GitLab
Use InnoCode in GitLab issues and merge requests.
InnoCode integrates with your GitLab workflow through your GitLab CI/CD pipeline or with GitLab Duo.
In both cases, InnoCode will run on your GitLab runners.
GitLab CI
InnoCode works in a regular GitLab pipeline. You can build it into a pipeline as a CI component
Here we are using a community-created CI/CD component for InnoCode — nagyv/gitlab-innocode.
Features
- Use custom configuration per job: Configure InnoCode with a custom configuration directory, for example
./config/#custom-directoryto enable or disable functionality per InnoCode invocation. - Minimal setup: The CI component sets up InnoCode in the background, you only need to create the InnoCode configuration and the initial prompt.
- Flexible: The CI component supports several inputs for customizing its behavior
Setup
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Store your InnoCode authentication JSON as a File type CI environment variables under Settings > CI/CD > Variables. Make sure to mark them as “Masked and hidden”.
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Add the following to your
.gitlab-ci.ymlfile..gitlab-ci.yml include:- component: $CI_SERVER_FQDN/nagyv/gitlab-innocode@2inputs:config_dir: ${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/innocode-configauth_json: $INNOCODE_AUTH_JSON # The variable name for your InnoCode authentication JSONcommand: optional-custom-commandmessage: "Your prompt here"
For more inputs and use cases check out the docs for this component.
GitLab Duo
InnoCode integrates with your GitLab workflow.
Mention @innocode in a comment, and InnoCode will execute tasks within your GitLab CI pipeline.
Features
- Triage issues: Ask InnoCode to look into an issue and explain it to you.
- Fix and implement: Ask InnoCode to fix an issue or implement a feature. It will create a new branch and raise a merge request with the changes.
- Secure: InnoCode runs on your GitLab runners.
Setup
InnoCode runs in your GitLab CI/CD pipeline, here’s what you’ll need to set it up:
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Configure your GitLab environment
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Set up CI/CD
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Get an AI model provider API key
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Create a service account
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Configure CI/CD variables
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Create a flow config file, here’s an example:
Flow configuration
image: node:22-slimcommands:- echo "Installing innocode"- npm install --global innocode- echo "Installing glab"- export GITLAB_TOKEN=$GITLAB_TOKEN_INNOCODE- apt-get update --quiet && apt-get install --yes curl wget gpg git && rm --recursive --force /var/lib/apt/lists/*- curl --silent --show-error --location "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/upciti/wakemeops/main/assets/install_repository" | bash- apt-get install --yes glab- echo "Configuring glab"- echo $GITLAB_HOST- echo "Creating InnoCode auth configuration"- mkdir --parents ~/.local/share/innocode- |cat > ~/.local/share/innocode/auth.json << EOF{"innogpt": {"type": "api","key": "$INNOGPT_API_KEY"}}EOF- echo "Configuring git"- git config --global user.email "innocode@gitlab.com"- git config --global user.name "InnoCode"- echo "Testing glab"- glab issue list- echo "Running InnoCode"- |innocode run "You are an AI assistant helping with GitLab operations.Context: $AI_FLOW_CONTEXTTask: $AI_FLOW_INPUTEvent: $AI_FLOW_EVENTPlease execute the requested task using the available GitLab tools.Be thorough in your analysis and provide clear explanations.<important>Please use the glab CLI to access data from GitLab. The glab CLI has already been authenticated. You can run the corresponding commands.If you are asked to summarize an MR or issue or asked to provide more information then please post back a note to the MR/Issue so that the user can see it.You don't need to commit or push up changes, those will be done automatically based on the file changes you make.</important>"- git checkout --branch $CI_WORKLOAD_REF origin/$CI_WORKLOAD_REF- echo "Checking for git changes and pushing if any exist"- |if ! git diff --quiet || ! git diff --cached --quiet || [ --not --zero "$(git ls-files --others --exclude-standard)" ]; thenecho "Git changes detected, adding and pushing..."git add .if git diff --cached --quiet; thenecho "No staged changes to commit"elseecho "Committing changes to branch: $CI_WORKLOAD_REF"git commit --message "Codex changes"echo "Pushing changes up to $CI_WORKLOAD_REF"git push https://gitlab-ci-token:$GITLAB_TOKEN@$GITLAB_HOST/gl-demo-ultimate-dev-ai-epic-17570/test-java-project.git $CI_WORKLOAD_REFecho "Changes successfully pushed"fielseecho "No git changes detected, skipping push"fivariables:- ANTHROPIC_API_KEY- GITLAB_TOKEN_INNOCODE- GITLAB_HOST
You can refer to the GitLab CLI agents docs for detailed instructions.
Examples
Here are some examples of how you can use InnoCode in GitLab.
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Explain an issue
Add this comment in a GitLab issue.
@innocode explain this issueInnoCode will read the issue and reply with a clear explanation.
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Fix an issue
In a GitLab issue, say:
@innocode fix thisInnoCode will create a new branch, implement the changes, and open a merge request with the changes.
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Review merge requests
Leave the following comment on a GitLab merge request.
@innocode review this merge requestInnoCode will review the merge request and provide feedback.