In n8n, click the "Add workflow" button in the Workflows tab to create a new workflow. Add the starting point – a trigger on when your workflow should run: an app event, a schedule, a webhook call, another workflow, an AI chat, or a manual trigger. Sometimes, the HTTP Request node might already serve as your starting point.
Create custom GitLab and Gleap workflows by choosing triggers and actions. Nodes come with global operations and settings, as well as app-specific parameters that can be configured. You can also use the HTTP Request node to query data from any app or service with a REST API.
Create
Create a new file in repository
Delete
Delete a file in repository
Edit
Edit a file in repository
Get
Get the data of a single file
List
List contents of a folder
Create
Create a new issue
Create Comment
Create a new comment on an issue
Edit
Edit an issue
Get
Get the data of a single issue
Lock
Lock an issue
Create
Create a new release
Delete
Delete a release
Get
Get a release
Get Many
Get many releases
Update
Update a release
Get
Get the data of a single repository
Get Issues
Returns issues of a repository
Get Repositories
Returns the repositories of a user
Delete
Get
Head
Options
Patch
Post
Put
To set up Gleap integration, add the HTTP Request node to your workflow canvas and authenticate it using a generic authentication method. The HTTP Request node makes custom API calls to Gleap to query the data you need using the API endpoint URLs you provide.
See the example hereRequires additional credentials set up
Use n8n's HTTP Request node with a predefined or generic credential type to make custom API calls.
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