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You're reading from  GitLab Quick Start Guide

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Published inNov 2018
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781789534344
Edition1st Edition
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Adam O'Grady
Adam O'Grady
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Adam O'Grady

Adam O'Grady hails from the remote Perth, Western Australia, and can usually be found on Twitter at @adamjogrady or in meatspace wrangling with code. His first taste of programming came from building games into graphics calculators at high school, and quickly developed into a passion. A few years later, while doing social media marketing for an ISP, his first big break arrived; building custom applications to monitor and respond to social feeds. After that, he spent a few years working for the government building systems that used satellite and geographic data to spot and predict bushfires, and now you can find him leading a small team of engineering mavens at a local health start-up.
Read more about Adam O'Grady

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Merge request approvals

One powerful feature for high-performance teams who want to ensure all submitted code is of the highest quality is merge request approvals. This is available to all Starter/Bronze enterprise subscriptions and above. It takes two main forms, which can be intermixed:

  • Requiring approval from a certain number of users before a merge is allowed
  • Requiring merge approval from select users/groups before a merge is allowed

By mixing these together, you can also have combinations such as requiring a certain number of people from a particular group, or requiring at least the project owner plus one other person to approve a merge request before it can be completed. For example, you might want to allow anyone to contribute work to your backend API, but before a merge, the code must be reviewed by a senior developer or perhaps any new SVG icons require two designers...

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GitLab Quick Start Guide
Published in: Nov 2018Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781789534344

Author (1)

author image
Adam O'Grady

Adam O'Grady hails from the remote Perth, Western Australia, and can usually be found on Twitter at @adamjogrady or in meatspace wrangling with code. His first taste of programming came from building games into graphics calculators at high school, and quickly developed into a passion. A few years later, while doing social media marketing for an ISP, his first big break arrived; building custom applications to monitor and respond to social feeds. After that, he spent a few years working for the government building systems that used satellite and geographic data to spot and predict bushfires, and now you can find him leading a small team of engineering mavens at a local health start-up.
Read more about Adam O'Grady