--- title: Use Self-Hosted CodeRabbit With GitLab sidebar_label: GitLab description: Instructions to self-host CodeRabbit and integrate it with GitLab. sidebar_position: 2 --- :::note The self-hosted option is only available for CodeRabbit Enterprise customers with 500 user seats or more. Please contact [CodeRabbit Sales](mailto:sales@coderabbit.ai) to learn more about the CodeRabbit Enterprise plan. ::: ## Create a GitLab User - **Username**: Set the username to "CodeRabbit" for easier identification (optional). - **Profile Image**: Use the CodeRabbitAI logo for the user image (optional). ## Add User to Projects Add the CodeRabbit user to each project where you want CodeRabbit to post reviews, with at least `Developer` access. ## Create a Personal Access Token for CodeRabbit user Generate a personal access token for the CodeRabbit user to be added in the `.env` file as `GITLAB_BOT_TOKEN`. **Necessary Scopes**: - `api` Consult official CodeRabbitAI documentation for a detailed [guide](https://docs.coderabbit.ai/integrations/self-hosted-gitlab#generating-personal-access-token) on creating personal access tokens. ## Add a webhook to each project 1. **Navigate to Add Webhook Page**: Go to the webhook configuration page in the desired GitLab project. 2. **Add Webhook URL**: Enter the URL pointing to the CodeRabbit service, followed by `/gitlab_webhooks` (e.g., `http://127.0.0.1:8080/gitlab_webhooks`). 3. **Generate and Save Secret Token**: Generate a secret token, add it to the webhook, and store it securely. This will be needed for the `.env` file as `GITLAB_WEBHOOK_SECRET` (you can use a single secret token for all projects). 4. Select triggers: - Push events - Comments - Issues events - Merge request events ## Prepare an `.env` file Create an `.env` file with the following content: ```bash # if using OpenAI LLM_PROVIDER=openai LLM_TIMEOUT=360000 OPENAI_API_KEYS= OPENAI_BASE_URL=[] OPENAI_ORG_ID=[] OPENAI_PROJECT_ID=[] # if using Azure OpenAI LLM_PROVIDER=azure-openai LLM_TIMEOUT=360000 AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT= AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY= AZURE_GPT4OMINI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME= AZURE_GPT4O_DEPLOYMENT_NAME= ## o1-mini is optional AZURE_O1_MINI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME= ## o1-preview is optional: it’s very expensive but provides best reviews AZURE_O1_DEPLOYMENT_NAME= ## gpt-4-turbo is optional: it’s expensive but provides better reviews AZURE_GPT4TURBO_DEPLOYMENT_NAME=[] # if using AWS Bedrock AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID= AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY= AWS_REGION= # if using Anthropic LLM_PROVIDER=anthropic LLM_TIMEOUT=360000 ANTHROPIC_API_KEYS= ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL=[] TEMP_PATH=/cache AST_GREP_RULES_PATH=/home/jailuser/ast-grep-rules AST_GREP_ESSENTIALS=ast-grep-essentials SELF_HOSTED=gitlab GITLAB_BOT_TOKEN= GITLAB_WEBHOOK_SECRET= CODERABBIT_LICENSE_KEY= CODERABBIT_API_KEY=[] ENABLE_LEARNINGS=[true] ENABLE_METRICS=[true] JIRA_HOST=[] JIRA_PAT=[] LINEAR_PAT=[] ``` :::note - If you are using Azure OpenAI, verify that the model deployment names are in the .env file. - Values marked with [] are not optional to provide. - You can generate `CODERABBIT_API_KEY` from CodeRabbit UI -> Organizations Settings -> API Keys. ::: ## Pull the CodeRabbit Docker image Authenticate and pull the Docker image using the provided credentials file: ```bash cat coderabbit.json | docker login -u _json_key --password-stdin us-docker.pkg.dev docker pull /coderabbit-agent:latest ``` ### Verify the image is up You can query `/health` endpoint to verify that the coderabbit-agent service is up and running. ```bash curl 127.0.0.1:8080/health ``` ## Host the image You can host the image on a server, serverless function, or container environment and expose port `8080`. Run the Docker image with the equivalent command on your chosen platform, ensuring you replace the `.env` file path with the path to your actual `.env` file: ```bash docker run --env-file .env --publish 127.0.0.1:8080:8080 /coderabbit-agent:latest ```