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---
stage: Verify
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group: Pipeline Authoring
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Jobs **(FREE)**
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Pipeline configuration begins with jobs. Jobs are the most fundamental element of a `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
Jobs are:
- Defined with constraints stating under what conditions they should be executed.
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- Top-level elements with an arbitrary name and must contain at least the [`script` ](../yaml/index.md#script ) clause.
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- Not limited in how many can be defined.
For example:
```yaml
job1:
script: "execute-script-for-job1"
job2:
script: "execute-script-for-job2"
```
The above example is the simplest possible CI/CD configuration with two separate
jobs, where each of the jobs executes a different command.
Of course a command can execute code directly (`./configure;make;make install`)
or run a script (`test.sh`) in the repository.
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Jobs are picked up by [runners ](../runners/index.md ) and executed in the
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environment of the runner. What is important is that each job is run
independently from each other.
## View jobs in a pipeline
When you access a pipeline, you can see the related jobs for that pipeline.
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Selecting an individual job shows you its job log, and allows you to:
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- Cancel the job.
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- Retry the job, if it failed.
- Run the job again, if it passed.
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- Erase the job log.
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### View all jobs in a project
To view the full list of jobs that ran in a project:
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1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find the project.
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1. On the left sidebar, select **CI/CD > Jobs** .
You can filter the list by [job status ](#the-order-of-jobs-in-a-pipeline ).
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## See why a job failed
When a pipeline fails or is allowed to fail, there are several places where you
can find the reason:
- In the [pipeline graph ](../pipelines/index.md#visualize-pipelines ), on the pipeline detail view.
- In the pipeline widgets, in the merge requests and commit pages.
- In the job views, in the global and detailed views of a job.
In each place, if you hover over the failed job you can see the reason it failed.
![Pipeline detail ](img/job_failure_reason.png )
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You can also see the reason it failed on the Job detail page.
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## The order of jobs in a pipeline
The order of jobs in a pipeline depends on the type of pipeline graph.
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- For [full pipeline graphs ](../pipelines/index.md#view-full-pipeline-graph ), jobs are sorted by name.
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- For [pipeline mini graphs ](../pipelines/index.md#pipeline-mini-graphs ), jobs are sorted by status, and then by name.
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The job status order is:
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- failed
- warning
- pending
- running
- manual
- scheduled
- canceled
- success
- skipped
- created
For example:
![Pipeline mini graph sorting ](img/pipelines_mini_graph_sorting.png )
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## Job name limitations
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> - [Enabled 255-character job length on GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/342800) in GitLab 14.5.
> - [Generally available](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/344665) in GitLab 14.10. [Feature flag `ci_validate_job_length`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/344665) removed.
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You can't use these keywords as job names:
- `image`
- `services`
- `stages`
- `types`
- `before_script`
- `after_script`
- `variables`
- `cache`
- `include`
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- `true`
- `false`
- `nil`
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- `pages:deploy` configured for a `deploy` stage
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Job names must be 255 characters or fewer.
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Use unique names for your jobs. If multiple jobs have the same name in a file,
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only one is added to the pipeline, and it's difficult to predict which one is chosen.
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If the same job name is used in one or more included files,
[parameters are merged ](../yaml/includes.md#override-included-configuration-values ).
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## Group jobs in a pipeline
If you have many similar jobs, your [pipeline graph ](../pipelines/index.md#visualize-pipelines ) becomes long and hard
to read.
You can automatically group similar jobs together. If the job names are formatted in a certain way,
they are collapsed into a single group in regular pipeline graphs (not the mini graphs).
You can recognize when a pipeline has grouped jobs if you don't see the retry or
cancel button inside them. Hovering over them shows the number of grouped
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jobs. Select to expand them.
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![Grouped pipelines ](img/pipeline_grouped_jobs_v14_2.png )
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To create a group of jobs, in the [CI/CD pipeline configuration file ](../yaml/index.md ),
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separate each job name with a number and one of the following:
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- A slash (`/`), for example, `slash-test 1/3` , `slash-test 2/3` , `slash-test 3/3` .
- A colon (`:`), for example, `colon-test 1:3` , `colon-test 2:3` , `colon-test 3:3` .
- A space, for example `space-test 0 3` , `space-test 1 3` , `space-test 2 3` .
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You can use these symbols interchangeably.
In the example below, these three jobs are in a group named `build ruby` :
```yaml
build ruby 1/3:
stage: build
script:
- echo "ruby1"
build ruby 2/3:
stage: build
script:
- echo "ruby2"
build ruby 3/3:
stage: build
script:
- echo "ruby3"
```
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The pipeline graph displays a group named `build ruby` with three jobs.
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The jobs are ordered by comparing the numbers from left to right. You
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usually want the first number to be the index and the second number to be the total.
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[This regular expression ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/2f3dc314f42dbd79813e6251792853bc231e69dd/app/models/commit_status.rb#L99 )
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evaluates the job names: `([\b\s:]+((\[.*\])|(\d+[\s:\/\\]+\d+))){1,3}\s*\z` .
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One or more `: [...]` , `X Y` , `X/Y` , or `X\Y` sequences are removed from the **end**
of job names only. Matching substrings found at the beginning or in the middle of
job names are not removed.
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In [GitLab 13.8 and earlier ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/52644 ),
the regular expression is `\d+[\s:\/\\]+\d+\s*` . [Feature flag ](../../user/feature_flags.md )
removed in [GitLab 13.11 ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/322080 ).
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## Hide jobs
To temporarily disable a job without deleting it from the configuration
file:
- Comment out the job's configuration:
```yaml
# hidden_job:
# script:
# - run test
```
- Start the job name with a dot (`.`) and it is not processed by GitLab CI/CD:
```yaml
.hidden_job:
script:
- run test
```
You can use hidden jobs that start with `.` as templates for reusable configuration with:
- The [`extends` keyword ](../yaml/index.md#extends ).
- [YAML anchors ](../yaml/yaml_optimization.md#anchors ).
## Control the inheritance of default keywords and global variables
You can control the inheritance of:
- [default keywords ](../yaml/index.md#default ) with [`inherit:default` ](../yaml/index.md#inheritdefault ).
- [global variables ](../yaml/index.md#default ) with [`inherit:variables` ](../yaml/index.md#inheritvariables ).
For example:
```yaml
default:
image: 'ruby:2.4'
before_script:
- echo Hello World
variables:
DOMAIN: example.com
WEBHOOK_URL: https://my-webhook.example.com
rubocop:
inherit:
default: false
variables: false
script: bundle exec rubocop
rspec:
inherit:
default: [image]
variables: [WEBHOOK_URL]
script: bundle exec rspec
capybara:
inherit:
variables: false
script: bundle exec capybara
karma:
inherit:
default: true
variables: [DOMAIN]
script: karma
```
In this example:
- `rubocop` :
- inherits: Nothing.
- `rspec` :
- inherits: the default `image` and the `WEBHOOK_URL` variable.
- does **not** inherit: the default `before_script` and the `DOMAIN` variable.
- `capybara` :
- inherits: the default `before_script` and `image` .
- does **not** inherit: the `DOMAIN` and `WEBHOOK_URL` variables.
- `karma` :
- inherits: the default `image` and `before_script` , and the `DOMAIN` variable.
- does **not** inherit: `WEBHOOK_URL` variable.
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## Specifying variables when running manual jobs
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/merge_requests/30485) in GitLab 12.2.
When running manual jobs you can supply additional job specific variables.
You can do this from the job page of the manual job you want to run with
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additional variables. To access this page, select the **name** of the manual job in
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the pipeline view, *not* the play (**{play}**) button.
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Define CI/CD variables here when you want to alter the execution of a job that uses
[CI/CD variables ](../variables/index.md ).
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If you add a variable that is already defined in the CI/CD settings or `.gitlab-ci.yml` file,
the [variable is overridden ](../variables/index.md#override-a-defined-cicd-variable ) with the new value.
Any variables overridden by using this process are [expanded ](../variables/index.md#prevent-cicd-variable-expansion )
and not [masked ](../variables/index.md#mask-a-cicd-variable ).
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![Manual job variables ](img/manual_job_variables_v13_10.png )
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## Delay a job
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When you do not want to run a job immediately, you can use the [`when:delayed` ](../jobs/job_control.md#run-a-job-after-a-delay ) keyword to
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delay a job's execution for a certain period.
This is especially useful for timed incremental rollout where new code is rolled out gradually.
For example, if you start rolling out new code and:
- Users do not experience trouble, GitLab can automatically complete the deployment from 0% to 100%.
- Users experience trouble with the new code, you can stop the timed incremental rollout by canceling the pipeline
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and [rolling ](../environments/index.md#retry-or-roll-back-a-deployment ) back to the last stable version.
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![Pipelines example ](img/pipeline_delayed_job_v14_2.png )
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## Expand and collapse job log sections
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/issues/14664) in GitLab 12.0.
Job logs are divided into sections that can be collapsed or expanded. Each section displays
the duration.
In the following example:
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- Three sections are collapsed and can be expanded.
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- Three sections are expanded and can be collapsed.
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![Collapsible sections ](img/collapsible_log_v13_10.png )
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### Custom collapsible sections
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/-/issues/14664) in GitLab 12.0.
You can create [collapsible sections in job logs ](#expand-and-collapse-job-log-sections )
by manually outputting special codes
that GitLab uses to determine what sections to collapse:
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- Section start marker: `\e[0Ksection_start:UNIX_TIMESTAMP:SECTION_NAME\r\e[0K` + `TEXT_OF_SECTION_HEADER`
- Section end marker: `\e[0Ksection_end:UNIX_TIMESTAMP:SECTION_NAME\r\e[0K`
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You must add these codes to the script section of the CI configuration. For example,
using `echo` :
```yaml
job1:
script:
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- echo -e "\e[0Ksection_start:`date +%s`:my_first_section\r\e[0KHeader of the 1st collapsible section"
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- echo 'this line should be hidden when collapsed'
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- echo -e "\e[0Ksection_end:`date +%s`:my_first_section\r\e[0K"
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```
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Depending on the shell that your runner uses, for example if it is using Zsh, you may need to
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escape the special characters like so: `\\e` and `\\r` .
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In the example above:
- `date +%s` : The Unix timestamp (for example `1560896352` ).
- `my_first_section` : The name given to the section.
- `\r\e[0K` : Prevents the section markers from displaying in the rendered (colored)
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job log, but they are displayed in the raw job log. To see them, in the upper-right corner
of the job log, select **Show complete raw** (**{doc-text}**).
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- `\r` : carriage return.
- `\e[0K` : clear line ANSI escape code.
Sample raw job log:
```plaintext
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\e[0Ksection_start:1560896352:my_first_section\r\e[0KHeader of the 1st collapsible section
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this line should be hidden when collapsed
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\e[0Ksection_end:1560896353:my_first_section\r\e[0K
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```
### Pre-collapse sections
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/198413) in GitLab 13.5.
You can make the job log automatically collapse collapsible sections by adding the `collapsed` option to the section start.
Add `[collapsed=true]` after the section name and before the `\r` . The section end marker
remains unchanged:
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- Section start marker with `[collapsed=true]` : `\e[0Ksection_start:UNIX_TIMESTAMP:SECTION_NAME[collapsed=true]\r\e[0K` + `TEXT_OF_SECTION_HEADER`
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- Section end marker: `\e[0Ksection_end:UNIX_TIMESTAMP:SECTION_NAME\r\e[0K`
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Add the updated section start text to the CI configuration. For example,
using `echo` :
```yaml
job1:
script:
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- echo -e "\e[0Ksection_start:`date +%s`:my_first_section[collapsed=true]\r\e[0KHeader of the 1st collapsible section"
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- echo 'this line should be hidden automatically after loading the job log'
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- echo -e "\e[0Ksection_end:`date +%s`:my_first_section\r\e[0K"
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```
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## Deployment jobs
Deployment jobs are a specific kind of CI job in that they deploy code to
[environments ](../environments/index.md ). A deployment job is any job that
uses the `environment` keyword and the [`start` environment `action` ](../yaml/index.md#environmentaction ).
Deployment jobs do not need to be in the `deploy` stage. The following `deploy me`
job is an example of a deployment job. `action: start` is the default behavior and
is defined for the sake of the example, but you can omit it:
```yaml
deploy me:
script:
- deploy-to-cats.sh
environment:
name: production
url: https://cats.example.com
action: start
```
The behavior of deployment jobs can be controlled with
[deployment safety ](../environments/deployment_safety.md ) settings like
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[preventing outdated deployment jobs ](../environments/deployment_safety.md#prevent-outdated-deployment-jobs )
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and [ensuring only one deployment job runs at a time ](../environments/deployment_safety.md#ensure-only-one-deployment-job-runs-at-a-time ).