Release fields
The following fields are available when you create or edit a release.
Title
The release title can be customized using the Release title field when creating or editing a release. If no title is provided, the release's tag name is used instead.
Tag name
The release tag name should include the release version. GitLab uses Semantic Versioning
for our releases, and we recommend you do too. Use (Major).(Minor).(Patch)
, as detailed in the
GitLab Policy for Versioning.
For example, for GitLab version 10.5.7
:
-
10
represents the major version. The major release was10.0.0
, but often referred to as10.0
. -
5
represents the minor version. The minor release was10.5.0
, but often referred to as10.5
. -
7
represents the patch number.
Any part of the version number can be multiple digits, for example, 13.10.11
.
Release notes description
Every release has a description. You can add any text you like, but we recommend including a changelog to describe the content of your release. This helps users quickly scan the differences between each release you publish.
Tagging messages in Git can be included in Release note descriptions by selecting Include tag message in the release notes.
Description supports Markdown.
Release assets
A release contains the following types of assets:
Source code
GitLab automatically generates zip
, tar.gz
, tar.bz2
, and tar
archived source code from the given Git tag. These assets are read-only,
and can be downloaded.
Links
A link is any URL which can point to whatever you like: documentation, built binaries, or other related materials. These can be both internal or external links from your GitLab instance. Each link as an asset has the following attributes:
Attribute | Description | Required |
---|---|---|
name |
The name of the link. | Yes |
url |
The URL to download a file. | Yes |
filepath |
The redirect link to the url . Must start with a slash (/ ). See this section for more information. |
No |
link_type |
The content kind of what users can download via url . See this section for more information. |
No |
Permanent link to latest release
- Introduced in GitLab 14.9.
Latest release page is accessible through a permanent URL. GitLab redirects to the latest release page URL when it is visited.
The format of the URL is:
https://host/namespace/project/-/releases/permalink/latest
We also support, suffix path carry forward on the redirect to the latest release.
Example if release v14.8.0-ee
is the latest release and has a readable link https://host/namespace/project/-/releases/v14.8.0-ee#release
then it can be addressed as https://host/namespace/project/-/releases/permalink/latest#release
.
Refer permanent links to latest release assets section to understand more about the suffix path carry forward usage.
Sorting preferences
By default, GitLab fetches the release using released_at
time. The use of the query parameter ?order_by=released_at
is optional, and support for ?order_by=semver
is tracked in this issue.
Permanent links to release assets
- Introduced in GitLab 15.9, links for private releases can be accessed using a Personal Access Token.
The assets associated with a release are accessible through a permanent URL.
GitLab always redirects this URL to the actual asset
location, so even if the assets move to a different location, you can continue
to use the same URL. This is defined during link creation or updating using the filepath
API attribute.
The format of the URL is:
https://host/namespace/project/-/releases/:release/downloads:filepath
If you have an asset for the v11.9.0-rc2
release in the gitlab-org
namespace and gitlab-runner
project on gitlab.com
, for example:
{
"name": "linux amd64",
"filepath": "/binaries/gitlab-runner-linux-amd64",
"url": "https://gitlab-runner-downloads.s3.amazonaws.com/v11.9.0-rc2/binaries/gitlab-runner-linux-amd64",
"link_type": "other"
}
This asset has a direct link of:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/-/releases/v11.9.0-rc2/downloads/binaries/gitlab-runner-linux-amd64
The physical location of the asset can change at any time and the direct link remains unchanged.
If the release is private, you need to provide a Personal Access Token with either api
or read_api
scopes using
a private_token
query parameter or a HTTP_PRIVATE_TOKEN
header when making the request. For example:
curl --location --output filename "https://gitlab.example.com/my-group/my-project/-/releases/myrelease/downloads</path-to-file>?private_token=<your_access_token>"
curl --location --output filename --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: <your_access_token>" "https://gitlab.example.com/my-group/my-project/-/releases/myrelease/downloads</path-to-file>
Permanent links to latest release assets
- Introduced in GitLab 14.9.
You can use the filepath
from permanent links to release assets in combination with a permanent link to the latest release. The filepath
must start with a slash (/
).
The format of the URL is:
https://host/namespace/project/-/releases/permalink/latest/downloads:filepath
You can use this format to provide a permanent link to an asset from the latest release.
If you have an asset with filepath
for the v11.9.0-rc2
latest release in the gitlab-org
namespace and gitlab-runner
project on gitlab.com
, for example:
{
"name": "linux amd64",
"filepath": "/binaries/gitlab-runner-linux-amd64",
"url": "https://gitlab-runner-downloads.s3.amazonaws.com/v11.9.0-rc2/binaries/gitlab-runner-linux-amd64",
"link_type": "other"
}
This asset has a direct link of:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/-/releases/permalink/latest/downloads/binaries/gitlab-runner-linux-amd64
Link Types
- Introduced in GitLab 13.1.
The four types of links are "Runbook," "Package," "Image," and "Other."
The link_type
parameter accepts one of the following four values:
runbook
package
image
-
other
(default)
This field has no effect on the URL and it's only used for visual purposes in the Releases page of your project.
Use a generic package for attaching binaries
You can use generic packages to store any artifacts from a release or tag pipeline, that can also be used for attaching binary files to an individual release entry. You basically need to:
The following example generates release assets, publishes them as a generic package, and then creates a release:
stages:
- build
- upload
- release
variables:
# Package version can only contain numbers (0-9), and dots (.).
# Must be in the format of X.Y.Z, i.e. should match /\A\d+\.\d+\.\d+\z/ regular expresion.
# See https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/packages/generic_packages/#publish-a-package-file
PACKAGE_VERSION: "1.2.3"
DARWIN_AMD64_BINARY: "myawesomerelease-darwin-amd64-${PACKAGE_VERSION}"
LINUX_AMD64_BINARY: "myawesomerelease-linux-amd64-${PACKAGE_VERSION}"
PACKAGE_REGISTRY_URL: "${CI_API_V4_URL}/projects/${CI_PROJECT_ID}/packages/generic/myawesomerelease/${PACKAGE_VERSION}"
build:
stage: build
image: alpine:latest
rules:
- if: $CI_COMMIT_TAG
script:
- mkdir bin
- echo "Mock binary for ${DARWIN_AMD64_BINARY}" > bin/${DARWIN_AMD64_BINARY}
- echo "Mock binary for ${LINUX_AMD64_BINARY}" > bin/${LINUX_AMD64_BINARY}
artifacts:
paths:
- bin/
upload:
stage: upload
image: curlimages/curl:latest
rules:
- if: $CI_COMMIT_TAG
script:
- |
curl --header "JOB-TOKEN: ${CI_JOB_TOKEN}" --upload-file bin/${DARWIN_AMD64_BINARY} "${PACKAGE_REGISTRY_URL}/${DARWIN_AMD64_BINARY}"
- |
curl --header "JOB-TOKEN: ${CI_JOB_TOKEN}" --upload-file bin/${LINUX_AMD64_BINARY} "${PACKAGE_REGISTRY_URL}/${LINUX_AMD64_BINARY}"
release:
# Caution, as of 2021-02-02 these assets links require a login, see:
# https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/299384
stage: release
image: registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/release-cli:latest
rules:
- if: $CI_COMMIT_TAG
script:
- |
release-cli create --name "Release $CI_COMMIT_TAG" --tag-name $CI_COMMIT_TAG \
--assets-link "{\"name\":\"${DARWIN_AMD64_BINARY}\",\"url\":\"${PACKAGE_REGISTRY_URL}/${DARWIN_AMD64_BINARY}\"}" \
--assets-link "{\"name\":\"${LINUX_AMD64_BINARY}\",\"url\":\"${PACKAGE_REGISTRY_URL}/${LINUX_AMD64_BINARY}\"}"
PowerShell users may need to escape the double quote "
inside a JSON
string with a `
(back tick) for --assets-link
and ConvertTo-Json
before passing on to the release-cli
.
For example:
release:
script:
- $env:asset = "{`"name`":`"MyFooAsset`",`"url`":`"https://gitlab.com/upack/artifacts/download/$env:UPACK_GROUP/$env:UPACK_NAME/$($env:GitVersion_SemVer)?contentOnly=zip`"}"
- $env:assetjson = $env:asset | ConvertTo-Json
- release-cli create --name $CI_COMMIT_TAG --description "Release $CI_COMMIT_TAG" --ref $CI_COMMIT_TAG --tag-name $CI_COMMIT_TAG --assets-link=$env:assetjson
NOTE: Directly attaching job artifacts links to a release is not recommended, because artifacts are ephemeral and are used to pass data in the same pipeline. This means there's a risk that they could either expire or someone might manually delete them.
Number of new and total features
DETAILS: Tier: Free, Premium, Ultimate Offering: SaaS
- Introduced in GitLab 13.5.
On GitLab.com, you can view the number of new and total features in the project.
The totals are displayed on shields and are generated per release by
a Rake task in the www-gitlab-com
repository.
Item | Formula |
---|---|
New features |
Total count of release posts across all tiers for a single release in the project. |
Total features |
Total count of release posts in reverse order for all releases in the project. |
The counts are also shown by license tier.
Item | Formula |
---|---|
New features |
Total count of release posts across a single tier for a single release in the project. |
Total features |
Total count of release posts across a single tier in reverse order for all releases in the project. |