Skip to main content

This version of GitHub Enterprise Server was discontinued on 2024-09-25. No patch releases will be made, even for critical security issues. For better performance, improved security, and new features, upgrade to the latest version of GitHub Enterprise Server. For help with the upgrade, contact GitHub Enterprise support.

Repository roles for an organization

You can customize access to each repository in your organization by assigning granular roles, giving people access to the features and tasks they need.

Repository roles for organizations

You can give organization members, outside collaborators, and teams of people different levels of access to repositories owned by an organization by assigning them to roles. Choose the role that best fits each person or team's function in your project without giving people more access to the project than they need.

From least access to most access, the roles for an organization repository are:

  • Read: Recommended for non-code contributors who want to view or discuss your project
  • Triage: Recommended for contributors who need to proactively manage issues and pull requests without write access
  • Write: Recommended for contributors who actively push to your project
  • Maintain: Recommended for project managers who need to manage the repository without access to sensitive or destructive actions
  • Admin: Recommended for people who need full access to the project, including sensitive and destructive actions like managing security or deleting a repository

You can create custom repository roles. For more information, see "Managing custom repository roles for an organization."

Organization owners can set base permissions that apply to all members of an organization when accessing any of the organization's repositories. For more information, see "Setting base permissions for an organization."

Organization owners can also choose to further limit access to certain settings and actions across the organization. For more information on options for specific settings, see "Managing organization settings."

In addition to managing organization-level settings, organization owners have admin access to every repository owned by the organization. For more information, see "Roles in an organization."

Warning

When someone adds a deploy key to a repository, any user who has the private key can read from or write to the repository (depending on the key settings), even if they're later removed from the organization.

Permissions for each role

Note

The roles required to use security features are listed in "Access requirements for security features" below.

Repository actionReadTriageWriteMaintainAdmin
Manage individual, team, and outside collaborator access to the repository
Pull from the person or team's assigned repositories
Fork the person or team's assigned repositories
Edit and delete their own comments
Open issues
Close issues they opened themselves
Reopen issues they closed themselves
Have an issue assigned to them
Send pull requests from forks of the team's assigned repositories
Submit reviews on pull requests
Approve or request changes to a pull request with required reviews
Apply suggested changes to pull requests
View published releases
Edit wikis in public repositories
Edit wikis in private repositories
Apply/dismiss labels
Create, edit, delete labels
Close, reopen, and assign all issues and pull requests
Enable and disable auto-merge on a pull request
Create, edit, delete milestones
Apply milestones
Mark duplicate issues and pull requests
Request pull request reviews
Merge a pull request
Push to (write) the person or team's assigned repositories
Edit and delete anyone's comments on commits, pull requests, and issues
Hide anyone's comments
Transfer issues (see "Transferring an issue to another repository" for details)
Act as a designated code owner for a repository
Mark a draft pull request as ready for review
Convert a pull request to a draft
Create status checks
Create, update, and delete GitHub Actions secrets on GitHub.com
Create, update, and delete GitHub Actions secrets using the REST API
Create and edit releases
View draft releases
Edit a repository's description
Manage topics
Enable wikis and restrict wiki editors
Enable projects (classic)
Configure pull request merges
Configure a publishing source for GitHub Pages
Manage branch protection rules
Push to protected branches
Merge pull requests on protected branches, even if there are no approving reviews
Create tags that match a tag protection rule
Delete tags that match a tag protection rule
Create and edit repository social cards
Delete an issue (see "Deleting an issue")
Define code owners for a repository
Add a repository to a team (see "Managing team access to an organization repository" for details)
Manage outside collaborator access to a repository
Change a repository's visibility
Make a repository a template (see "Creating a template repository")
Change a repository's settings
Manage team and collaborator access to the repository
Edit the repository's default branch
Rename the repository's default branch (see "Renaming a branch")
Rename a branch other than the repository's default branch (see "Renaming a branch")
Manage webhooks and deploy keys
Manage the forking policy for a repository
Transfer repositories into the organization
Delete or transfer repositories out of the organization
Archive repositories
Create autolink references to external resources, like Jira or Zendesk (see "Configuring autolinks to reference external resources")
Enable GitHub Discussions in a repository
Create and edit categories for GitHub Discussions
Move a discussion to a different category
Manage pinned discussions
Convert issues to discussions in bulk
Lock and unlock discussions
Individually convert issues to discussions
Create new discussions and comment on existing discussions
Delete a discussion

Access requirements for security features

In this section, you can find the access required for security features, such as Advanced Security features.

Note

Repository writers and maintainers can only see secret scanning alert information for their own commits.

Further reading