python-gitlab
is a Python package providing access to the GitLab APIs.
It includes a client for GitLab's v4 REST API, synchronous and asynchronous GraphQL API
clients, as well as a CLI tool (gitlab
) wrapping REST API endpoints.
python-gitlab
enables you to:
- write Pythonic code to manage your GitLab resources.
- pass arbitrary parameters to the GitLab API. Simply follow GitLab's docs on what parameters are available.
- use a synchronous or asynchronous client when using the GraphQL API.
- access arbitrary endpoints as soon as they are available on GitLab, by using lower-level API methods.
- use persistent requests sessions for authentication, proxy and certificate handling.
- handle smart retries on network and server errors, with rate-limit handling.
- flexible handling of paginated responses, including lazy iterators.
- automatically URL-encode paths and parameters where needed.
- automatically convert some complex data structures to API attribute types
- merge configuration from config files, environment variables and arguments.
As of 5.0.0, python-gitlab
is compatible with Python 3.9+.
Use pip
to install the latest stable version of python-gitlab
:
$ pip install --upgrade python-gitlab
The current development version is available on both GitHub.com and GitLab.com, and can be installed directly from the git repository:
$ pip install git+https://github.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab.git
From GitLab:
$ pip install git+https://gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab.git
python-gitlab
provides Docker images in two flavors, based on the Alpine and Debian slim
python base images. The default tag is alpine
,
but you can explicitly use the alias (see below).
The alpine image is smaller, but you may want to use the Debian-based slim tag (currently
based on -slim-bullseye
) if you are running into issues or need a more complete environment
with a bash shell, such as in CI jobs.
The images are published on the GitLab registry, for example:
registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:latest
(latest, alpine alias)registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:alpine
(latest alpine)registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:slim-bullseye
(latest slim-bullseye)registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:v3.2.0
(alpine alias)registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:v3.2.0-alpine
registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:v3.2.0-slim-bullseye
You can run the Docker image directly from the GitLab registry:
$ docker run -it --rm registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:latest <command> ...
For example, to get a project on GitLab.com (without authentication):
$ docker run -it --rm registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:latest project get --id gitlab-org/gitlab
You can also mount your own config file:
$ docker run -it --rm -v /path/to/python-gitlab.cfg:/etc/python-gitlab.cfg registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:latest <command> ...
If you want to use the Docker image directly inside your GitLab CI as an image
, you will need to override
the entrypoint
, as noted in the official GitLab documentation:
Job Name:
image:
name: registry.gitlab.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab:latest
entrypoint: [""]
before_script:
gitlab --version
script:
gitlab <command>
To build your own image from this repository, run:
$ docker build -t python-gitlab:latest .
Run your own image:
$ docker run -it --rm python-gitlab:latest <command> ...
Build a Debian slim-based image:
$ docker build -t python-gitlab:latest --build-arg PYTHON_FLAVOR=slim-bullseye .
Please report bugs and feature requests at https://github.com/python-gitlab/python-gitlab/issues.
We have a gitter community chat available at https://gitter.im/python-gitlab/Lobby, which you can also directly access via the Open Chat button below.
If you have a simple question, the community might be able to help already, without you opening an issue. If you regularly use python-gitlab, we also encourage you to join and participate. You might discover new ideas and use cases yourself!
The full documentation for CLI and API is available on readthedocs.
We use tox
to manage our environment and build the documentation:
pip install tox tox -e docs
For guidelines for contributing to python-gitlab
, refer to CONTRIBUTING.rst.