To trigger a child pipeline as a [Merge Request Pipeline](merge_request_pipelines/index.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
your own script to generate a YAML file, which is then [used to trigger a child pipeline](yaml/README.md#trigger-child-pipeline-with-generated-configuration-file).
This technique can be very powerful in generating pipelines targeting content that changed or to
further child pipelines. See the [related issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/29651)
for discussion on possible future improvements.
When triggering dynamic child pipelines, if the job containing the CI config artifact is not a predecessor of the
trigger job, the child pipeline will fail to be created, causing also the parent pipeline to fail.
In the future we want to validate the trigger job's dependencies [at the time the parent pipeline is created](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/209070) rather than when the child pipeline is created.