Travis CI's use of Bitbucket API Scopes
When you sign in to Travis CI for the first time, we ask for permission to access some of your data on Bitbucket. Read the Scopes for the Bitbucket Cloud REST API for general information about this, or pick an explanation of what data we need and why we need it.
Travis CI for Open-Source and Private Projects #
On https://travis-ci.com, via our Bitbucket integration, we ask for the following permissions:
- Read access to code
- Read access to metadata and pull requests
- Read and write access to administration, checks, commit statuses, and deployments
WebHooks #
We use scoped OAuth tokens to integrate with Bitbucket.
Used Scopes #
The following sections explain the different scopes used.
repository #
It gives the app read access to all the repositories the authorizing user has access to.
This scope does not give access to a repository’s pull requests.
repository:admin #
Gives the app admin access to all the repositories the authorizing user has access to. This permission is needed to add the access key. Travis CI uses the key to read the travis.yml file content.
pull-request #
Gives the app read access to pull requests and collaborate on them. This scope implies repository, giving read access to the pull request’s destination repository.
email #
Ability to see the user’s primary email address. This should make it easier to use Bitbucket Cloud as a login provider to apps or external applications.
account #
Ability to see all the user’s account information. Note that this does not include any ability to mutate any of the data.
team #
The ability to find out what teams the current user is part of. This is covered by the teams endpoint.
webhook #
Gives access to webhooks. This scope is required for any webhook-related operation.
This scope gives read access to existing webhook subscriptions to all resources you can access, without needing further scopes. This means that a client can list all existing webhook subscriptions on repository foo/bar (assuming the principal user has access to this repo). The additional repository scope is not required for this.
Likewise, existing webhook subscriptions for a repo’s issue tracker can be retrieved without holding the issue scope. All that is required is the webhook scope.
However, to create a webhook for issue:created, the client will need to have both the webhook as well as issue scope.