Troubleshooting GitLab tokens

When working with GitLab tokens, you might encounter the following issues.

Expired access tokens

If an existing access token is in use and reaches the expires_at value, the token expires and:

  • Can no longer be used for authentication.
  • Is not visible in the UI.

Requests made using this token return a 401 Unauthorized response. Too many unauthorized requests in a short period of time from the same IP address result in 403 Forbidden responses from GitLab.com.

For more information on authentication request limits, see Git and container registry failed authentication ban.

Identify expired access tokens from logs

History

Prerequisites:

You must:

  • Be an administrator.
  • Have access to the api_json.log file.

To identify which 401 Unauthorized requests are failing due to expired access tokens, use the following fields in the api_json.log file:

Field name Description
meta.auth_fail_reason The reason the request was rejected. Possible values: token_expired, token_revoked, insufficient_scope, and impersonation_disabled.
meta.auth_fail_token_id A string describing the type and ID of the attempted token.

When a user attempts to use an expired token, the meta.auth_fail_reason is token_expired. The following shows an excerpt from a log entry:

{
  "status": 401,
  "method": "GET",
  "path": "/api/v4/user",
  ...
  "meta.auth_fail_reason": "token_expired",
  "meta.auth_fail_token_id": "PersonalAccessToken/12",
}

meta.auth_fail_token_id indicates that an access token of ID 12 was used.

To find more information about this token, use the personal access token API. You can also use the API to rotate the token.

Replace expired access tokens

To replace the token:

  1. Check where this token may have been used previously, and remove it from any automation might still use the token.
    • For personal access tokens, use the API to list tokens that have expired recently. For example, go to https://gitlab.com/api/v4/personal_access_tokens, and locate tokens with a specific expires_at date.
    • For project access tokens, use the project access tokens API to list recently expired tokens.
    • For group access tokens, use the group access tokens API to list recently expired tokens.
  2. Create a new access token:
  3. Replace the old access token with the new access token. This process varies depending on how you use the token, for example if configured as a secret or embedded in an application. Requests made from this token should no longer return 401 responses.

Extend token lifetime

Delay the expiration of certain tokens with this script.

From GitLab 16.0, all access tokens have an expiration date. After you deploy at least GitLab 16.0, any non-expiring access tokens expire one year from the date of deployment.

If this date is approaching and there are tokens that have not yet been rotated, you can use this script to delay expiration and give users more time to rotate their tokens.

Extend lifetime for specific tokens

This script extends the lifetime of all tokens which expire on a specified date, including:

  • Personal access tokens
  • Group access tokens
  • Project access tokens

For group and project access tokens, this script only extends the lifetime of these tokens if they were given an expiration date automatically when upgrading to GitLab 16.0 or later. If a group or project access token was generated with an expiration date, or was rotated, the validity of that token is dependent on a valid membership to a resource, and therefore the token lifetime cannot be extended using this script.

To use the script:

Rails console session
  1. In your terminal window, start a Rails console session with sudo gitlab-rails console.
  2. Paste in the entire extend_expiring_tokens.rb script below. If desired, change the expiring_date to a different date.
  3. Press Enter.
Rails Runner
  1. In your terminal window, connect to your instance.
  2. Copy this entire extend_expiring_tokens.rb script below, and save it as a file on your instance:
    • Name it extend_expiring_tokens.rb.
    • If desired, change the expiring_date to a different date.
    • The file must be accessible to git:git.
  3. Run this command, changing /path/to/extend_expiring_tokens.rb to the full path to your extend_expiring_tokens.rb file:

    sudo gitlab-rails runner /path/to/extend_expiring_tokens.rb
    

For more information, see the Rails Runner troubleshooting section.

extend_expiring_tokens.rb
expiring_date = Date.new(2024, 5, 30)
new_expires_at = 6.months.from_now

total_updated = PersonalAccessToken
                  .not_revoked
                  .without_impersonation
                  .where(expires_at: expiring_date.to_date)
                  .update_all(expires_at: new_expires_at.to_date)

puts "Updated #{total_updated} tokens with new expiry date #{new_expires_at}"

Identify personal, project, and group access tokens expiring on a certain date

Access tokens that have no expiration date are valid indefinitely, which is a security risk if the access token is divulged.

To manage this risk, when you upgrade to GitLab 16.0 and later, any personal, project, or group access token that does not have an expiration date automatically has an expiration date set at one year from the date of upgrade.

In GitLab 17.3 and later, this automatic setting of expiry on existing tokens has been reverted, and you can disable expiration date enforcement for new access tokens.

If you are not aware of when your tokens expire because the dates have changed, you might have unexpected authentication failures when trying to sign into GitLab on that date.

To manage this issue, you should upgrade to GitLab 17.2 or later, because these versions contain a tool that assists with analyzing, extending, or remove token expiration dates.

If you cannot run the tool, you can also run scripts in self-managed instances to identify tokens that either:

  • Expire on a specific date.
  • Have no expiration date.

You run these scripts from your terminal window in either:

The specific scripts you run differ depending on if you have upgraded to GitLab 16.0 and later, or not:

After you have identified tokens affected by this issue, you can run a final script to extend the lifetime of specific tokens if needed.

These scripts return results in the following format:

Expired group access token in Group ID 25, Token ID: 8, Name: Example Token, Scopes: ["read_api", "create_runner"], Last used:
Expired project access token in Project ID 2, Token ID: 9, Name: Test Token, Scopes: ["api", "read_registry", "write_registry"], Last used: 2022-02-11 13:22:14 UTC

For more information on this, see incident 18003.

Find all tokens expiring on a specific date

This script finds tokens that expire on a specific date.

Prerequisites:

  • You must know the exact date your instance was upgraded to GitLab 16.0.

To use it:

Rails console session
  1. In your terminal window, connect to your instance.
  2. Start a Rails console session with sudo gitlab-rails console.
  3. Depending on your needs, copy either the entire expired_tokens.rb or expired_tokens_date_range.rb script below, and paste it into the console. Change the expires_at_date to the date one year after your instance was upgraded to GitLab 16.0.
  4. Press Enter.
Rails Runner
  1. In your terminal window, connect to your instance.
  2. Depending on your needs, copy either the entire expired_tokens.rb or expired_tokens_date_range.rb script below, and save it as a file on your instance:
    • Name it expired_tokens.rb.
    • Change the expires_at_date to the date one year after your instance was upgraded to GitLab 16.0.
    • The file must be accessible to git:git.
  3. Run this command, changing the path to the full path to your expired_tokens.rb file:

    sudo gitlab-rails runner /path/to/expired_tokens.rb
    

For more information, see the Rails Runner troubleshooting section.

expired_tokens.rb

This script requires you to know the exact date your GitLab instance was upgraded to GitLab 16.0.

# Change this value to the date one year after your GitLab instance was upgraded.

expires_at_date = "2024-05-22"

# Check for expiring personal access tokens
PersonalAccessToken.owner_is_human.where(expires_at: expires_at_date).find_each do |token|
  if token.user.blocked?
    next
    # Hide unusable, blocked PATs from output
  end

  puts "Expired personal access token ID: #{token.id}, User Email: #{token.user.email}, Name: #{token.name}, Scopes: #{token.scopes}, Last used: #{token.last_used_at}"
end

# Check for expiring project and group access tokens
PersonalAccessToken.project_access_token.where(expires_at: expires_at_date).find_each do |token|
  token.user.members.each do |member|
    type = member.is_a?(GroupMember) ? 'Group' : 'Project'

    puts "Expired #{type} access token in #{type} ID #{member.source_id}, Token ID: #{token.id}, Name: #{token.name}, Scopes: #{token.scopes}, Last used: #{token.last_used_at}"
  end
end
note
To not only hide, but also remove, tokens belonging to blocked users, add token.destroy! directly below if token.user.blocked?. However, this action does not leave an audit event, unlike the API method.

Find tokens expiring in a given month

This script finds tokens that expire in a particular month. You don’t need to know the exact date your instance was upgraded to GitLab 16.0. To use it:

Rails console session
  1. In your terminal window, start a Rails console session with sudo gitlab-rails console.
  2. Paste in the entire tokens_with_no_expiry.rb script below. If desired, change the date_range to a different range.
  3. Press Enter.
Rails Runner
  1. In your terminal window, connect to your instance.
  2. Copy this entire tokens_with_no_expiry.rb script below, and save it as a file on your instance:
    • Name it expired_tokens_date_range.rb.
    • If desired, change the date_range to a different range.
    • The file must be accessible to git:git.
  3. Run this command, changing /path/to/expired_tokens_date_range.rb to the full path to your expired_tokens_date_range.rb file:

    sudo gitlab-rails runner /path/to/expired_tokens_date_range.rb
    

For more information, see the Rails Runner troubleshooting section.

expired_tokens_date_range.rb

# This script enables you to search for tokens that expire within a
# certain date range (like 1.month) from the current date. Use it if
# you're unsure when exactly your GitLab 16.0 upgrade completed.

date_range = 1.month

# Check for personal access tokens
PersonalAccessToken.owner_is_human.where(expires_at: Date.today .. Date.today + date_range).find_each do |token|
  puts "Expired personal access token ID: #{token.id}, User Email: #{token.user.email}, Name: #{token.name}, Scopes: #{token.scopes}, Last used: #{token.last_used_at}"
end

# Check for expiring project and group access tokens
PersonalAccessToken.project_access_token.where(expires_at: Date.today .. Date.today + date_range).find_each do |token|
  token.user.members.each do |member|
    type = member.is_a?(GroupMember) ? 'Group' : 'Project'

    puts "Expired #{type} access token in #{type} ID #{member.source_id}, Token ID: #{token.id}, Name: #{token.name}, Scopes: #{token.scopes}, Last used: #{token.last_used_at}"
  end
end

Identify dates when many tokens expire

This script identifies dates when most of tokens expire. You can use it in combination with other scripts on this page to identify and extend large batches of tokens that may be approaching their expiration date, in case your team has not yet set up token rotation.

The script returns results in this format:

42 Personal access tokens will expire at 2024-06-27
17 Personal access tokens will expire at 2024-09-23
3 Personal access tokens will expire at 2024-08-13

To use it:

Rails console session
  1. In your terminal window, start a Rails console session with sudo gitlab-rails console.
  2. Paste in the entire dates_when_most_of_tokens_expire.rb script.
  3. Press Enter.
Rails Runner
  1. In your terminal window, connect to your instance.
  2. Copy this entire dates_when_most_of_tokens_expire.rb script, and save it as a file on your instance:
    • Name it dates_when_most_of_tokens_expire.rb.
    • The file must be accessible to git:git.
  3. Run this command, changing /path/to/dates_when_most_of_tokens_expire.rb to the full path to your dates_when_most_of_tokens_expire.rb file:

    sudo gitlab-rails runner /path/to/dates_when_most_of_tokens_expire.rb
    

For more information, see the Rails Runner troubleshooting section.

dates_when_most_of_tokens_expire.rb

PersonalAccessToken
  .select(:expires_at, Arel.sql('count(*)'))
  .where('expires_at >= NOW()')
  .group(:expires_at)
  .order(Arel.sql('count(*) DESC'))
  .limit(10)
  .each do |token|
    puts "#{token.count} Personal access tokens will expire at #{token.expires_at}"
  end

Find tokens with no expiration date

This script finds tokens that lack an expiration date: expires_at is NULL. For users who have not yet upgraded to GitLab version 16.0 or later, the token expires_at value is NULL, and can be used to identify tokens to add an expiration date to.

You can use this script in either the Rails console or the Rails Runner:

Rails console session
  1. In your terminal window, connect to your instance.
  2. Start a Rails console session with sudo gitlab-rails console.
  3. Paste in the entire tokens_with_no_expiry.rb script below.
  4. Press Enter.
Rails Runner
  1. In your terminal window, connect to your instance.
  2. Copy this entire tokens_with_no_expiry.rb script below, and save it as a file on your instance:
    • Name it tokens_with_no_expiry.rb.
    • The file must be accessible to git:git.
  3. Run this command, changing the path to the full path to your tokens_with_no_expiry.rb file:

    sudo gitlab-rails runner /path/to/tokens_with_no_expiry.rb
    

For more information, see the Rails Runner troubleshooting section.

tokens_with_no_expiry.rb

This script finds tokens without a value set for expires_at.

   # This script finds tokens which do not have an expires_at value set.

   # Check for expiring personal access tokens
   PersonalAccessToken.owner_is_human.where(expires_at: nil).find_each do |token|
     puts "Expires_at is nil for personal access token ID: #{token.id}, User Email: #{token.user.email}, Name: #{token.name}, Scopes: #{token.scopes}, Last used: #{token.last_used_at}"
   end

   # Check for expiring project and group access tokens
   PersonalAccessToken.project_access_token.where(expires_at: nil).find_each do |token|
     token.user.members.each do |member|
       type = member.is_a?(GroupMember) ? 'Group' : 'Project'

       puts "Expires_at is nil for #{type} access token in #{type} ID #{member.source_id}, Token ID: #{token.id}, Name: #{token.name}, Scopes: #{token.scopes}, Last used: #{token.last_used_at}"
     end
   end