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File Locking

DETAILS: Tier: Free, Premium, Ultimate Offering: GitLab.com, Self-managed, GitLab Dedicated

Preventing wasted work caused by unresolvable merge conflicts requires a different way of working. This means explicitly requesting write permissions, and verifying no one else is editing the same file before you start.

Although branching strategies typically work well enough for source code and plain text because different versions can be merged together, they do not work for binary files.

When file locking is setup, lockable files are read-only by default.

When a file is locked, only the user who locked the file may modify it. This user is said to "hold the lock" or have "taken the lock", because only one user can lock a file at a time. When a file or directory is unlocked, the user is said to have "released the lock".

GitLab supports two different modes of file locking:

  • Exclusive file locks for binary files: done through the command line with Git LFS and .gitattributes, it prevents locked files from being modified on any branch.
  • Default branch locks: done through the GitLab UI, it prevents locked files and directories being modified on the default branch.

Permissions

Locks can be created by any person who has at least Developer role for the repository.

Only the user who locked the file or directory can edit locked files. Other users are prevented from modifying locked files by pushing, merging, or any other means, and are shown an error like: '.gitignore' is locked by @Administrator.

Default branch file and directory locks

DETAILS: Tier: Premium, Ultimate Offering: GitLab.com, Self-managed, GitLab Dedicated

This process allows you to lock one file at a time through the GitLab UI and requires access to the GitLab Premium or Ultimate tier.

Default branch file and directory locks only apply to the default branch set in the project's settings.

Changes to locked files on the default branch are blocked, including merge requests that modify locked files. Unlock the file to allow changes.

Lock a file or a directory

To lock a file:

  1. Open the file or directory in GitLab.
  2. In the upper-right corner, above the file, select Lock.
  3. On the confirmation dialog, select OK.

If you do not have permission to lock the file, the button is not enabled.

To view the user who locked a directory (if it was not you), hover over the button. Reinstatement of similar functionality for locked files is discussed in issue 376222.

View and remove existing locks

To view and remove file locks:

  1. On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
  2. Select Code > Locked files.

This list shows all the files locked either through LFS or GitLab UI.

Locks can be removed by their author, or any user with at least the Maintainer role.

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