Claude-skill-registry GitLab Code Review
Performs comprehensive code reviews of GitLab merge requests, analyzing code quality, security, performance, and best practices. Use when the user says "review" or "code review" or asks to review merge requests or analyze branch changes before merging.
git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/gitlab-code-review" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-gitlab-code-review && rm -rf "$T"
skills/data/gitlab-code-review/SKILL.mdGitLab Code Review
Perform comprehensive code reviews of GitLab merge requests, providing actionable feedback on code quality, security, performance, and best practices.
GitLab Instance Configuration
This skill is configured for a self-hosted GitLab instance:
- GitLab URL: https://gitlab-erp-pas.dedalus.lan
- All project identifiers, URLs, and references should use this self-hosted instance
- Ensure you have appropriate access credentials configured for this GitLab server
When to Use This Skill
Activate this skill when:
- The user types "review" or "code review" (with or without slash command)
- The user types "review MR-123" or "review !123" to review a specific merge request
- The user types "review ISSUE-ID" (e.g., "review #456") to review the MR associated with a GitLab issue
- The user asks to review a merge request
- Analyzing code changes before merging
- Performing code quality assessments
- Checking for security vulnerabilities or performance issues
- Reviewing merge request diffs
Critical Rules
IMPORTANT: Always confirm project_id before reviewing merge requests
Always provide constructive feedback framed as questions, not directives
Only review changes introduced in the merge request, not unrelated code
Workflow
1. Identify the Merge Request
Merge Request IID Provided
If a merge request IID is provided (e.g., "review !123" or "review MR 123"):
- Extract the MR IID from the user input
- Verify the project context (ask user if not clear)
- Fetch merge request details using
gitlab-mcp(get_merge_request)
GitLab Issue ID Provided
If a GitLab issue ID is provided (e.g., "review #456"):
- Fetch issue details using
to understand contextgitlab-mcp(get_issue) - Find related merge requests using
with search filtergitlab-mcp(list_merge_requests) - If multiple MRs found, ask user to select the one to review
- Proceed with the selected MR
No Specific MR Provided
If no MR is specified (e.g., just "review"):
- List recent open merge requests using
withgitlab-mcp(list_merge_requests)state: "opened" - Present the list to the user
- Ask user to select which MR to review
2. Gather Merge Request Context
Self-hosted GitLab Instance: https://gitlab-erp-pas.dedalus.lan
Use
gitlab-mcp(get_merge_request) to retrieve:
- Title and description
- Source and target branches
- Author information
- State (open, merged, closed)
- Labels and milestones
- Approval status
- Pipeline status
(base_sha, head_sha, start_sha) for accurate diff comparisondiff_refs
Extract key information:
Project: namespace/project MR: !123 - "Feature: Add user authentication" Author: @username Source: feature/auth -> Target: main Status: Open | Pipeline: Passed | Approvals: 1/2
3. Analyze the Changes
Get File Changes
Use
gitlab-mcp(get_merge_request_diffs) to retrieve:
- List of changed files
- Additions and deletions per file
- Diff content for each file
Pagination: If many files changed, use pagination parameters (
page, per_page) to retrieve all changes.
Get Detailed File Content
For complex changes, use
gitlab-mcp(get_file_contents) to:
- View the complete file context
- Understand surrounding code
- Check for consistency with existing patterns
Parameters:
: Project identifierproject_id
: Path to the filefile_path
: Use the source branch or head_sha from diff_refsref
Analyze Commits
Use
gitlab-mcp(list_commits) with:
: Project identifierproject_id
: Source branch nameref_name
Then use
gitlab-mcp(get_commit) and gitlab-mcp(get_commit_diff) to:
- Understand commit history
- Review individual commit changes
- Check commit message quality
4. Check Existing Discussions
Use
gitlab-mcp(mr_discussions) to:
- Review existing feedback and discussions
- Avoid duplicate comments
- Understand ongoing conversations
- Check for unresolved threads
5. Check Pipeline Status
Use
gitlab-mcp(list_pipelines) and gitlab-mcp(get_pipeline) to:
- Verify CI/CD pipeline status
- Check for failed jobs
- Review test results
If pipeline failed, use
gitlab-mcp(get_pipeline_job_output) to understand failures.
6. Perform Comprehensive Code Review
Conduct a thorough review of only the changes introduced in this merge request.
Code Quality Assessment
- Code style and formatting consistency
- Variable and function naming conventions
- Code organization and structure
- Adherence to DRY (Don't Repeat Yourself) principles
- Proper abstraction levels
Technical Review
- Logic correctness and edge cases
- Error handling and validation
- Performance implications
- Security considerations (input validation, SQL injection, XSS, etc.)
- Resource management (memory leaks, connection handling)
- Concurrency issues if applicable
Best Practices Check
- Design patterns usage
- SOLID principles adherence
- Testing coverage implications
- Documentation completeness
- API consistency
- Backwards compatibility
Dependencies and Integration
- New dependencies added
- Breaking changes to existing interfaces
- Impact on other parts of the system
- Database migration requirements
7. Generate Review Report
Create a structured code review report with:
-
Executive Summary: High-level overview of changes and overall assessment
-
Statistics:
- Files changed, lines added/removed
- Commits reviewed
- Critical issues found
-
Strengths: What was done well
-
Issues by Priority:
- 🔴 Critical: Must fix before merging (bugs, security issues)
- 🟡 Important: Should address (performance, maintainability)
- 🟢 Suggestions: Nice to have improvements
-
Detailed Findings: For each issue include:
- File and line reference
- A question framing the concern
- Context explaining why you're asking
- Code example if helpful
-
Security Review: Specific security considerations
-
Performance Review: Performance implications
-
Testing Recommendations: What tests should be added
-
Documentation Needs: What documentation should be updated
8. Add Comments to Merge Request (Optional)
CRITICAL: Ask user before adding comments to the MR
If user wants to add feedback directly to the MR:
General Comment
Use
gitlab-mcp(create_note) to add a general comment:
: Project identifierproject_id
: MR internal IDmerge_request_iid
: Comment content in Markdownbody
Line-Specific Discussion
Use
gitlab-mcp(create_merge_request_thread) for code-specific feedback:
: Project identifierproject_id
: MR internal IDmerge_request_iid
: Discussion contentbody
: Object with diff position details:position
: From diff_refsbase_sha
: From diff_refshead_sha
: From diff_refsstart_sha
: File pathnew_path
: Line number for new codenew_line
: File path (for modifications)old_path
: Line number for removed codeold_line
Feedback Style: Questions, Not Directives
Frame all feedback as questions, not commands. This encourages dialogue and respects the author's context.
Examples
❌ Don't write:
- "You should use early returns here"
- "This needs error handling"
- "Extract this into a separate function"
- "Add a null check"
✅ Do write:
- "Could this be simplified with an early return?"
- "What happens if this API call fails? Would error handling help here?"
- "Would it make sense to extract this into its own function for reusability?"
- "Is there a scenario where this could be null? If so, how should we handle it?"
Why Questions Work Better
- The author may have context you don't have
- Questions invite explanation rather than defensiveness
- They acknowledge uncertainty in the reviewer's understanding
- They create a conversation rather than a checklist
Review Report Template
# Code Review: !{MR_IID} - {MR_TITLE} ## Executive Summary {Brief overview of changes and overall assessment} ## Merge Request Details - **Project**: {project_path} - **Author**: @{author} - **Source Branch**: {source_branch} → **Target**: {target_branch} - **Pipeline Status**: {status} - **Approvals**: {current}/{required} ## Statistics | Metric | Count | |--------|-------| | Files Changed | {count} | | Lines Added | +{additions} | | Lines Removed | -{deletions} | | Commits | {commit_count} | ## Strengths - {strength_1} - {strength_2} ## Issues Found ### 🔴 Critical {critical_issues_or_none} ### 🟡 Important {important_issues_or_none} ### 🟢 Suggestions {suggestions_or_none} ## Security Review {security_findings} ## Performance Review {performance_findings} ## Testing Recommendations - {test_recommendation_1} - {test_recommendation_2} ## Documentation Needs - {doc_need_1} ## Verdict {APPROVED | CHANGES_REQUESTED | NEEDS_DISCUSSION}
Examples
Example 1: Review a Specific Merge Request
User: Review !42 in namespace/project Assistant actions: 1. gitlab-mcp(get_merge_request) with project_id="namespace/project", merge_request_iid=42 2. gitlab-mcp(get_merge_request_diffs) with project_id="namespace/project", merge_request_iid=42 3. gitlab-mcp(mr_discussions) to check existing feedback 4. gitlab-mcp(list_pipelines) to check CI status 5. Analyze changes and generate report 6. Present review to user 7. Ask if user wants comments added to the MR
Example 2: Review MR Related to an Issue
User: Review the MR for issue #123 Assistant actions: 1. gitlab-mcp(get_issue) with project_id="namespace/project", issue_iid=123 2. gitlab-mcp(list_merge_requests) with search for "#123" or issue reference 3. Present found MRs and ask user to confirm 4. Proceed with code review workflow
Example 3: List Open MRs for Review
User: Show me open merge requests to review Assistant actions: 1. gitlab-mcp(list_merge_requests) with state="opened" 2. Present list with key details (title, author, pipeline status) 3. Ask user which MR to review
Important Notes
- Only review changes from THIS merge request - do not comment on code that wasn't changed
- Frame feedback as questions to encourage dialogue
- Be constructive and specific in feedback
- Provide code examples for suggested improvements
- Acknowledge good practices and improvements
- Prioritize issues clearly (Critical > Important > Suggestions)
- Consider the context and purpose of changes
- Check pipeline status before concluding review
- Review existing discussions to avoid duplicate feedback
- Always ask before adding comments to the MR
- Verify the review addresses acceptance criteria if linked to an issue