| name | gitlab-automation |
| description | Automate GitLab project management, issues, merge requests, pipelines, branches, and user operations via Rube MCP (Composio). Always search tools first for current schemas. |
| risk | critical |
| source | community |
| date_added | 2026-02-27 |
GitLab Automation via Rube MCP
Automate GitLab operations including project management, issue tracking, merge request workflows, CI/CD pipeline monitoring, branch management, and user administration through Composio's GitLab toolkit.
Prerequisites
- Rube MCP must be connected (RUBE_SEARCH_TOOLS available)
- Active GitLab connection via
RUBE_MANAGE_CONNECTIONS with toolkit gitlab
- Always call
RUBE_SEARCH_TOOLS first to get current tool schemas
Setup
Get Rube MCP: Add https://rube.app/mcp as an MCP server in your client configuration. No API keys needed — just add the endpoint and it works.
- Verify Rube MCP is available by confirming
RUBE_SEARCH_TOOLS responds
- Call
RUBE_MANAGE_CONNECTIONS with toolkit gitlab
- If connection is not ACTIVE, follow the returned auth link to complete GitLab OAuth
- Confirm connection status shows ACTIVE before running any workflows
Core Workflows
1. Manage Issues
When to use: User wants to create, update, list, or search issues in a GitLab project
Tool sequence:
GITLAB_GET_PROJECTS - Find the target project and get its ID [Prerequisite]
GITLAB_LIST_PROJECT_ISSUES - List and filter issues for a project [Required]
GITLAB_CREATE_PROJECT_ISSUE - Create a new issue [Required for create]
GITLAB_UPDATE_PROJECT_ISSUE - Update an existing issue (title, labels, state, assignees) [Required for update]
GITLAB_LIST_PROJECT_USERS - Find user IDs for assignment [Optional]
Key parameters:
id: Project ID (integer) or URL-encoded path (e.g., "my-group/my-project")
title: Issue title (required for creation)
description: Issue body text (max 1,048,576 characters)
labels: Comma-separated label names (e.g., "bug,critical")
add_labels / remove_labels: Add or remove labels without replacing all
state: Filter by "all", "opened", or "closed"
state_event: "close" or "reopen" to change issue state
assignee_ids: Array of user IDs; use [0] to unassign all
issue_iid: Internal issue ID within the project (required for updates)
milestone: Filter by milestone title
search: Search in title and description
scope: "created_by_me", "assigned_to_me", or "all"
page / per_page: Pagination (default per_page: 20)
Pitfalls:
id accepts either integer project ID or URL-encoded path; wrong IDs yield 4xx errors
issue_iid is the project-internal ID (shown as #42), different from the global issue ID
- Labels in
labels field replace ALL existing labels; use add_labels/remove_labels for incremental changes
- Setting
assignee_ids to empty array does NOT unassign; use [0] instead
updated_at field requires administrator or project/group owner rights
2. Manage Merge Requests
When to use: User wants to list, filter, or review merge requests in a project
Tool sequence:
GITLAB_GET_PROJECT - Get project details and verify access [Prerequisite]
GITLAB_GET_PROJECT_MERGE_REQUESTS - List and filter merge requests [Required]
GITLAB_GET_REPOSITORY_BRANCHES - Verify source/target branches [Optional]
GITLAB_LIST_ALL_PROJECT_MEMBERS - Find reviewers/assignees [Optional]
Key parameters:
id: Project ID or URL-encoded path
state: "opened", "closed", "locked", "merged", or "all"
scope: "created_by_me" (default), "assigned_to_me", or "all"
source_branch / target_branch: Filter by branch names
author_id / author_username: Filter by MR author
assignee_id: Filter by assignee (use None for unassigned, Any for assigned)
reviewer_id / reviewer_username: Filter by reviewer
labels: Comma-separated label filter
search: Search in title and description
wip: "yes" for draft MRs, "no" for non-draft
order_by: "created_at" (default), "title", "merged_at", "updated_at"
view: "simple" for minimal fields
iids[]: Filter by specific MR internal IDs
Pitfalls:
- Default
scope is "created_by_me" which limits results; use "all" for complete listings
author_id and author_username are mutually exclusive
reviewer_id and reviewer_username are mutually exclusive
approved filter requires the mr_approved_filter feature flag (disabled by default)
- Large MR histories can be noisy; use filters and moderate
per_page values
3. Manage Projects and Repositories
When to use: User wants to list projects, create new projects, or manage branches
Tool sequence:
GITLAB_GET_PROJECTS - List all accessible projects with filters [Required]
GITLAB_GET_PROJECT - Get detailed info for a specific project [Optional]
GITLAB_LIST_USER_PROJECTS - List projects owned by a specific user [Optional]
GITLAB_CREATE_PROJECT - Create a new project [Required for create]
GITLAB_GET_REPOSITORY_BRANCHES - List branches in a project [Required for branch ops]
GITLAB_CREATE_REPOSITORY_BRANCH - Create a new branch [Optional]
GITLAB_GET_REPOSITORY_BRANCH - Get details of a specific branch [Optional]
GITLAB_LIST_REPOSITORY_COMMITS - View commit history [Optional]
GITLAB_GET_PROJECT_LANGUAGES - Get language breakdown [Optional]
Key parameters:
name / path: Project name and URL-friendly path (both required for creation)
visibility: "private", "internal", or "public"
namespace_id: Group or user ID for project placement
search: Case-insensitive substring search for projects
membership: true to limit to projects user is a member of
owned: true to limit to user-owned projects
project_id: Project ID for branch operations
branch_name: Name for new branch
ref: Source branch or commit SHA for new branch creation
order_by: "id", "name", "path", "created_at", "updated_at", "star_count", "last_activity_at"
Pitfalls:
GITLAB_GET_PROJECTS pagination is required for complete coverage; stopping at first page misses projects
- Some responses place items under
data.details; parse the actual returned list structure
- Most follow-up calls depend on correct
project_id; verify with GITLAB_GET_PROJECT first
- Invalid
branch_name/ref/sha causes client errors; verify branch existence via GITLAB_GET_REPOSITORY_BRANCHES first
- Both
name and path are required for GITLAB_CREATE_PROJECT
4. Monitor CI/CD Pipelines
When to use: User wants to check pipeline status, list jobs, or monitor CI/CD runs
Tool sequence:
GITLAB_GET_PROJECT - Verify project access [Prerequisite]
GITLAB_LIST_PROJECT_PIPELINES - List pipelines with filters [Required]
GITLAB_GET_SINGLE_PIPELINE - Get detailed info for a specific pipeline [Optional]
GITLAB_LIST_PIPELINE_JOBS - List jobs within a pipeline [Optional]
Key parameters:
id: Project ID or URL-encoded path
status: Filter by "created", "waiting_for_resource", "preparing", "pending", "running", "success", "failed", "canceled", "skipped", "manual", "scheduled"
scope: "running", "pending", "finished", "branches", "tags"
ref: Branch or tag name
sha: Specific commit SHA
source: Pipeline source (use "parent_pipeline" for child pipelines)
order_by: "id" (default), "status", "ref", "updated_at", "user_id"
created_after / created_before: ISO 8601 date filters
pipeline_id: Specific pipeline ID for job listing
include_retried: true to include retried jobs (default false)
Pitfalls:
- Large pipeline histories can be noisy; use
status, ref, and date filters to narrow results
- Use moderate
per_page values to keep output manageable
- Pipeline job
scope accepts single status string or array of statuses
yaml_errors: true returns only pipelines with invalid configurations
5. Manage Users and Members
When to use: User wants to find users, list project members, or check user status
Tool sequence:
GITLAB_GET_USERS - Search and list GitLab users [Required]
GITLAB_GET_USER - Get details for a specific user by ID [Optional]
GITLAB_GET_USERS_ID_STATUS - Get user status message and availability [Optional]
GITLAB_LIST_ALL_PROJECT_MEMBERS - List all project members (direct + inherited) [Required for member listing]
GITLAB_LIST_PROJECT_USERS - List project users with search filter [Optional]
Key parameters:
search: Search by name, username, or public email
username: Get specific user by username
active / blocked: Filter by user state
id: Project ID for member listing
query: Filter members by name, email, or username
state: Filter members by "awaiting" or "active" (Premium/Ultimate)
user_ids: Filter by specific user IDs
Pitfalls:
- Many user filters (admins, auditors, extern_uid, two_factor) are admin-only
GITLAB_LIST_ALL_PROJECT_MEMBERS includes direct, inherited, and invited members
- User search is case-insensitive but may not match partial email domains
- Premium/Ultimate features (state filter, seat info) are not available on free plans
Common Patterns
ID Resolution
GitLab uses two identifier formats for projects:
- Numeric ID: Integer project ID (e.g.,
123)
- URL-encoded path: Namespace/project format (e.g.,
"my-group%2Fmy-project" or "my-group/my-project")
- Issue IID vs ID:
issue_iid is the project-internal number (#42); the global id is different
- User ID: Numeric; resolve via
GITLAB_GET_USERS with search or username
Pagination
GitLab uses offset-based pagination:
- Set
page (starting at 1) and per_page (1-100, default 20)
- Continue incrementing
page until response returns fewer items than per_page or is empty
- Total count may be available in response headers (
X-Total, X-Total-Pages)
- Always paginate to completion for accurate results
URL-Encoded Paths
When using project paths as identifiers:
- Forward slashes must be URL-encoded:
my-group/my-project becomes my-group%2Fmy-project
- Some tools accept unencoded paths; check schema for each tool
- Prefer numeric IDs when available for reliability
Known Pitfalls
ID Formats
- Project
id field accepts both integer and string (URL-encoded path)
- Issue
issue_iid is project-scoped; do not confuse with global issue ID
- Pipeline IDs are project-scoped integers
- User IDs are global integers across the GitLab instance
Rate Limits
- GitLab has per-user rate limits (typically 300-2000 requests/minute depending on plan)
- Large pipeline/issue histories should use date and status filters to reduce result sets
- Paginate responsibly with moderate
per_page values
Parameter Quirks
labels field replaces ALL labels; use add_labels/remove_labels for incremental changes
assignee_ids: [0] unassigns all; empty array does nothing
scope defaults vary: "created_by_me" for MRs, "all" for issues
author_id and author_username are mutually exclusive in MR filters
- Date parameters use ISO 8601 format:
"2024-01-15T10:30:00Z"
Plan Restrictions
- Some features require Premium/Ultimate:
epic_id, weight, iteration_id, approved_by_ids, member state filter
- Admin-only features: user management filters,
updated_at override, custom attributes
- The
mr_approved_filter feature flag is disabled by default
Quick Reference
| Task | Tool Slug | Key Params |
|---|
| List projects | GITLAB_GET_PROJECTS | search, membership, visibility |
| Get project details | GITLAB_GET_PROJECT | id |
| User's projects | GITLAB_LIST_USER_PROJECTS | id, search, owned |
| Create project | GITLAB_CREATE_PROJECT | name, path, visibility |
| List issues | GITLAB_LIST_PROJECT_ISSUES | id, state, labels, search |
| Create issue | GITLAB_CREATE_PROJECT_ISSUE | id, title, description, labels |
| Update issue | GITLAB_UPDATE_PROJECT_ISSUE | id, issue_iid, state_event |
| List merge requests | GITLAB_GET_PROJECT_MERGE_REQUESTS | id, state, scope, labels |
| List branches | GITLAB_GET_REPOSITORY_BRANCHES | project_id, search |
| Get branch | GITLAB_GET_REPOSITORY_BRANCH | project_id, branch_name |
| Create branch | GITLAB_CREATE_REPOSITORY_BRANCH | project_id, branch_name, ref |
| List commits | GITLAB_LIST_REPOSITORY_COMMITS | project ID, branch ref |
| Project languages | GITLAB_GET_PROJECT_LANGUAGES | project ID |
| List pipelines | GITLAB_LIST_PROJECT_PIPELINES | id, status, ref |
| Get pipeline | GITLAB_GET_SINGLE_PIPELINE | project_id, pipeline_id |
| List pipeline jobs | GITLAB_LIST_PIPELINE_JOBS | id, pipeline_id, scope |
| Search users | GITLAB_GET_USERS | search, username, active |
| Get user | GITLAB_GET_USER | user ID |
| User status | GITLAB_GET_USERS_ID_STATUS | user ID |
| List project members | GITLAB_LIST_ALL_PROJECT_MEMBERS | id, query, state |
| List project users | GITLAB_LIST_PROJECT_USERS | id, search |
When to Use
This skill is applicable to execute the workflow or actions described in the overview.
Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.