In April 2024, the Core Atlantis Team launched an anonymous survey to better understand our community's needs and help prioritize our roadmap.
If you're an Atlantis user, please take 5 minutes to fill it out: Survey Link
In April 2024, the Core Atlantis Team launched an anonymous survey to better understand our community's needs and help prioritize our roadmap.
If you're an Atlantis user, please take 5 minutes to fill it out: Survey Link
Atlantis requires certain conditions be satisfied before atlantis apply and atlantis import commands can be run:
If the requirement is not met, users will see an error if they try to run atlantis apply: 
The approved requirement will prevent applies unless the pull request is approved by at least one person other than the author.
The approved requirement by:
Creating a repos.yaml file with the apply_requirements key:
repos:
- id: /.*/
  apply_requirements: [approved]Or by allowing an atlantis.yaml file to specify the apply_requirements key in the repos.yaml config:
repos.yaml
repos:
- id: /.*/
  allowed_overrides: [apply_requirements]atlantis.yaml
version: 3
projects:
- dir: .
  apply_requirements: [approved]Each VCS provider has different rules around who can approve:
Tip
To require certain people to approve the pull request, look at the mergeable requirement.
The mergeable requirement will prevent applies unless a pull request is able to be merged.
Set the mergeable requirement by:
Creating a repos.yaml file with the apply_requirements key:
repos:
- id: /.*/
  apply_requirements: [mergeable]Or by allowing an atlantis.yaml file to specify plan_requirements, apply_requirements and import_requirements keys in the repos.yaml config:
repos.yaml
repos:
- id: /.*/
  allowed_overrides: [plan_requirements, apply_requirements, import_requirements]atlantis.yaml
version: 3
projects:
- dir: .
  plan_requirements: [mergeable]
  apply_requirements: [mergeable]
  import_requirements: [mergeable]Each VCS provider has a different concept of "mergeability":
WARNING
Some VCS providers have a feature for branch protection to control "mergeability". To use it, limit the base branch so to not bypass the branch protection. See also the branch keyword in Server Side Repo Config for more details.
In GitHub, if you're not using Protected Branches then all pull requests are mergeable unless there is a conflict.
If you set up Protected Branches then you can enforce:
CODEOWNERS to have reviewed and approved the pull requestmainSee GitHub: About protected branches for more details.
WARNING
If you have the Restrict who can push to this branch requirement, then the Atlantis user needs to be part of that list in order for it to consider a pull request mergeable.
WARNING
If you set atlantis/apply to the mergeable requirement, use the --gh-allow-mergeable-bypass-apply flag or set the ATLANTIS_GH_ALLOW_MERGEABLE_BYPASS_APPLY=true environment variable. This flag and environment variable allow the mergeable check before executing atlantis apply to skip checking the status of atlantis/apply.
For GitLab, a merge request will be merged if there are no conflicts, no unresolved discussions if it is a project requirement and if all necessary approvers have approved the pull request.
For pipelines, if the project requires that pipelines must succeed, all builds except the apply command status will be checked.
For Jobs with allow_failure setting set to true, will be ignored. If the pipeline has been skipped and the project allows merging, it will be marked as mergeable.
For Bitbucket, we just check if there is a conflict that is preventing a merge. We don't check anything else because Bitbucket's API doesn't support it.
If you need a specific check, please open an issue.
In Azure DevOps, all pull requests are mergeable unless there is a conflict. You can set a pull request to "Complete" right away, or set "Auto-Complete", which will merge after all branch policies are met. See Review code with pull requests.
Branch policies can:
WARNING
At this time, the Azure DevOps client only supports merging using the default 'no fast-forward' strategy. Make sure your branch policies permit this type of merge.
Prevent applies if there are any changes on the base branch since the most recent plan. Applies to merge checkout strategy only which you need to set via --checkout-strategy flag.
You can set the undiverged requirement by:
Creating a repos.yaml file with plan_requirements, apply_requirements and import_requirements keys:
repos:
- id: /.*/
  plan_requirements: [undiverged]
  apply_requirements: [undiverged]
  import_requirements: [undiverged]Or by allowing an atlantis.yaml file to specify the plan_requirements, apply_requirements and import_requirements keys in your repos.yaml config:
repos.yaml
repos:
- id: /.*/
  allowed_overrides: [plan_requirements, apply_requirements, import_requirements]atlantis.yaml
version: 3
projects:
- dir: .
  plan_requirements: [undiverged]
  apply_requirements: [undiverged]
  import_requirements: [undiverged]The merge checkout strategy creates a temporary merge commit and runs the plan on the Atlantis local version of the PR source and destination branch. The local destination branch can become out of date since changes to the destination branch are not fetched if there are no changes to the source branch. undiverged enforces that Atlantis local version of main is up to date with remote so that the state of the source during the apply is identical to that if you were to merge the PR at that time.
As mentioned above, you can set command requirements via flags, in repos.yaml, or in atlantis.yaml if repos.yaml allows the override.
Flags override any repos.yaml or atlantis.yaml settings so they are equivalent to always having that apply requirement set.
If you only want some projects/repos to have apply requirements, then you must
Specifying which repos have which requirements via the repos.yaml file.
repos:
- id: /.*/
  plan_requirements: [approved]
  apply_requirements: [approved]
  import_requirements: [approved]
# Regex that defaults all repos to requiring approval
- id: /github.com/runatlantis/.*/
  # Regex to match any repo under the atlantis namespace, and not require approval
  # except for repos that might match later in the chain
  plan_requirements: []
  apply_requirements: []
  import_requirements: []
- id: github.com/runatlantis/atlantis
  plan_requirements: [approved]
  apply_requirements: [approved]
  import_requirements: [approved]
  # Exact string match of the github.com/runatlantis/atlantis repo
  # that sets apply_requirements to approvedSpecify which projects have which requirements via an atlantis.yaml file, and allowing plan_requirements, apply_requirements and import_requirements to be set in atlantis.yaml by the server side repos.yaml config.
For example if I have two directories, staging and production, I might use:
repos.yaml:
repos:
- id: /.*/
  allowed_overrides: [plan_requirements, apply_requirements, import_requirements]
  # Allow any repo to specify apply_requirements in atlantis.yamlatlantis.yaml:
version: 3
projects:
- dir: staging
  # By default, plan_requirements, apply_requirements and import_requirements are empty so this
  # isn't strictly necessary.
  plan_requirements: []
  apply_requirements: []
  import_requirements: []
- dir: production
  # This requirement will only apply to the
  # production directory.
  plan_requirements: [mergeable]
  apply_requirements: [mergeable]
  import_requirements: [mergeable]You can set any or all of approved, mergeable, and undiverged requirements.
Once the apply requirement is satisfied, anyone that can comment on the pull request can run the actual atlantis apply command.