gitlab-mcp-server
A Model Context Protocol server for GitLab that provides AI agents structured access to projects, repositories, issues, merge requests, pipelines, and releases, with read-only defaults and operational controls.
README
GitLab MCP Server
gitlab-mcp-server is a Model Context Protocol server for GitLab.com and self-managed GitLab. It runs over stdio by default and also supports opt-in Streamable HTTP for local clients that need an HTTP endpoint.
It gives AI agents and developer tools structured access to GitLab projects, repositories, issues, merge requests, pipelines, releases, governance data, and higher-level delivery summaries. The server is read-only by default and uses explicit gates for write and destructive actions.
- npm package: gitlab-mcp-cli
- Repository: DevquasarX9/mcp-gitlab
- Works with: Claude Code, Claude Desktop, Codex, Cursor, and other MCP clients
Why This Server
- Safe defaults: read-only mode is the default, with separate write and destructive-action gates.
- GitLab coverage: projects, groups, repositories, issues, merge requests, pipelines, releases, packages, approvals, and protected branches.
- AI-friendly tools: higher-level tools summarize project health, review risk, release notes, delivery status, and pipeline failures.
- Self-managed support: works with
https://gitlab.comand private GitLab instances. - Operational controls: allowlists, denylist, payload caps, timeout control, optional audit logging, and secret redaction.
When To Use This
Use this server when you want a local or self-managed GitLab MCP server with conservative defaults, explicit write gates, project/group allowlists, and workflow-oriented summaries. It is especially useful for agents that need to inspect repositories, review merge requests, triage CI, assess release readiness, or produce delivery digests without cloning repositories first.
The official GitLab MCP server is a good default when you want GitLab's beta hosted tool surface and Duo-backed features. glab mcp serve can be useful for CLI-centered experimentation. This package focuses on read-only-by-default local operation, guarded writes, broader GitLab API coverage, and higher-level DevOps workflow intelligence. See docs/parity.md for the current mapping.
Install
Requirements:
- Node.js
>=20.11.0 - A GitLab token with the scopes needed for the resources you want to access
Install globally:
npm install -g gitlab-mcp-cli
Run without a global install:
npx -y gitlab-mcp-cli
The published package name is gitlab-mcp-cli. The installed executable is gitlab-mcp-server.
Quick Start
Run the server directly after setting the required environment variables:
GITLAB_BASE_URL=https://gitlab.com \
GITLAB_TOKEN=glpat-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx \
gitlab-mcp-server
From source:
npm ci
npm run build
GITLAB_BASE_URL=https://gitlab.com \
GITLAB_TOKEN=glpat-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx \
node dist/cli.js
For local development, copy .env.example to .env and keep credentials out of git.
Run a setup diagnostics pass before wiring the server into a client:
gitlab-mcp-server doctor
From source:
npm run build
node dist/cli.js doctor
The doctor report validates GitLab connectivity and summarizes:
- authenticated user and GitLab version
- read-only, write-enabled, or destructive-enabled posture
- token scope visibility when PAT introspection is available
- allowlists, denylist, and alias counts
- tool profile, HTTP bind posture, and payload limits
- likely blocked capabilities and recommended next checks
MCP Client Setup
Example client configs live in examples/clients/:
- Claude Code guide
- Shared client setup guide
- HTTP transport guide
- Raw config examples: Claude Desktop JSON, Codex TOML, Cursor JSON
Generic stdio config
{
"mcpServers": {
"gitlab": {
"command": "gitlab-mcp-server",
"env": {
"GITLAB_BASE_URL": "https://gitlab.com",
"GITLAB_TOKEN": "your-token-here",
"ENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS": "false",
"ENABLE_DESTRUCTIVE_TOOLS": "false"
}
}
}
}
npx config
{
"mcpServers": {
"gitlab": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "gitlab-mcp-cli"],
"env": {
"GITLAB_BASE_URL": "https://gitlab.com",
"GITLAB_TOKEN": "your-token-here",
"ENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS": "false",
"ENABLE_DESTRUCTIVE_TOOLS": "false"
}
}
}
}
Codex TOML config
[mcp_servers.gitlab]
command = "gitlab-mcp-server"
[mcp_servers.gitlab.env]
GITLAB_BASE_URL = "https://gitlab.com"
GITLAB_TOKEN = "your-token-here"
ENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS = "false"
ENABLE_DESTRUCTIVE_TOOLS = "false"
HTTP transport
Stdio remains the default transport. To run the local Streamable HTTP server, use the CLI subcommand:
GITLAB_TOKEN=glpat-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx \
gitlab-mcp-server serve-http
You can also enable HTTP with environment configuration:
MCP_TRANSPORT=http \
GITLAB_TOKEN=glpat-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx \
gitlab-mcp-server
CLI mode takes precedence over MCP_TRANSPORT, so gitlab-mcp-server doctor still runs diagnostics even when MCP_TRANSPORT=http is present.
Default HTTP endpoint:
http://127.0.0.1:3333/mcp
HTTP safety defaults:
- Binds to
127.0.0.1. - Allows
localhost,127.0.0.1, and[::1]host headers. - Allows missing origins and localhost browser origins.
- Requires explicit
MCP_HTTP_ALLOWED_ORIGINSentries for remote browser origins. - Refuses non-local binds unless both
MCP_HTTP_ALLOW_NON_LOCALHOST=trueandMCP_HTTP_AUTH_TOKENare configured.
Configuration
The server normalizes GITLAB_BASE_URL to /api/v4 automatically. If you already pass an /api/v4 URL, it is preserved.
Core settings
| Variable | Required | Default | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
GITLAB_BASE_URL |
No | https://gitlab.com |
GitLab instance base URL or /api/v4 URL |
GITLAB_TOKEN |
Yes | GitLab PAT, project access token, group access token, or OAuth bearer token | |
GITLAB_TOKEN_HEADER_MODE |
No | bearer |
Use private-token when required by some self-managed setups |
GITLAB_MCP_TOOL_PROFILE |
No | readonly |
Limits MCP tool discovery to a workflow profile |
GITLAB_MCP_ENABLED_TOOLS |
No | empty | Comma-separated explicit tool allowlist applied after the profile |
GITLAB_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS |
No | empty | Comma-separated explicit tool denylist applied after the profile |
GITLAB_MCP_EXPOSE_DISABLED_WRITES |
No | false |
Compatibility override to advertise write/destructive tools even when server-side gates are disabled |
MCP_TRANSPORT |
No | stdio |
Use http to run Streamable HTTP when no CLI mode is provided |
MCP_HTTP_HOST |
No | 127.0.0.1 |
HTTP bind host |
MCP_HTTP_PORT |
No | 3333 |
HTTP bind port |
MCP_HTTP_PATH |
No | /mcp |
Streamable HTTP MCP path |
MCP_HTTP_ALLOWED_ORIGINS |
No | empty | Comma-separated browser origins allowed in HTTP mode |
MCP_HTTP_ALLOWED_HOSTS |
No | localhost,127.0.0.1,[::1] |
Comma-separated allowed hostnames for DNS rebinding protection |
MCP_HTTP_AUTH_TOKEN |
No | unset | Optional bearer token required by HTTP mode; required for non-local binds |
MCP_HTTP_ALLOW_NON_LOCALHOST |
No | false |
Allows non-local HTTP binds only when a bearer token is also configured |
ENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS |
No | false |
Enables write-capable tools |
ENABLE_DESTRUCTIVE_TOOLS |
No | false |
Enables destructive tools that also require per-call confirmation |
ENABLE_DRY_RUN |
No | false |
Returns intended write requests without mutating GitLab |
PROJECT_ALIASES |
No | empty | Comma-separated alias=group/project mappings for project_id inputs |
GROUP_ALIASES |
No | empty | Comma-separated alias=my-group mappings for group_id inputs |
Access controls and limits
| Variable | Default | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
PROJECT_ALLOWLIST |
empty | Comma-separated project IDs or paths that are allowed |
GROUP_ALLOWLIST |
empty | Comma-separated group IDs or paths that are allowed |
PROJECT_DENYLIST |
empty | Comma-separated project IDs or paths that are always denied |
MAX_FILE_SIZE_BYTES |
1048576 |
Maximum repository file payload |
MAX_DIFF_SIZE_BYTES |
2097152 |
Maximum diff payload |
MAX_API_RESPONSE_BYTES |
4194304 |
Maximum total API response payload |
GITLAB_HTTP_TIMEOUT_MS |
30000 |
Request timeout |
Operational settings
| Variable | Default | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
GITLAB_USER_AGENT |
gitlab-mcp-server |
Custom outbound user agent |
LOG_LEVEL |
info |
debug, info, warn, or error |
AUDIT_LOG_PATH |
unset | Optional JSON-line audit log path |
EXPOSE_SECRET_VARIABLE_VALUES |
false |
Keeps CI/CD secret values redacted unless explicitly enabled |
See .env.example for a complete local template.
Aliases
If you repeatedly work with the same projects or groups, you can define explicit aliases:
PROJECT_ALIASES=platform-api=platform/backend-api,storefront=commerce/storefront
GROUP_ALIASES=platform=platform,commerce=commerce
After that, any tool expecting project_id or group_id can use the alias instead of the full path. Alias resolution is explicit and local to this server configuration.
Tool profiles
The default profile is readonly, so MCP clients discover read-only tools first and disabled write/destructive tools stay hidden. Use a narrower profile when you want agents to see only the tools for a workflow:
GITLAB_MCP_TOOL_PROFILE=mr-review
Available profiles:
readonlycoremr-reviewci-triagedeliveryreleasegovernancemaintainer-writefull
Explicit allow/deny lists are applied after the selected profile:
GITLAB_MCP_ENABLED_TOOLS=gitlab_get_merge_request,gitlab_get_merge_request_diff
GITLAB_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS=gitlab_merge_merge_request
For compatibility with older broad tool discovery, set GITLAB_MCP_TOOL_PROFILE=full and GITLAB_MCP_EXPOSE_DISABLED_WRITES=true. Execution is still protected by ENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS, ENABLE_DESTRUCTIVE_TOOLS, and per-call destructive confirmation.
Guided Prompts
The server now exposes reusable MCP prompts so users do not need to memorize the full tool catalog first.
Core workflow prompts:
gitlab_review_merge_request_workflowgitlab_explain_failed_pipeline_workflowgitlab_summarize_project_status_workflowgitlab_generate_weekly_delivery_summary_workflowgitlab_assess_project_write_safety_workflow
Hero workflow prompts:
gitlab_stale_merge_request_cleanup_workflowgitlab_flaky_ci_triage_workflowgitlab_release_readiness_check_workflowgitlab_team_delivery_digest_workflowgitlab_portfolio_delivery_overview_workflowgitlab_summarize_commit_range_workflowgitlab_summarize_directory_workflow
Example prompt requests inside an MCP client:
Use gitlab_review_merge_request_workflow for project_id="platform-api" and merge_request_iid="42".
Use gitlab_flaky_ci_triage_workflow for project_id="platform-api" and ref="main".
These prompts point the model at the relevant gitlab_* tools for each workflow while keeping the actual data access explicit and structured.
Recommended Starting Points
If you are trying the MCP for the first time, start with the orchestration tools rather than the lower-level primitives.
Recommended first tools:
gitlab_release_readiness_check: one-call release go/caution/hold assessment for a projectgitlab_flaky_ci_triage: separates likely flaky CI from deterministic failuresgitlab_stale_merge_request_cleanup: identifies stale merge requests and recommends the next action for each sampled itemgitlab_team_delivery_digest: produces a concise project or group delivery summary plus a chat-ready status line
Example calls:
{
"project_id": "platform-api",
"output_format": "markdown"
}
Use that with gitlab_release_readiness_check.
{
"project_id": "platform-api",
"ref": "main",
"output_format": "markdown"
}
Use that with gitlab_flaky_ci_triage.
{
"project_id": "platform-api",
"stale_after_days": 14,
"output_format": "markdown"
}
Use that with gitlab_stale_merge_request_cleanup.
{
"scope_type": "group",
"scope_id": "platform",
"days": 7,
"output_format": "markdown"
}
Use that with gitlab_team_delivery_digest.
Shareable Output Formats
Selected higher-level tools support output_format="markdown" in addition to the default structured JSON response envelope.
Current markdown-capable tools:
gitlab_summarize_project_statusgitlab_explain_failed_pipelinegitlab_stale_merge_request_cleanupgitlab_flaky_ci_triagegitlab_compare_pipeline_runsgitlab_trace_job_to_commit_and_merge_requestgitlab_release_readiness_checkgitlab_team_delivery_digestgitlab_portfolio_delivery_overviewgitlab_get_group_delivery_overviewgitlab_summarize_commit_rangegitlab_summarize_directorygitlab_review_merge_request_risksgitlab_get_merge_request_review_stategitlab_generate_release_notesgitlab_get_project_dashboard
Example calls:
{
"project_id": "platform-api",
"output_format": "markdown"
}
{
"project_id": "platform-api",
"pipeline_id": 12345,
"output_format": "markdown"
}
{
"scope_type": "project",
"scope_id": "platform-api",
"days": 7,
"output_format": "markdown"
}
This is useful when the result is intended for chat, a GitLab comment, or a status update, while structured remains the best default for agents that want to post-process the result.
Token Setup
Recommended scopes:
- Read-only mode:
read_api - Write mode:
api
Notes:
ENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS=trueonly enables the MCP server's write-capable tools. It does not add GitLab permissions to the configured token.- If write tools are enabled but GitLab returns
insufficient_scope, the MCP write-mode guard has passed and the token is still missing the required GitLab scope, usuallyapi. - Project and group access tokens work when their scopes match the requested resources.
- Some self-managed GitLab instances work better with
GITLAB_TOKEN_HEADER_MODE=private-token. - Keep write and destructive modes off unless you explicitly need them.
Safety Model
- Read-only is the default and recommended starting point.
- The default tool profile is
readonly; disabled write/destructive tools are hidden from MCP discovery. - Write-capable tools require
ENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS=true. - Destructive tools require
ENABLE_DESTRUCTIVE_TOOLS=trueandconfirm_destructive=truein the tool call. ENABLE_DRY_RUN=truelets agents inspect a write request before changing GitLab.- Allowlists and the denylist are enforced before risky operations.
- HTTP mode is localhost-only by default and requires a bearer token before non-local binds are allowed.
- Secret CI/CD variable values remain redacted unless
EXPOSE_SECRET_VARIABLE_VALUES=true. - The server does not execute shell commands. It talks directly to the GitLab REST and GraphQL APIs.
Security details: SECURITY.md and docs/security-model.md
Available Tool Areas
The server exposes concrete gitlab_* MCP tools. Representative examples:
- Instance and access:
gitlab_validate_token,gitlab_get_current_user,gitlab_list_accessible_projects - Projects and groups:
gitlab_search,gitlab_search_projects,gitlab_search_labels,gitlab_get_project_dashboard,gitlab_get_group_delivery_overview - Repository:
gitlab_get_file,gitlab_search_code,gitlab_compare_refs,gitlab_get_commit_diff - Issues:
gitlab_list_issues,gitlab_create_issue,gitlab_add_issue_comment - Merge requests:
gitlab_get_merge_request,gitlab_get_merge_request_commits,gitlab_get_merge_request_pipelines,gitlab_get_merge_request_review_state,gitlab_merge_merge_request - Pipelines:
gitlab_list_pipelines,gitlab_explain_failed_pipeline,gitlab_find_flaky_jobs - Releases and packages:
gitlab_list_releases,gitlab_create_release,gitlab_get_package - Governance:
gitlab_get_project_approval_rules,gitlab_check_project_write_risk - Intelligence:
gitlab_summarize_project_status,gitlab_stale_merge_request_cleanup,gitlab_flaky_ci_triage,gitlab_release_readiness_check,gitlab_team_delivery_digest,gitlab_portfolio_delivery_overview,gitlab_summarize_commit_range,gitlab_summarize_directory,gitlab_review_merge_request_risks,gitlab_generate_release_notes
Write-capable tools stay unavailable until you explicitly enable them.
For design notes and implementation details, see:
Common AI Workflows
This server is useful when you want an agent to:
- inspect a GitLab repository without cloning it first
- summarize a commit range and identify risky files or directories with
gitlab_summarize_commit_range - understand an unfamiliar repository area with
gitlab_summarize_directory - review merge request diffs, discussions, approvals, and pipeline state together
- summarize recent team activity across issues, merge requests, and pipelines with
gitlab_team_delivery_digest - assess cross-project portfolio health with
gitlab_portfolio_delivery_overview - assess release readiness with
gitlab_release_readiness_check - triage flaky CI with
gitlab_flaky_ci_triage - clean up stale merge requests with
gitlab_stale_merge_request_cleanup - trace a failed job back to its pipeline, commit, and merge request context
- draft release notes from tags, compares, and recent delivery activity
- assess whether a project is safe for AI-assisted writes before enabling write mode
- produce a chat-ready delivery digest with markdown output
- use guided prompts instead of manually selecting low-level tools
If you want agents and other developers to discover the right tools quickly, refer to the actual MCP tool names in prompts, examples, and client instructions.
Troubleshooting
- Run
gitlab-mcp-server doctorfirst when setup behavior is unclear. 401 Unauthorized: the token is invalid, expired, or using the wrong header mode.403 Forbidden: the token lacks access or the resource is outside the configured allowlists.403 insufficient_scopeon write tools afterENABLE_WRITE_TOOLS=true: write mode is enabled, but the GitLab credential is still not authorized for writes. Usegitlab_validate_tokenordoctor; personal access tokens should showapiin their scopes. For project, group, or OAuth tokens, verify the token scope and project membership directly in GitLab because PAT scope introspection may be unavailable.404 Not Found: the resource is missing or hidden by GitLab permissions.429 Too Many Requests: the GitLab rate limit was hit.- HTTP server refuses to start on
0.0.0.0or another non-local host: set bothMCP_HTTP_ALLOW_NON_LOCALHOST=trueandMCP_HTTP_AUTH_TOKEN, then restrictMCP_HTTP_ALLOWED_HOSTSandMCP_HTTP_ALLOWED_ORIGINSto trusted values. - PAT about to expire: the
doctorreport andgitlab_validate_tokenadvisory will flag short remaining lifetime when PAT introspection is available. - Large file or diff errors: raise payload limits only when you trust the workload.
- CLI not found from source: run
npm run buildand invokenode dist/cli.js.
Development
npm ci
npm run typecheck
npm test
npm run build
npm run pack:dry-run
Supporting docs:
Publishing
This repository uses npm trusted publishing from GitHub Actions through publish.yml.
Release flow:
- Update
package.jsonversion. - Commit and push.
- Create and push a matching tag such as
v<package-version>. - Publish a GitHub Release for that tag.
- GitHub Actions publishes the package to npm through OIDC.
Manual fallback:
npm login
npm whoami
npm run clean
npm run build
npm test
npm run pack:dry-run
npm publish --access public
No NPM_TOKEN secret is required for the default GitHub Actions release path.
Published Package Contents
The npm tarball intentionally stays small and only publishes:
dist/README.mdLICENSEpackage.json
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