Pull from a remote repository (PREMIUM)

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

You can use the GitLab interface to browse the content and activity of a repository, even if it isn't hosted on GitLab. Create a pull mirror to copy the branches, tags, and commits from an upstream repository to yours.

Unlike push mirrors, pull mirrors retrieve changes from an upstream (remote) repository on a scheduled basis. To prevent the mirror from diverging from the upstream repository, don't push commits directly to the downstream mirror. Push commits to the upstream repository instead. Changes in the remote repository are pulled into the GitLab repository, either:

By default, if any branch or tag on the downstream pull mirror diverges from the local repository, GitLab stops updating the branch. This prevents data loss. Deleted branches and tags in the upstream repository are not reflected in the downstream repository.

How pull mirroring works

After you configure a GitLab repository as a pull mirror:

  1. GitLab adds the repository to a queue.
  2. Once per minute, a Sidekiq cron job schedules repository mirrors to update, based on:
    • Available capacity, determined by Sidekiq settings. For GitLab.com, read GitLab.com Sidekiq settings.
    • How many mirrors are already in the queue and due for updates. Being due depends on when the repository mirror was last updated, and how many times updates have been retried.
  3. Sidekiq becomes available to process updates, mirrors are updated. If the update process:
    • Succeeds: An update is enqueued again with at least a 30 minute wait.
    • Fails: The update is attempted again later. After 14 failures, a mirror is marked as a hard failure and is no longer enqueued for updates. A branch diverging from its upstream counterpart can cause failures. To prevent branches from diverging, configure Overwrite diverged branches when you create your mirror.

Configure pull mirroring

Prerequisite:

  1. On the top bar, select Menu > Projects and find your project.
  2. On the left sidebar, select Settings > Repository.
  3. Expand Mirroring repositories.
  4. Enter the Git repository URL. Include the username in the URL, if required: https://MYUSERNAME@github.com/GROUPNAME/PROJECTNAME.git
  5. In Mirror direction, select Pull.
  6. In Authentication method, select your authentication method.
  7. Select any of the options you need:
  8. To save the configuration, select Mirror repository.

Overwrite diverged branches

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

To always update your local branches with remote versions, even if they have diverged from the remote, select Overwrite diverged branches when you create a mirror.

WARNING: For mirrored branches, enabling this option results in the loss of local changes.

Trigger pipelines for mirror updates

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

If this option is enabled, pipelines trigger when branches or tags are updated from the remote repository. Depending on the activity of the remote repository, this may greatly increase the load on your CI runners. Only enable this feature if you know they can handle the load. CI uses the credentials assigned when you set up pull mirroring.

Trigger an update by using the API

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

Pull mirroring uses polling to detect new branches and commits added upstream, often minutes afterwards. If you notify GitLab by API, updates are pulled immediately.

For more information, read Start the pull mirroring process for a project.

Fix hard failures when mirroring

Moved to GitLab Premium in 13.9.

After 14 consecutive unsuccessful retries, the mirroring process is marked as a hard failure and mirroring attempts stop. This failure is visible in either the:

  • Project's main dashboard.
  • Pull mirror settings page.

To resume project mirroring, force an update.

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