►
From YouTube: Groups and Projects Basics
Description
Groups and projects for teams getting started with GitLab
https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/group/
A
Hi
this
is
Martin
Technical
Account
Manager
at
gitlab.
Today,
I
will
show
you
how
groups
and
projects
working
get
lab
afterwards
cause
that
will
give
you
a
quick
demo
on
how
to
set
up
your
own
projects
and
organize
them
in
groups.
We
will
be
looking
at
what
groups
and
projects
are
in,
get
lab
what
they
are
used
for,
how
to
manage
users
in
these
groups
and
projects,
and
the
demo
will
show
you
how
to
set
up
groups
and
projects
and
get
lab
yourself
first.
A
The
repository
is
where
the
files
you
work,
or
not-
wrecked
and
versioned,
to
enable
working
on
it
collaboratively
that
is
the
code,
documentation
and
configuration
now.
The
repository
is
only
part
of
a
project.
The
project
is
the
core
building
block
where
work
is
organized
and
managed
in
issues
where
code
is
reviewed
and
merge
requests
and
where
the
software
is
built
and
delivered
in
CI,
CD
and
the
project,
we
also
have
the
people
working
on
it
with
their
specific
permissions.
These
are
the
project
members.
A
group
is
a
collection
of
projects.
A
An
amount
of
projects
can
be
filed
under
group.
In
addition
to
that,
you
can
also
add
members
to
a
group.
You
can
use
groups
to
organize
related
projects,
add
members
to
the
group
and
so
grant
access
to
all
projects
at
once.
You
can
also
use
groups
to
organize
teams,
grouping
people
that
work
together,
there's
useful
to
add
a
whole
team
to
a
project
or
to
add
mention
all
members
of
that
group
in
issues
and
mesh
requests.
A
You
can
create
subgroups
in
the
group
subgroups
address
groups
that
allow
you
to
organize
and
manage
the
teams,
team
members
and
projects
across
your
organization
even
better.
Now,
let's
take
a
closer
look
at
the
permissions
group.
Permissions
of
the
members
define
the
minimum
permissions
in
subgroups
and
projects.
Minimum
permission
means
that
if
he
users
both
in
a
projects
group
and
the
project
itself,
the
highest
permission
level
is
used.
Let's
look
at
an
example:
here
we
have
Jack
who
was
developed
in
the
group.
A
B
Now
that
we've
seen
what
groups
are
and
why
do
we
use
them?
Let's
see
this
in
action
in
the
gitlab
UI
here
I
have
a
group
that
I
have
created
to
hold
my
users.
Sometimes
it
makes
sense
to
have
separate
groups
to
manage
projects
or
users.
Such
is
the
case,
for
example,
when
syncing
LDAP
user
groups
into
get
lab.
In
my
case,
I
have
the
old
users
group
with
no
direct
members
under
it.
I
have
two
sub
groups:
each
contains
users
to
view
the
group's
members.