
When this happens...
New Commit
Merge Request Review Request
New Job Event
New Issue Comment
New Project Merge Request Event
New Project Issue Event
New Merge Request Comment
New Commit Comment
New Code Snippet Comment
New Group Issue Event
New Group Merge Request Event

Automatically do this!
Create Issue
Get Repository Details
Get Pull Requests Details
Update GitHub Issue
Find Issue
Find Organization
Create Gist
Get File Changes
List Pull Requests
Get File Contents
Create Or Update File
Add Comment to Issue
Create Commit Comment
Create Inline Comment
List All Repository
List PR Review Comments
Get a Pull Request Details
Invite Member To Organization
Update pull request
List All Files
When this happensTriggers
A trigger is an event that starts a workflow.
Triggers when a commit is made on a specified project.
Triggers when you are requested to review a merge request.
Trigger for a specified job event in a project.
Triggers when a new comment is made on an issue in the selected project.
Triggers on an open, merge, or close merge request event.
Triggers on project issue event. e.g. when an issue is opened, closed or updated.
Action is the task that follows automatically within your GitLab integrations.
Find merge request for a project.
Finds all Merge Requests that the authenticated user has access to.
Creates a new commit. Supports creating or updating a file.
Creates a new merge request.
Create a new branch in project
Add note to MR or thread
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To start, connect both your GitLab and GitHub accounts to viaSocket. Once connected, you can set up a workflow where an event in GitLab triggers actions in GitHub (or vice versa).
Absolutely. You can customize how GitLab data is recorded in GitHub. This includes choosing which data fields go into which fields of GitHub, setting up custom formats, and filtering out unwanted information.
The data sync between GitLab and GitHub typically happens in real-time through instant triggers. And a maximum of 15 minutes in case of a scheduled trigger.
Yes, viaSocket allows you to add custom logic or use built-in filters to modify data according to your needs.
Yes, you can set conditional logic to control the flow of data between GitLab and GitHub. For instance, you can specify that data should only be sent if certain conditions are met, or you can create if/else statements to manage different outcomes.
GitLab is a comprehensive DevOps platform that provides source code management, CI/CD pipelines, and project management tools, enabling teams to collaborate efficiently on software development projects.
Learn MoreGitHub is a developer platform for hosting code, collaborating on software projects, managing issues and pull requests, automating workflows, and securing the software development lifecycle with tools like GitHub Actions and Advanced Security.
Learn More