and though bugs are the bane of my existence, rest assured the wretched thing will get the best of care here

Activating and deactivating users

GitLab administrators can deactivate and activate users.

Deactivating a user

Introduced in GitLab 12.4.

In order to temporarily prevent access by a GitLab user that has no recent activity, administrators can choose to deactivate the user.

Deactivating a user is functionally identical to blocking a user, with the following differences:

  • It does not prohibit the user from logging back in via the UI.
  • Once a deactivated user logs back into the GitLab UI, their account is set to active.

A deactivated user:

  • Cannot access Git repositories or the API.
  • Will not receive any notifications from GitLab.
  • Will not be able to use slash commands.

Personal projects, and group and user history of the deactivated user will be left intact.

A user can be deactivated from the Admin Area. To do this:

  1. Navigate to Admin Area > Overview > Users.
  2. Select a user.
  3. Under the Account tab, click Deactivate user.

Please note that for the deactivation option to be visible to an admin, the user:

  • Must be currently active.
  • Must not have signed in, or have any activity, in the last 90 days.

Users can also be deactivated using the GitLab API.

NOTE: A deactivated user does not consume a seat.

Activating a user

Introduced in GitLab 12.4.

A deactivated user can be activated from the Admin Area.

To do this:

  1. Navigate to Admin Area > Overview > Users.
  2. Click on the Deactivated tab.
  3. Select a user.
  4. Under the Account tab, click Activate user.

Users can also be activated using the GitLab API.

NOTE: Activating a user changes the user's state to active and consumes a seat.

NOTE: A deactivated user can also activate their account themselves by simply logging back in via the UI.