Slash Commands

The run command was introduced in GitLab Ultimate 10.6. Moved to GitLab Core in 11.9.

Slash commands in Mattermost and Slack allow you to control GitLab and view GitLab content right inside your chat client, without having to leave it. For Slack, this requires an integration configuration. Simply type the command as a message in your chat client to activate it.

Commands are scoped to a project, with a trigger term that is specified during configuration.

We suggest you use the project name as the trigger term for simplicity and clarity.

Taking the trigger term as project-name, the commands are:

Command Effect
/project-name help Shows all available slash commands
/project-name issue new <title> <shift+return> <description> Creates a new issue with title <title> and description <description>
/project-name issue show <id> Shows the issue with ID <id>
/project-name issue close <id> Closes the issue with ID <id>
/project-name issue search <query> Shows up to 5 issues matching <query>
/project-name issue move <id> to <project> Moves issue ID <id> to <project>
/project-name issue comment <id> <shift+return> <comment> Adds a new comment to an issue with ID <id> and comment body <comment>
/project-name deploy <from> to <to> Deploy from the <from> environment to the <to> environment
/project-name run <job name> <arguments> Execute ChatOps job <job name> on master

Note that if you are using the GitLab Slack application for your GitLab.com projects, you need to add the gitlab keyword at the beginning of the command.

Issue commands

It is possible to create new issue, display issue details and search up to 5 issues.

Deploy command

In order to deploy to an environment, GitLab tries to find a deployment manual action in the pipeline.

If there is only one action for a given environment, it is triggered. If there is more than one action defined, GitLab tries to find an action which name equals the environment name we want to deploy to.

The command returns an error when no matching action has been found.