Audit event streaming for top-level groups
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- Subgroup events recording fixed in GitLab 15.2.
- Custom HTTP headers UI introduced in GitLab 15.2 with a flag named
custom_headers_streaming_audit_events_ui
. Disabled by default.- Custom HTTP headers UI made generally available in GitLab 15.3. Feature flag
custom_headers_streaming_audit_events_ui
removed.- Improved user experience in GitLab 15.3.
- HTTP destination Name field added in GitLab 16.3.
- Functionality for the Active checkbox added in GitLab 16.5.
With audit event streaming for top-level groups, group owners can:
- Set a streaming destination for a top-level group to receive all audit events about the group, subgroups, and projects as structured JSON.
- Manage their audit logs in third-party systems. Any service that can receive structured JSON data can be used as the streaming destination.
Each streaming destination:
- Can have up to 20 custom HTTP headers included with each streamed event.
- For GitLab.com, must allow traffic from the GitLab.com IP address range.
GitLab can stream a single event more than once to the same destination. Use the id
key in the payload to deduplicate
incoming data.
Audit events are sent using the POST request method protocol supported by HTTP.
WARNING: Streaming destinations receive all audit event data, which could include sensitive information. Make sure you trust the streaming destination.
HTTP destinations
Prerequisites:
- For better security, you should use an SSL certificate on the destination URL.
Manage HTTP streaming destinations for top-level groups.
Add a new HTTP destination
Add a new HTTP streaming destination to a top-level group.
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To add streaming destinations to a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select Add streaming destination and select HTTP endpoint to show the section for adding destinations.
- In the Name and Destination URL fields, add a destination name and URL.
- Optional. Locate the Custom HTTP headers table.
- To make the header active, select the Active checkbox. The header will be sent with the audit event.
- Select Add header to create a new name and value pair. Enter as many name and value pairs as required. You can add up to 20 headers per streaming destination.
- After all headers have been filled out, select Add to add the new streaming destination.
List HTTP destinations
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a group.
To list the streaming destinations for a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand it and see all the custom HTTP headers.
Update an HTTP destination
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a group.
To update a streaming destination's name:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand.
- In the Name fields, add a destination name to update.
- Select Save to update the streaming destination.
To update a streaming destination's custom HTTP headers:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand.
- Locate the Custom HTTP headers table.
- Locate the header that you wish to update.
- To make the header active, select the Active checkbox. The header will be sent with the audit event.
- Select Add header to create a new name and value pair. Enter as many name and value pairs as required. You can add up to 20 headers per streaming destination.
- Select Save to update the streaming destination.
Delete an HTTP destination
Delete streaming destinations for a top-level group. When the last destination is successfully deleted, streaming is disabled for the top-level group.
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a group.
To delete a streaming destination:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand.
- Select Delete destination.
- Confirm by selecting Delete destination in the dialog.
To delete only the custom HTTP headers for a streaming destination:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand.
- Locate the Custom HTTP headers table.
- Locate the header that you wish to remove.
- To the right of the header, select Delete ({remove}).
- Select Save to update the streaming destination.
Verify event authenticity
- Introduced in GitLab 15.2.
Each streaming destination has a unique verification token (verificationToken
) that can be used to verify the authenticity of the event. This
token is either specified by the Owner or generated automatically when the event destination is created and cannot be changed.
Each streamed event contains the verification token in the X-Gitlab-Event-Streaming-Token
HTTP header that can be verified against
the destination's value when listing streaming destinations.
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a group.
To list streaming destinations and see the verification tokens:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand.
- Locate the Verification token input.
Update event filters
- Event type filtering in the UI with a defined list of audit event types introduced in GitLab 16.1.
When this feature is enabled for a group, you can permit users to filter streamed audit events per destination. If the feature is enabled with no filters, the destination receives all audit events.
A streaming destination that has an event type filter set has a filtered ({filter}) label.
To update a streaming destination's event filters:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand.
- Locate the Filter by audit event type dropdown list.
- Select the dropdown list and select or clear the required event types.
- Select Save to update the event filters.
Update namespace filters
- Namespace filtering in the UI introduced in GitLab 16.7.
When this feature is enabled for a group, you can permit users to filter streamed audit events per destination. If the feature is enabled with no filters, the destination receives all audit events.
A streaming destination that has a namespace filter set has a filtered ({filter}) label.
To update a streaming destination's namespace filters:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the stream to expand.
- Locate the Filter by groups or projects dropdown list.
- Select the dropdown list and select or clear the required namespaces.
- Select Save to update the namespace filter.
Override default content type header
By default, streaming destinations use a content-type
header of application/x-www-form-urlencoded
. However, you
might want to set the content-type
header to something else. For example ,application/json
.
To override the content-type
header default value for a top-level group streaming destination, use either:
- The GitLab UI.
- The GraphQL API.
Google Cloud Logging destinations
- Introduced in GitLab 16.2.
Manage Google Cloud Logging destinations for top-level groups.
Prerequisites
Before setting up Google Cloud Logging streaming audit events, you must:
- Enable Cloud Logging API on your Google Cloud project.
- Create a service account for Google Cloud with the appropriate credentials and permissions. This account is used to configure audit log streaming authentication. For more information, see Creating and managing service accounts in the Google Cloud documentation.
- Enable the Logs Writer role for the service account to enable logging on Google Cloud. For more information, see Access control with IAM.
- Create a JSON key for the service account. For more information, see Creating a service account key.
Add a new Google Cloud Logging destination
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To add Google Cloud Logging streaming destinations to a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select Add streaming destination and select Google Cloud Logging to show the section for adding destinations.
- Enter a random string to use as a name for the new destination.
- Enter the Google project ID, Google client email, and Google private key from previously-created Google Cloud service account key to add to the new destination.
- Enter a random string to use as a log ID for the new destination. You can use this later to filter log results in Google Cloud.
- Select Add to add the new streaming destination.
List Google Cloud Logging destinations
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To list Google Cloud Logging streaming destinations for a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the Google Cloud Logging stream to expand and see all the fields.
Update a Google Cloud Logging destination
- Button to add private key introduced in GitLab 16.3.
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To update Google Cloud Logging streaming destinations to a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the Google Cloud Logging stream to expand.
- Enter a random string to use as a name for the destination.
- Enter the Google project ID and Google client email from previously-created Google Cloud service account key to update the destination.
- Enter a random string to update the log ID for the destination. You can use this later to filter log results in Google Cloud.
- Select Add a new private key and enter a Google private key to update the private key.
- Select Save to update the streaming destination.
Delete a Google Cloud Logging streaming destination
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To delete Google Cloud Logging streaming destinations to a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the Google Cloud Logging stream to expand.
- Select Delete destination.
- Confirm by selecting Delete destination in the dialog.
AWS S3 destinations
- Introduced in GitLab 16.6 with a flag named
allow_streaming_audit_events_to_amazon_s3
. Enabled by default.- Feature flag
allow_streaming_audit_events_to_amazon_s3
removed in GitLab 16.7.
Manage AWS S3 destinations for top-level groups.
Prerequisites
Before setting up AWS S3 streaming audit events, you must:
- Create a access key for AWS with the appropriate credentials and permissions. This account is used to configure audit log streaming authentication. For more information, see Managing access keys.
- Create a AWS S3 bucket. This bucket is used to store audit log streaming data. For more information, see Creating a bucket
Add a new AWS S3 destination
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To add AWS S3 streaming destinations to a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select Add streaming destination and select AWS S3 to show the section for adding destinations.
- Enter a random string to use as a name for the new destination.
- Enter the Access Key ID, Secret Access Key, Bucket Name, and AWS Region from previously-created AWS access key and bucket to add to the new destination.
- Select Add to add the new streaming destination.
List AWS S3 destinations
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To list AWS S3 streaming destinations for a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the AWS S3 stream to expand and see all the fields.
Update a AWS S3 destination
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To update AWS S3 streaming destinations to a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the AWS S3 stream to expand.
- Enter a random string to use as a name for the destination.
- Enter the Access Key ID, Secret Access Key, Bucket Name, and AWS Region from previously-created AWS access key and bucket to update the destination.
- Select Add a new Secret Access Key and enter a AWS Secret Access Key to update the Secret Access Key.
- Select Save to update the streaming destination.
Delete a AWS S3 streaming destination
Prerequisites:
- Owner role for a top-level group.
To delete AWS S3 streaming destinations to a top-level group:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your group.
- Select Secure > Audit events.
- On the main area, select the Streams tab.
- Select the AWS S3 stream to expand.
- Select Delete destination.
- Confirm by selecting Delete destination in the dialog.