PROJECT ARCHIVED: unfortunately, due to lack of time, this repository is no longer maintained.
gitlab-copy
is a simple tool for copying issues/labels/milestones/notes from one GitLab project to another, possibly running on different GitLab instances.
By default, gitlab-copy
won't copy anything until told explicitly to do so on the command line: running it will do nothing but showing some statistics.
Note: GitLab 8.6 introduced the ability to move an issue to another project, but on the same GitLab installation only. gitlab-copy
can still prove valuable to move issues between projects on different GitLab hosts and to perform batch operations from the command line (see the feature list below).
Installing gitlab-copy
is very easy since it comes as a static binary with no dependencies. Just grab a compiled version for your system (or have a look at the Compile From Source section).
The following features are available:
- Support for GitLab instances with self-signed TLS certificates by using the
-k
CLI flag (sincev0.8.0
) - Support for different GitLab hosts/instances (since
v0.8.0
) - Copy milestones if not existing on target (use
milestonesOnly
to copy milestones only, see below) - Copy all source labels on target (use
labelsOnly
to copy labels only, see below) - Copy issues if not existing on target (by title)
- Apply closed status on issues, if any
- Set issue's assignee (if user exists) and milestone, if any
- Copy notes (attached to issues), preserving user ownership
- Can specify in the config file a specific issue or range of issues to copy
- Auto-close source issues after copy
- Add a note with a link to the new issue created in the target project
- Use a custom link text template, like "Closed in favor or me/myotherproject#12"
Here are some instructions to get started. First make sure you have valid GitLab account tokens for both source and destination GitLab installations. They are used to access GitLab resources without authentication. GitLab private tokens are availble in "Profile Settings -> Account".
Now, write a gitlab.yml
YAML config file to specify source and target projects, along with your GitLab account tokens:
from:
url: https://gitlab.mydomain.com
token: atoken
project: namespace/project
to:
url: https://gitlab.myotherdomain.com
token: anothertoken
project: namespace/project
That's it. You may want to run the program now. See the section below.
Now grab some project stats by running
$ ./gitlab-copy gitlab.yml
If everything looks good, run the same command, this time with the -y
flag to effectively copie issues between GitLab
instances (they can be the same):
$ ./gitlab-copy -y gitlab.yml
If one of the GitLab instances uses a self-signed TLS certificate, use the -k
flag (available in v0.8.0
) to skip the TLS verification process:
$ ./gitlab-copy -k -y gitlab.yml
Note that a specific issue or ranges of issues can be specified in the YAML config file. If you want to
copy only issue #15 and issues #20 to #30, add an issues
key in the from:
key:
from:
url: https://gitlab.mydomain.com
token: atoken
project: namespace/project
issues:
- 15
- 20-30
...
In order to copy all labels from one project to another (labels only, not issues), just append a labelsOnly
entry in the from
section:
from:
url: https://gitlab.mydomain.com
token: atoken
project: namespace/project
labelsOnly: true
to:
url: https://gitlab.sameorotherdomain.com
token: anothertoken
project: namespace/otherproject
...
In order to copy all milestones only, just add a milestonesOnly
entry in the from
section:
from:
url: https://gitlab.mydomain.com
token: atoken
project: namespace/project
milestonesOnly: true
...
Notes in issues can preserve original user ownership when copied. To do that, you need to
- have tokens for all users involved
- add related users as members of the target project beforehand (with at least a Reporter permission)
- add a
users
entry into theto
target section:
...
to:
url: https://gitlab.sameorotherdomain.com
token: anothertoken
project: namespace/otherproject
users:
bob: anothertoken
alice: herowntoken
Ensure you have a working Go 1.18 installation then:
$ go install github.com/gotsunami/gitlab-copy/cmd/gitlab-copy@latest
- The program gets compiled into
bin/gitlab-copy
- Cross-compile with
make buildall
- Prepare distribution packages with
make dist
If you like this tool and want to support its development, a donation would be greatly appreciated!
It's not about the amount at all: making a donation boosts the motivation to work on a project. Thank you very much if you can give anything.
Monero address: 88uoutKJS2w3FfkKyJFsNwKPHzaHfTAo6LyTmHSAoQHgCkCeR8FUG4hZ8oD4fnt8iP7i1Ty72V6CLMHi1yUzLCZKHU1pB7c
MIT. See LICENSE
file.