| name | glab |
| description | GitLab CLI (glab) for working with GitLab from the command line. Read this skill before running any `glab` or GitLab API command — it applies to every GitLab operation, whether reading or writing (for example merge requests, issues, work items, discussions and threaded replies, comments, CI/CD pipelines, releases, packages, members, and project settings). Whenever a task touches GitLab in any way, consult this skill first so you use the correct, safe command on the first try. Prefer glab over raw API calls for all GitLab operations.
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GitLab CLI (glab)
glab is pre-configured and available in your environment. Use it for all
GitLab operations. Run glab <command> --help for detailed flag information.
Quick reference
# Issues
glab issue view <iid>
glab issue list --label "bug,priority::1"
glab issue create --title "title" --description "$(cat /tmp/desc.md)"
glab issue note <iid> -m "comment text"
# Merge requests
glab mr create --push --title "fix: title" --description "$(cat /tmp/desc.md)"
glab mr view <iid>
glab mr list --assignee <user>
glab mr update <iid> --description "$(cat /tmp/desc.md)"
glab mr note create <iid> -m "comment text"
# CI/CD
glab ci status
glab ci status --output json
glab ci list
glab ci get --merge-request <iid> --with-job-details
glab ci get --pipeline-id <id> --output json
glab ci retry <job-id>
glab api projects/:id/jobs/<job-id>/trace
# Machine-readable output
glab mr list --output json | jq '.[].title'
Templates: Check .gitlab/merge_request_templates/ and
.gitlab/issue_templates/ for project-specific templates.
References: Link issues with #123, MRs with !456, cross-project
with group/project#123.
Comments and discussions
Use the mr note subcommands (create, resolve, reopen); flags on the
root glab mr note command are deprecated.
Short, inline bodies — pass -m
glab issue note <iid> -m "comment text"
glab mr note create <iid> -m "comment text"
glab incident note <iid> -m "comment text"
# Cross-project
glab mr note create <iid> -m "..." --repo group/project
Long or Markdown bodies — pipe to stdin (preferred for MR notes)
glab mr note create reads the body from stdin when its input is a pipe.
This avoids shell-quoting pitfalls (backticks, $, backslashes) and is the
safest pattern for non-interactive use.
# From a file
glab mr note create <iid> < /tmp/body.md
# Inline literal multi-line body — quoted heredoc, no shell expansion inside
glab mr note create <iid> << 'EOF'
Your **markdown** comment.
Code blocks and `inline code`, $variables, and \backslashes are all literal.
EOF
glab issue note and glab incident note do not read stdin. For long
bodies on those commands, use glab api with -F body=@file (see
Content-type guidance) or inline a quoted heredoc
into -m:
glab issue note <iid> -m "$(cat << 'EOF'
Your **markdown** comment.
Code blocks and `inline code` are safe.
EOF
)"
For descriptions on glab issue create / glab mr create / glab mr update,
inline a quoted heredoc into --description, or for very large or reusable
bodies write to a file and use --description "$(cat /tmp/desc.md)".
Threaded replies on merge requests
glab mr note create supports --reply <discussion-id> for replying inside
an MR thread. The value can be the full discussion ID or a unique prefix of
at least 8 characters.
Diff comments accept a single line (--line 42), a range (--line 10:15),
a removed line (--old-line 7), or no line for a file-level comment.
glab mr note create <iid> --reply <discussion-id> -m "I agree!"
glab mr note create <iid> --file main.go --line 42 -m "Needs refactoring"
glab mr note create <iid> --file main.go --line 10:15 -m "Extract this block"
glab mr note create <iid> --file main.go --old-line 7 -m "Why was this removed?"
glab mr note create <iid> --file main.go -m "General comment on this file"
glab mr note create <iid> -m "LGTM" --unique # idempotent: skip if same body exists
glab mr note resolve / reopen take the MR identifier followed by the
discussion identifier. The identifier can be a discussion ID (full 40-char
hex or 8+ char prefix) or a note ID (integer; the parent discussion is
looked up automatically):
glab mr note resolve <iid> <discussion-id>
glab mr note resolve <iid> <note-id> # integer note ID also works
glab mr note reopen <iid> <discussion-id>
Threaded replies on issues, incidents, and work items
The CLI does not wrap threaded replies for these, so you fall back to
glab api. For any non-trivial body, write it to a file and post the file
rather than inlining rich Markdown — inlined backticks, $, newlines, and a
leading @ all break (see Content-type guidance):
# Discover the discussion ID
glab api projects/:id/issues/<iid>/discussions \
| jq '.[] | {id, body: .notes[0].body}'
# Build the body in a file, then post it with -F body=@file
cat > /tmp/reply.md << 'EOF'
@user — here's the result, with `code`, a $variable, and an emoji ✅.
EOF
glab api projects/:id/issues/<iid>/discussions/<discussion-id>/notes \
-F body=@/tmp/reply.md
For a short, plain reply you can still inline it with -f body="reply text".
API calls
glab api auto-prepends /api/v4/. Use relative paths:
glab api user # NOT /api/v4/user
glab api projects/:id/merge_requests
glab api projects/:id/issues | jq '.[0]'
When using -f for PUT/POST, pass simple key=value pairs. Array bracket
syntax like ids[]=1 is not supported:
glab api projects/:id/merge_requests/:iid -X PUT -f "assignee_id=1"
Content-type guidance
# -f / --raw-field — literal string value
glab api projects/:id/issues/:iid/notes -f body="comment text"
# -F / --field — reads @file as a string. The leading @ means "read this
# file", so only pass a real path here. A literal body that starts with @
# (e.g. "@user thanks") must NOT go through -F — it would be read as a
# filename. Use -f for literal inline text, or write the body to a file and
# point -F at the file (recommended for rich/markdown bodies).
glab api projects/:id/issues/:iid/notes -F body=@/tmp/comment.md
# --input — raw request body from a file (or '-' for stdin). Does NOT set
# Content-Type. Without the header, JSON endpoints return HTTP 415.
glab api projects/:id/issues/:iid/notes \
--input /tmp/body.json \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Common mistakes
-m is required on note commands — without it, glab issue note and
glab incident note open $EDITOR (which hangs in non-interactive
environments). glab mr note create falls back to reading stdin on a pipe,
but still opens $EDITOR on a TTY.
- Use
glab mr note create, not glab mr note -m — the --message,
--unique, --resolve, and --unresolve flags on the root glab mr note
command are deprecated. Use the create, resolve, and reopen
subcommands instead.
- Editor-opening flags are unsafe in agent environments — avoid
--description "-" on issue create / mr create / mr update and
avoid omitting -m on note commands. Pass an explicit value or pipe
from stdin instead.
glab issue note and glab incident note only post root-level
comments — use glab mr note create --reply for MRs, or
glab api .../discussions/<id>/notes for issues/incidents (write the body
to a file and pass -F body=@file for anything non-trivial).
--input requires an explicit Content-Type header — glab api --input file.json sends raw bytes without setting Content-Type, causing
HTTP 415. Add -H "Content-Type: application/json" or use -f / -F
instead.
glab ci retry takes a job ID, not a pipeline ID — to retry an
entire pipeline, use glab api projects/:id/pipelines/<id>/retry -X POST.
glab ci trace streams — it blocks until the job finishes. For
agents, use glab ci get for pipeline state or
glab api projects/:id/jobs/<job-id>/trace to fetch a finished log.
glab ci view is interactive — terminal UI that blocks. Use
glab ci status or glab ci get for pipeline state instead.
- Always
--push on glab mr create — without it the remote branch
may not exist and MR creation fails.
- No
--state on mr list — use --all, --merged, or --closed.
- No
--body flag — --body is a gh flag. glab uses --description.
- Labels —
--label to add, --unlabel to remove. Scoped labels like
status::doing auto-replace within their scope.