Deploy Keys
Deploy keys allow read-only or read-write (if enabled) access to one or more repositories, by importing an SSH public key to your GitLab instance.
This is useful for cloning repositories to your Continuous Integration (CI) server. By using deploy keys, you don't have to set up a fake user account.
There are two types of deploy keys:
Key details on deploy keys
Deploy Keys allow a remote machine (VM, physical, and so on) to access a GitLab repository with just a few steps. If you want a remote machine to interact with a GitLab repository in automation, it's a simple solution.
A drawback is that your repository could become vulnerable if a remote machine is compromised by a hacker. You should limit access to the remote machine before a deploy key is enabled on your repository. A good rule to follow is to provide access only to trusted users, and make sure that the allowed users have maintainer permissions or higher in the GitLab project.
If this security implication is a concern for your organization, Deploy Tokens works as an alternative, but with more security control.
Deploy Keys Permissions
You can choose the access level of a deploy key when you enable it on a project:
-
read-only
: The deploy key can read a repository. -
read-write
: The deploy key can read a repository and write to it.
Project maintainers and owners can activate and deactivate deploy keys. They can also add their own deploy keys and enable them for this project.
When a write-access
deploy key is used to push a commit, GitLab checks if
the creator of the deploy key has permission to access the resource. For example:
- When a deploy key is used to push a commit to a protected branch, the creator of the deploy key must have access to the branch.
- When a deploy key is used to push a commit that triggers a CI/CD pipelines, the creator of the deploy key must have access to the CI/CD resources (like protected environments, secret variables, and so on).
- If the creator of a deploy key does not have permissions to read a project's repository, the deploy key might encounter an error during the process.
Differences between deploy keys and deploy tokens
Both deploy keys and deploy tokens can help you access a repository, but there are some notables differences between them:
- Deploy keys are shareable between projects that are not related or don't even belong to the same group. Deploy tokens belong to either a project or a group.
- A deploy key is an SSH key you need to generate yourself on your machine. A deploy token is generated by your GitLab instance, and is provided to users only once (at creation time).
- A deploy key is valid as long as it's registered and enabled. Deploy tokens can be time-sensitive, as you can control their validity by setting an expiration date to them.
- You can't log in to a registry with deploy keys, or perform read / write operations on it, but this is possible with deploy tokens.
- You need an SSH key pair to use deploy keys, but not deploy tokens.
How to enable Deploy Keys
Project deploy keys
Project maintainers and owners can add or enable a deploy key for a project repository:
- Navigate to the project's Settings > Repository page.
- Expand the Deploy Keys section.
- Specify a title for the new deploy key and paste your public SSH key.
- (Optional) Check Write access allowed to allow
read-write
access. Leave it unchecked forread-only
access.
There are three lists of Project Deploy Keys:
- Enabled deploy keys
- Privately accessible deploy keys
- Public accessible deploy keys
After you add a key, it's enabled for this project by default and it appears in the Enabled deploy keys tab.
In the Privately accessible deploy keys tab, you can enable a private key which has been already imported in a different project. If you have access to these keys, it's because you have either:
- Previously uploaded the keys yourself in a different project.
- You are a maintainer or owner of the other project where the keys were imported.
In the Publicly accessible deploy keys tab, you can enable keys that were made available to your entire GitLab instance.
After a key is added, you can edit it to update its title, or switch between read-only
and read-write
access.
NOTE:
If you have enabled a privately or publicly accessible or deploy key for your
project, and if you then update the access level for this key from read-only
to
read-write
, the change is only for the current project.
Public deploy keys
Public deploy keys allow read-only
or read-write
access to any repository in your GitLab instance. This is useful for integrating
repositories to secure, shared services, such as CI/CD.
Instance administrators can add public deploy keys:
-
Go to Admin Area > Deploy Keys.
-
Click on New deploy key.
Make sure your new key has a meaningful title, as it is the primary way for project maintainers and owners to identify the correct public deploy key to add. For example, if the key gives access to a SaaS CI/CD instance, use the name of that service in the key name if that is all the key is used for.
After adding a key, it's available to any shared systems. Project maintainers or higher can authorize a public deploy key to start using it with the project.
NOTE: The Publicly accessible deploy keys tab within Project's CI/CD settings only appears if there is at least one Public deploy key configured.
Public deploy keys can provide greater security compared to project deploy keys, as the administrator of the target integrated system is the only one who needs to know the key value, or configure it.
When creating a Public deploy key, determine whether or not it can be defined for
very narrow usage, such as just a specific service, or if it needs to be defined for
broader usage, such as full read-write
access for all services.
WARNING: Adding a public deploy key does not immediately expose any repository to it. Public deploy keys enable access from other systems, but access is not given to any project until a project maintainer chooses to make use of it.
Troubleshooting
Deploy Key cannot push to a protected branch
If the owner of this deploy key doesn't have access to a protected branch, then this deploy key doesn't have access to the branch either. In addition to this, choosing the No one value in the "Allowed to push" section means that no users and no services using deploy keys can push to that selected branch.
Refer to this issue for more information.