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---
stage: Verify
group: Pipeline Authoring
info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
type: reference
---
# Parent-child pipelines **(FREE)**
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/16094) in GitLab 12.7.
As pipelines grow more complex, a few related problems start to emerge:
- The staged structure, where all steps in a stage must be completed before the first
job in next stage begins, causes arbitrary waits, slowing things down.
- Configuration for the single global pipeline becomes very long and complicated,
making it hard to manage.
- Imports with [`include` ](../yaml/index.md#include ) increase the complexity of the configuration, and create the potential
for namespace collisions where jobs are unintentionally duplicated.
- Pipeline UX can become unwieldy with so many jobs and stages to work with.
Additionally, sometimes the behavior of a pipeline needs to be more dynamic. The ability
to choose to start sub-pipelines (or not) is a powerful ability, especially if the
YAML is dynamically generated.
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![Parent pipeline graph expanded ](img/parent_pipeline_graph_expanded_v14_3.png )
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Similarly to [multi-project pipelines ](multi_project_pipelines.md ), a pipeline can trigger a
set of concurrently running child pipelines, but within the same project:
- Child pipelines still execute each of their jobs according to a stage sequence, but
would be free to continue forward through their stages without waiting for unrelated
jobs in the parent pipeline to finish.
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- The configuration is split up into smaller child pipeline configurations. Each child pipeline contains only relevant steps which are
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easier to understand. This reduces the cognitive load to understand the overall configuration.
- Imports are done at the child pipeline level, reducing the likelihood of collisions.
Child pipelines work well with other GitLab CI/CD features:
- Use [`rules: changes` ](../yaml/index.md#ruleschanges ) to trigger pipelines only when
certain files change. This is useful for monorepos, for example.
- Since the parent pipeline in `.gitlab-ci.yml` and the child pipeline run as normal
pipelines, they can have their own behaviors and sequencing in relation to triggers.
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See the [`trigger` ](../yaml/index.md#trigger ) keyword documentation for full details on how to
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include the child pipeline configuration.
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For an overview, see [Parent-Child Pipelines feature demo ](https://youtu.be/n8KpBSqZNbk ).
## Examples
The simplest case is [triggering a child pipeline ](../yaml/index.md#trigger ) using a
local YAML file to define the pipeline configuration. In this case, the parent pipeline
triggers the child pipeline, and continues without waiting:
```yaml
microservice_a:
trigger:
include: path/to/microservice_a.yml
```
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You can include multiple files when defining a child pipeline. The child pipeline's
configuration is composed of all configuration files merged together:
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```yaml
microservice_a:
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/microservice_a.yml
- template: Security/SAST.gitlab-ci.yml
```
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In [GitLab 13.5 and later ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/205157 ),
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you can use [`include:file` ](../yaml/index.md#includefile ) to trigger child pipelines
with a configuration file in a different project:
```yaml
microservice_a:
trigger:
include:
- project: 'my-group/my-pipeline-library'
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ref: 'main'
file: '/path/to/child-pipeline.yml'
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```
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The maximum number of entries that are accepted for `trigger:include` is three.
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Similar to [multi-project pipelines ](multi_project_pipelines.md#mirror-status-of-a-triggered-pipeline-in-the-trigger-job ),
we can set the parent pipeline to depend on the status of the child pipeline upon completion:
```yaml
microservice_a:
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/microservice_a.yml
- template: Security/SAST.gitlab-ci.yml
strategy: depend
```
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## Merge request child pipelines
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To trigger a child pipeline as a [Merge Request Pipeline ](merge_request_pipelines.md ) we need to:
- Set the trigger job to run on merge requests:
```yaml
# parent .gitlab-ci.yml
microservice_a:
trigger:
include: path/to/microservice_a.yml
rules:
- if: $CI_MERGE_REQUEST_ID
```
- Configure the child pipeline by either:
- Setting all jobs in the child pipeline to evaluate in the context of a merge request:
```yaml
# child path/to/microservice_a.yml
workflow:
rules:
- if: $CI_MERGE_REQUEST_ID
job1:
script: ...
job2:
script: ...
```
- Alternatively, setting the rule per job. For example, to create only `job1` in
the context of merge request pipelines:
```yaml
# child path/to/microservice_a.yml
job1:
script: ...
rules:
- if: $CI_MERGE_REQUEST_ID
job2:
script: ...
```
## Dynamic child pipelines
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/35632) in GitLab 12.9.
Instead of running a child pipeline from a static YAML file, you can define a job that runs
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your own script to generate a YAML file, which is then used to trigger a child pipeline.
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This technique can be very powerful in generating pipelines targeting content that changed or to
build a matrix of targets and architectures.
< i class = "fa fa-youtube-play youtube" aria-hidden = "true" > < / i >
For an overview, see [Create child pipelines using dynamically generated configurations ](https://youtu.be/nMdfus2JWHM ).
We also have an example project using
[Dynamic Child Pipelines with Jsonnet ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/project-templates/jsonnet )
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which shows how to use a data templating language to generate your `.gitlab-ci.yml` at runtime.
You could use a similar process for other templating languages like
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[Dhall ](https://dhall-lang.org/ ) or [ytt ](https://get-ytt.io/ ).
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The artifact path is parsed by GitLab, not the runner, so the path must match the
syntax for the OS running GitLab. If GitLab is running on Linux but using a Windows
runner for testing, the path separator for the trigger job would be `/` . Other CI/CD
configuration for jobs, like scripts, that use the Windows runner would use `\` .
In GitLab 12.9, the child pipeline could fail to be created in certain cases, causing the parent pipeline to fail.
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This is [resolved ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/209070 ) in GitLab 12.10.
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### Dynamic child pipeline example
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/35632) in GitLab 12.9.
You can trigger a child pipeline from a [dynamically generated configuration file ](../pipelines/parent_child_pipelines.md#dynamic-child-pipelines ):
```yaml
generate-config:
stage: build
script: generate-ci-config > generated-config.yml
artifacts:
paths:
- generated-config.yml
child-pipeline:
stage: test
trigger:
include:
- artifact: generated-config.yml
job: generate-config
```
The `generated-config.yml` is extracted from the artifacts and used as the configuration
for triggering the child pipeline.
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## Nested child pipelines
> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/29651) in GitLab 13.4.
> - [Feature flag removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/243747) in GitLab 13.5.
Parent and child pipelines were introduced with a maximum depth of one level of child
pipelines, which was later increased to two. A parent pipeline can trigger many child
pipelines, and these child pipelines can trigger their own child pipelines. It's not
possible to trigger another level of child pipelines.
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For an overview, see [Nested Dynamic Pipelines ](https://youtu.be/C5j3ju9je2M ).
## Pass CI/CD variables to a child pipeline
You can pass CI/CD variables to a downstream pipeline using the same methods as
multi-project pipelines:
- [By using the `variable` keyword ](multi_project_pipelines.md#pass-cicd-variables-to-a-downstream-pipeline-by-using-the-variables-keyword ).
- [By using variable inheritance ](multi_project_pipelines.md#pass-cicd-variables-to-a-downstream-pipeline-by-using-variable-inheritance ).