![]() Installing GitLab Self-Managed hooks Installing GitLab Self-Managed hooks for remote verificationįirst, read the GitLab custom hooks page to learn how to install custom hook scripts to GitLab Self-Managed hosted Git repositories in general. ![]() (Installing hooks to the local Git repositories is the same for those two cases.) In the Better Commit Policy app's context, the only major difference between using Git alone and Git with GitLab Self-Managed is how you install the commit hooks to the central Git repository. GitLab Self-Managed builds on the top of the Git version control system, extending that with repository-, user- and permission management capabilities.Īs it is primarily a high-level management layer above Git, everything written in the general Git guide applies to the Git repositories managed by GitLab Self-Managed, too. Working with GitLab Self-Managed commit policies If you use Git, but you don't use GitLab Self-Managed, see the general Git guide instead of this page. This page is about implementing Better Commit Policy specifically in Git repositories managed by the GitLab Self-Managed application.
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