debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/ci/quick_start/tutorial.md

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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/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
---
# Tutorial: Create a complex pipeline
This tutorial walks you through configuring a progressively more complex CI/CD pipeline
through small, iterative steps. The pipeline is always fully functional,
but it gains more functionality with each step.
When you finish this tutorial, you will have a new project on GitLab.com and a working documentation site on
[Docusaurus](https://docusaurus.io/).
To complete this tutorial, you will:
1. Create a project to hold the Docusaurus files
1. Create the initial pipeline configuration file
1. Add a job to build the site
1. Add a job to deploy the site
1. Add test jobs
1. Start using merge request pipelines
1. Reduce duplicated configuration
## Prerequisites
- You need an account on GitLab.com.
- You should be familiar with Git.
- Node.js must be installed on your local machine. For example, on macOS you can
[install node](https://formulae.brew.sh/formula/node) with `brew install node`.
## Create a project to hold the Docusaurus files
Before adding the pipeline configuration, you must first set up a Docusaurus project
on GitLab.com:
1. Create a new project under your username (not a group):
1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects > View all projects**.
1. On the right of the page, select **New project**.
1. Select **Create blank project**.
1. Enter the project details:
- In the **Project name** field, enter the name of your project, for example `My Pipeline Tutorial Project`.
- Select **Initialize repository with a README**.
1. Select **Create project**.
1. On the right of the **Project Overview** page for your project, select **Clone**
to find the clone paths for your project. Copy the SSH or HTTP path and use the path
to clone the project locally.
For example, to clone with SSH into a `pipeline-tutorial` directory on your computer:
```shell
git clone git@gitlab.com:my-username/my-pipeline-tutorial-project.git pipeline-tutorial
```
1. Change to the project's directory, then generate a new Docusaurus site:
```shell
cd pipeline-tutorial
npm init docusaurus
```
The Docusaurus initialization wizard prompts you with questions about the site.
Use all the default options.
1. The initialization wizard sets up the site in `website/`, but the site should be in
the root of the project. Move the files up to the root and delete the old directory:
```shell
mv website/* .
rm -r website
```
1. Update the Docusaurus configuration file with the details of your GitLab project.
In `docusaurus.config.js`:
- Set `url:` to a path with this format: `https://<my-username>.gitlab.io/`.
- Set `baseUrl:` to your project name, like `/my-pipeline-tutorial-project/`.
1. Commit the changes, and push them to GitLab:
```shell
git add .
git commit -m "Add simple generated Docusaurus site"
git push origin
```
## Create the initial CI/CD configuration file
Start with the simplest possible pipeline configuration file to ensure CI/CD is enabled
in the project and runners are available to run jobs.
This step introduces:
- [Jobs](../jobs/index.md): These are self-contained parts of a pipeline that run your commands.
Jobs run on [runners](../runners/index.md), separate from the GitLab instance.
- [`script`](../yaml/index.md#script): This section of a job's configuration is
where you define the commands for jobs. If there are multiple commands (in an array),
they run in order. Each command executes as if it was run as a CLI command.
By default, if a command fails or returns an error, the job is flagged as failed
and no more commands run.
In this step, create a `.gitlab-ci.yml` file in the root of the project with this configuration:
```yaml
test-job:
script:
- echo "This is my first job!"
- date
```
Commit and push this change to GitLab, then:
1. Go to **Build > Pipelines** and make sure a pipeline runs in GitLab with this single job.
1. Select the pipeline, then select the job to view the job's log and see the `This is my first job!` message
followed by the date.
Now that you have a `.gitlab-ci.yml` file in your project, you can make all future changes
to pipeline configuration with the [pipeline editor](../pipeline_editor/index.md).
## Add a job to build the site
A common task for a CI/CD pipeline is to build the code in the project then deploy it.
Start by adding a job that builds the site.
This step introduces:
- [`image`](../yaml/index.md#image): Tell the runner which Docker
container to use to run the job in. The runner:
1. Downloads the container image and starts it.
1. Clones your GitLab project into the running container.
1. Runs the `script` commands, one at a time.
- [`artifacts`](../yaml/index.md#artifacts): Jobs are self-contained and do not share
resources with each other. If you want files generated in one job to be used in
another job, you must save them as artifacts first. Then later jobs can retrieve the
artifacts and use the generated files.
In this step, replace `test-job` with `build-job`:
- Use `image` to configure the job to run with the latest `node` image. Docusaurus
is a Node.js project and the `node` image has the needed `npm` commands built in.
- Run `npm install` to install Docusaurus into the running `node` container, then run
`npm run build` to build the site.
- Docusaurus saves the built site in `build/`, so save these files with `artifacts`.
```yaml
build-job:
image: node
script:
- npm install
- npm run build
artifacts:
paths:
- "build/"
```
Use the pipeline editor to commit this pipeline configuration to the default branch,
and check the job log. You can:
- See the `npm` commands run and build the site.
- Verify that the artifacts are saved at the end.
- Browse the contents of the artifacts file by selecting **Browse** to the right of the job log
after the job completes.
## Add a job to deploy the site
After verifying the Docusaurus site builds in `build-job`, you can add a job that deploys it.
This step introduces:
- [`stage`](../yaml/index.md#stage) and [`stages`](../yaml/index.md#stage): The most common
pipeline configurations group jobs into stages. Jobs in the same stage can run in parallel,
while jobs in later stages wait for jobs in earlier stages to complete. If a job fails,
the whole stage is considered failed and jobs in later stages do not start running.
- [GitLab Pages](../../user/project/pages/index.md): To host your static site, you
will use GitLab Pages.
In this step:
- Add a job that fetches the built site and deploys it. When using GitLab Pages,
the job is always named `pages`. The artifacts from the `build-job` are fetched automatically
and extracted into the job. Pages looks for the site in the `public/` directory though,
so add a `script` command to move the site to that directory.
- Add a `stages` section, and define the stages for each job. `build-job` runs first
in the `build` stage, and `pages` runs after in the `deploy` stage.
```yaml
stages: # List of stages for jobs and their order of execution
- build
- deploy
build-job:
stage: build # Set this job to run in the `build` stage
image: node
script:
- npm install
- npm run build
artifacts:
paths:
- "build/"
pages:
stage: deploy # Set this new job to run in the `deploy` stage
script:
- mv build/ public/
artifacts:
paths:
- "public/"
```
Use the pipeline editor to commit this pipeline configuration to the default branch,
and view the pipeline details from the **Pipelines** list. Verify that:
- The two jobs run in different stages, `build` and `deploy`.
- After the `pages` job completes a `pages-deploy` job appears, which is the GitLab process
that deploys the Pages site. When that job completes, you can visit your new Docusaurus
site. The Pages documentation explains [the URL formatting](../../user/project/pages/getting_started_part_one.md#gitlab-pages-default-domain-names),
which should be similar to `https://<my-username>.gitlab.io/<my-pipeline-tutorial-project>/`.
## Add test jobs
Now that the site builds and deploys as expected, you can add tests and linting.
For example, a Ruby project might run RSpec test jobs. Docusaurus is a static site
that uses Markdown and generated HTML, so this tutorial adds jobs to test the Markdown and HTML.
This step introduces:
- [`allow_failure`](../yaml/index.md#allow_failure): Jobs that fail intermittently,
or are expected to fail, can slow down productivity or be difficult to troubleshoot.
Use `allow_failure` to let jobs fail without halting pipeline execution.
- [`dependencies`](../yaml/index.md#dependencies): Use `dependencies` to control
artifact downloads in individual jobs by listing which jobs to fetch artifacts from.
In this step:
- Add a new `test` stage that runs between `build` and `deploy`. These three stages
are the default stages when `stages` is undefined in the configuration.
- Add a `lint-markdown` job to run [markdownlint](https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint)
and check the Markdown in your project. markdownlint is a static analysis tool that
checks that your Markdown files follow formatting standards.
- The sample Markdown files Docusaurus generates are in `blog/` and `docs/`.
- This tool scans the original Markdown files only, and does not need the generated HTML
saved in the `build-job` artifacts. Speed up the job with `dependencies: []`
so that it fetches no artifacts.
- A few of the sample Markdown files violate default markdownlint rules, so add
`allow_failure: true` to let the pipeline continue despite the rule violations.
- Add a `test-html` job to run [HTMLHint](https://htmlhint.com/) and check the generated HTML.
HTMLHint is a static analysis tool that scans generated HTML for known issues.
- Both `test-html` and `pages` need the generated HTML found in the `build-job` artifacts.
Jobs fetch artifacts from all jobs in earlier stages by default, but add `dependencies:`
to make sure the jobs don't accidentally download other artifacts after future pipeline changes.
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test # Add a `test` stage for the test jobs
- deploy
build-job:
stage: build
image: node
script:
- npm install
- npm run build
artifacts:
paths:
- "build/"
lint-markdown:
stage: test
image: node
dependencies: [] # Don't fetch any artifacts
script:
- npm install markdownlint-cli2 --global # Install markdownlint into the container
- markdownlint-cli2 -v # Verify the version, useful for troubleshooting
- markdownlint-cli2 "blog/**/*.md" "docs/**/*.md" # Lint all markdown files in blog/ and docs/
allow_failure: true # This job fails right now, but don't let it stop the pipeline.
test-html:
stage: test
image: node
dependencies:
- build-job # Only fetch artifacts from `build-job`
script:
- npm install --save-dev htmlhint # Install HTMLHint into the container
- npx htmlhint --version # Verify the version, useful for troubleshooting
- npx htmlhint build/ # Lint all markdown files in blog/ and docs/
pages:
stage: deploy
dependencies:
- build-job # Only fetch artifacts from `build-job`
script:
- mv build/ public/
artifacts:
paths:
- "public/"
```
Commit this pipeline configuration to the default branch, and view the pipeline details.
- The `test-markdown` job fails because the sample Markdown violates the default
markdownlint rules, but is allowed to fail. You can:
- Ignore the violations for now. They do not need to be fixed as part of the tutorial.
- Fix the Markdown file violations. Then you can change `allow_failure` to `false`,
or remove `allow_failure` completely because `allow_failure: false` is the default behavior
when not defined.
- Add a markdownlint configuration file to limit which rule violations to alert on.
- You can also make changes to the Markdown file content and see the changes on the site
after the next deployment.
## Start using merge request pipelines
With the pipeline configurations above, the site deploys every time a pipeline completes
successfully, but this is not an ideal development workflow. It's better to work from
feature branches and merge requests, and only deploy the site when changes merge
to the default branch.
This step introduces:
- [`rules`](../yaml/index.md#rules): Add rules to each job to configure in which
pipelines they run. You can configure jobs to run in [merge request pipelines](../pipelines/merge_request_pipelines.md),
[scheduled pipelines](../pipelines/schedules.md), or other specific situations.
Rules are evaluated from top to bottom, and if a rule matches, the job is
added to the pipeline.
- [CI/CD variables](../variables/index.md): use these environment variables
to configure job behavior in the configuration file and in script commands.
[Predefined CI/CD variables](../variables/predefined_variables.md) are variables
that you do not need to manually define. They are automatically injected into pipelines
so you can use them to configure your pipeline. Variables are usually formatted as `$VARIABLE_NAME`.
and predefined variables are usually prefixed with `$CI_`.
In this step:
- Create a new feature branch and make the changes in the branch instead of the default branch.
- Add `rules` to each job:
- The site should only deploy for changes to the default branch.
- The other jobs should run for all changes in merge requests or the default branch.
- With this pipeline configuration, you can work from a feature branch without running any jobs,
which saves resources. When you are ready to validate your changes, create a merge request
and a pipeline runs with the jobs configured to run in merge requests.
- When your merge request is accepted and the changes merge to the default branch,
a new pipeline runs which also contains the `pages` deployment job. The site deploys
if no jobs fail.
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test
- deploy
build-job:
stage: build
image: node
script:
- npm install
- npm run build
artifacts:
paths:
- "build/"
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == 'merge_request_event' # Run for all changes to a merge request's source branch
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH # Run for all changes to the default branch
lint-markdown:
stage: test
image: node
dependencies: []
script:
- npm install markdownlint-cli2 --global
- markdownlint-cli2 -v
- markdownlint-cli2 "blog/**/*.md" "docs/**/*.md"
allow_failure: true
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == 'merge_request_event' # Run for all changes to a merge request's source branch
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH # Run for all changes to the default branch
test-html:
stage: test
image: node
dependencies:
- build-job
script:
- npm install --save-dev htmlhint
- npx htmlhint --version
- npx htmlhint build/
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == 'merge_request_event' # Run for all changes to a merge request's source branch
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH # Run for all changes to the default branch
pages:
stage: deploy
dependencies:
- build-job
script:
- mv build/ public/
artifacts:
paths:
- "public/"
rules:
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH # Run for all changes to the default branch only
```
Merge the changes in your merge request. This action updates the default branch. Verify that
the new pipeline contains the `pages` job that deploys the site.
Be sure to use feature branches and merge requests for all future changes to pipeline configuration.
Other project changes, like creating a Git tag or adding a pipeline schedule, do not
trigger pipelines unless you add rules for those cases too.
## Reduce duplicated configuration
The pipeline now contains three jobs that all have identical `rules` and `image`
configuration. Instead of repeating these rules, use `extends` and `default` to create
single sources of truth.
This step introduces:
- [Hidden jobs](../jobs/index.md#hide-jobs): Jobs that start with `.` are never
added to a pipeline. Use them to hold configuration you want to reuse.
- [`extends`](../yaml/index.md#extends): Use extends to repeat configuration in
multiple places, often from hidden jobs. If you update the hidden job's configuration,
all jobs extending the hidden job use the updated configuration.
- [`default`](../yaml/index.md#default): Set keyword defaults that apply to all jobs
when not defined.
- YAML overriding: When reusing configuration with `extends` or `default`, you can explicitly
define a keyword in the job to override the `extends` or `default` configuration.
In this step:
- Add a `.standard-rules` hidden job to hold the rules that are repeated in `build-job`,
`lint-markdown`, and `test-html`.
- Use `extends` to reuse the `.standard-rules` configuration in the three jobs.
- Add a `default` section to define the `image` default as `node`.
- The `pages` deployment job does not need the default `node` image, so explicitly use
[`busybox`](https://hub.docker.com/_/busybox), an extremely tiny and fast image.
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test
- deploy
default: # Add a default section to define the `image` keyword's default value
image: node
.standard-rules: # Make a hidden job to hold the common rules
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == 'merge_request_event'
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH
build-job:
extends:
- .standard-rules # Reuse the configuration in `.standard-rules` here
stage: build
script:
- npm install
- npm run build
artifacts:
paths:
- "build/"
lint-markdown:
stage: test
extends:
- .standard-rules # Reuse the configuration in `.standard-rules` here
dependencies: []
script:
- npm install markdownlint-cli2 --global
- markdownlint-cli2 -v
- markdownlint-cli2 "blog/**/*.md" "docs/**/*.md"
allow_failure: true
test-html:
stage: test
extends:
- .standard-rules # Reuse the configuration in `.standard-rules` here
dependencies:
- build-job
script:
- npm install --save-dev htmlhint
- npx htmlhint --version
- npx htmlhint build/
pages:
stage: deploy
image: busybox # Override the default `image` value with `busybox`
dependencies:
- build-job
script:
- mv build/ public/
artifacts:
paths:
- "public/"
rules:
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH
```
Use a merge request to commit this pipeline configuration to the default branch.
The file is simpler, but it should have the same behavior as the previous step.
You've just created a full pipeline and streamlined it to be more efficient. Nice work!
Now you can take this knowledge, learn about [the rest of the `.gitlab-ci.yml` keywords](../yaml/index.md),
and build your own pipelines.