script outputs a diff of the file changes against the default branch and also verifies that the template repository matches the source template project.