Redirects in GitLab documentation

When you move, rename, or delete a page, you must add a redirect. Redirects reduce how often users get 404s when they visit the documentation site from out-of-date links.

Add a redirect to ensure:

  • Users see the new page and can update or delete their bookmark.
  • External sites can update their links, especially sites that have automation that checks for redirected links.
  • The documentation site global navigation does not link to a missing page.

    The links in the global navigation are already tested in the gitlab-docs project. If the redirect is missing, the gitlab-docs project’s main branch might break.

Be sure to assign a technical writer to any merge request that moves, renames, or deletes a page. Technical Writers can help with any questions and can review your change.

note
When you change the filename of a page, the Google Analytics are removed from the content audit and the page views start from scratch. If you want to change the filename, edit the page first, so you can ensure the new page name is as accurate as possible.

Types of redirects

There are two types of redirects:

  • Redirects added into the documentation files themselves, for users who view the docs in /help on self-managed instances. For example, /help on GitLab.com. These must be added in the same MR that renames or moves a doc. Redirects to internal pages expire after three months and redirects to external pages (starting with https:) expire after a year.
  • GitLab Pages redirects, which are added automatically after redirect files expire. They must not be manually added by contributors and expire after nine months. Redirects pointing to external sites are not added to the GitLab Pages redirects.

Expired redirect files are removed from the documentation projects by the clean_redirects Rake task, as part of the Technical Writing team’s monthly tasks.

Redirect to a page that already exists

To redirect a page to another page in the same repository:

  1. In the Markdown file that you want to direct to a new location:

    • Delete all of the content.
    • Add this content:

      ---
      redirect_to: '../newpath/to/file/index.md'
      remove_date: 'YYYY-MM-DD'
      ---
      
      <!-- markdownlint-disable -->
      
      This document was moved to [another location](../newpath/to/file/index.md).
      
      <!-- This redirect file can be deleted after <YYYY-MM-DD>. -->
      <!-- Redirects that point to other docs in the same project expire in three months. -->
      <!-- Redirects that point to docs in a different project or site (for example, link is not relative and starts with `https:`) expire in one year. -->
      <!-- Before deletion, see: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/development/documentation/redirects.html -->
      
    • Replace both instances of ../newpath/to/file/index.md with the new file path.
    • Replace both instances of YYYY-MM-DD with the expiration date, as explained in the template.
  2. If the page had images that aren’t used on any other pages, delete them.

After your changes are committed, search for and update all other repositories that might link to the old file:

  1. In https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/www-gitlab-com, search for full URLs:

    grep -r "docs.gitlab.com/ee/path/to/file.html" .
    
  2. In https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-docs/-/tree/main/content/_data, search the navigation bar configuration files for the path with .html:

    grep -r "path/to/file.html" .
    
  3. In all of the doc projects, search for links in the docs and codebase. Search for all variations, including full URL and just the path. For example, go to the root directory of the gitlab project and run:

    grep -r "docs.gitlab.com/ee/path/to/file.html" .
    grep -r "path/to/file.html" .
    grep -r "path/to/file.md" .
    grep -r "path/to/file" .
    

    You might need to try variations of relative links, such as ../path/to/file or ../file to find every case.

  4. In https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/customers-gitlab-com, search for full URLs:

    grep -r "docs.gitlab.com/ee/path/to/file.html" .
    

Move a file’s location

If you want to move a file from one location to another, you do not move it. Instead, you duplicate the file, and add the redirect code to the old file.

  1. Create the new file.
  2. Copy the contents of the old file to the new one.
  3. In the old file, delete all the content.
  4. In the old file, add the redirect code and follow the rest of the steps in the Redirect to a page that already exists topic.

Use code to add a redirect

If you prefer to use a script to create the redirect:

Add the redirect code to the old documentation file by running the following Rake task. The first argument is the path of the old file, and the second argument is the path of the new file:

  • To redirect to a page in the same project, use relative paths and the .md extension. Both old and new paths start from the same location. In the following example, both paths are relative to doc/:

    bundle exec rake "gitlab:docs:redirect[doc/user/search/old_file.md, doc/api/new_file.md]"
    
  • To redirect to a page in a different project or site, use the full URL (with https://) :

    bundle exec rake "gitlab:docs:redirect[doc/user/search/old_file.md, https://example.com]"
    
  • Alternatively, you can omit the arguments and be prompted to enter the values:

    bundle exec rake gitlab:docs:redirect
    

Redirecting a page created before the release

If you create a new page and then rename it before it’s added to a release on the 18th:

Instead of following that procedure, ask a Technical Writer to manually add the redirect to redirects.yaml.

Exceptions to creating a redirect

In some cases you can skip adding the redirect and just delete the file. The page must have already been removed from (or never existed in) the navigation, and one of the following must be true:

  • The page was added and removed in the same release, so it was never included in a self-managed release.
  • The page does not contain any content of value, like a placeholder page or a page with extremely low usage statistics.