--- stage: Verify group: Pipeline Execution 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: tutorial --- # Trigger pipelines by using the API **(FREE)** To trigger a pipeline for a specific branch or tag, you can use an API call to the [pipeline triggers API endpoint](../../api/pipeline_triggers.md). When authenticating with the API, you can use: - A [trigger token](#create-a-trigger-token) to trigger a branch or tag pipeline. - A [CI/CD job token](../jobs/ci_job_token.md) to [trigger a multi-project pipeline](../pipelines/downstream_pipelines.md#trigger-a-multi-project-pipeline-by-using-the-api). ## Create a trigger token You can trigger a pipeline for a branch or tag by generating a trigger token and using it to authenticate an API call. The token impersonates a user's project access and permissions. Prerequisite: - You must have at least the Maintainer role for the project. To create a trigger token: 1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project. 1. On the left sidebar, select **Settings > CI/CD**. 1. Expand **Pipeline triggers**. 1. Enter a description and select **Add trigger**. - You can view and copy the full token for all triggers you have created. - You can only see the first 4 characters for tokens created by other project members. WARNING: It is a security risk to save tokens in plain text in public projects. Potential attackers could use a trigger token exposed in the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file to impersonate the user that created the token. Use [masked CI/CD variables](../variables/index.md#mask-a-cicd-variable) to improve the security of trigger tokens. ## Trigger a pipeline After you [create a trigger token](#create-a-trigger-token), you can use it to trigger pipelines with a tool that can access the API, or a webhook. ### Use cURL You can use cURL to trigger pipelines with the [pipeline triggers API endpoint](../../api/pipeline_triggers.md). For example: - Use a multiline cURL command: ```shell curl --request POST \ --form token= \ --form ref= \ "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects//trigger/pipeline" ``` - Use cURL and pass the `` and `` in the query string: ```shell curl --request POST \ "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects//trigger/pipeline?token=&ref=" ``` In each example, replace: - The URL with `https://gitlab.com` or the URL of your instance. - `` with your trigger token. - `` with a branch or tag name, like `main`. - `` with your project ID, like `123456`. The project ID is displayed at the top of every project's landing page. ### Use a CI/CD job You can use a CI/CD job with a triggers token to trigger pipelines when another pipeline runs. For example, to trigger a pipeline on the `main` branch of `project-B` when a tag is created in `project-A`, add the following job to project A's `.gitlab-ci.yml` file: ```yaml trigger_pipeline: stage: deploy script: - 'curl --fail --request POST --form token=$MY_TRIGGER_TOKEN --form ref=main "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/123456/trigger/pipeline"' rules: - if: $CI_COMMIT_TAG environment: production ``` In this example: - `1234` is the project ID for `project-B`. The project ID is displayed at the top of every project's landing page. - The [`rules`](../yaml/index.md#rules) cause the job to run every time a tag is added to `project-A`. - `MY_TRIGGER_TOKEN` is a [masked CI/CD variables](../variables/index.md#mask-a-cicd-variable) that contains the trigger token. ### Use a webhook To trigger a pipeline from another project's webhook, use a webhook URL like the following for push and tag events: ```plaintext https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects//ref//trigger/pipeline?token= ``` Replace: - The URL with `https://gitlab.com` or the URL of your instance. - `` with your project ID, like `123456`. The project ID is displayed at the top of the project's landing page. - `` with a branch or tag name, like `main`. This value takes precedence over the `ref_name` in the webhook payload. The payload's `ref` is the branch that fired the trigger in the source repository. You must URL-encode the `ref_name` if it contains slashes. - `` with your trigger token. #### Use a webhook payload > - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/31197) in GitLab 13.9. > - [Feature flag removed](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/321027) in GitLab 13.11. If you trigger a pipeline by using a webhook, you can access the webhook payload with the `TRIGGER_PAYLOAD` [predefined CI/CD variable](../variables/predefined_variables.md). The payload is exposed as a [file-type variable](../variables/index.md#cicd-variable-types), so you can access the data with `cat $TRIGGER_PAYLOAD` or a similar command. ### Pass CI/CD variables in the API call You can pass any number of [CI/CD variables](../variables/index.md) in the trigger API call. These variables have the [highest precedence](../variables/index.md#cicd-variable-precedence), and override all variables with the same name. The parameter is of the form `variables[key]=value`, for example: ```shell curl --request POST \ --form token=TOKEN \ --form ref=main \ --form "variables[UPLOAD_TO_S3]=true" \ "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/123456/trigger/pipeline" ``` CI/CD variables in triggered pipelines display on each job's page, but only users with the Owner and Maintainer role can view the values. ![Job variables in UI](img/trigger_variables.png) ## Revoke a trigger token To revoke a trigger token: 1. On the top bar, select **Main menu > Projects** and find your project. 1. On the left sidebar, select **Settings > CI/CD**. 1. Expand **Pipeline triggers**. 1. To the left of the trigger token you want to revoke, select **Revoke** (**{remove}**). A revoked trigger token cannot be added back. ## Configure CI/CD jobs to run in triggered pipelines To [configure when to run jobs](../jobs/job_control.md) in triggered pipelines: - Use [`rules`](../yaml/index.md#rules) with the `$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE` [predefined CI/CD variable](../variables/predefined_variables.md). - Use [`only`/`except`](../yaml/index.md#onlyrefs--exceptrefs) keywords. | `$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE` value | `only`/`except` keywords | Trigger method | |-----------------------------|--------------------------|---------------------| | `trigger` | `triggers` | In pipelines triggered with the [pipeline triggers API](../../api/pipeline_triggers.md) by using a [trigger token](#create-a-trigger-token). | | `pipeline` | `pipelines` | In [multi-project pipelines](../pipelines/downstream_pipelines.md#trigger-a-multi-project-pipeline-by-using-the-api) triggered with the [pipeline triggers API](../../api/pipeline_triggers.md) by using the [`$CI_JOB_TOKEN`](../jobs/ci_job_token.md), or by using the [`trigger`](../yaml/index.md#trigger) keyword in the CI/CD configuration file. | Additionally, the `$CI_PIPELINE_TRIGGERED` predefined CI/CD variable is set to `true` in pipelines triggered with a trigger token. ## See which trigger token was used You can see which trigger caused a job to run by visiting the single job page. A part of the trigger's token displays on the right of the page, under the job details: ![Marked as triggered on a single job page](img/trigger_single_job.png) In pipelines triggered with a trigger token, jobs are labeled as `triggered` in **CI/CD > Jobs**. ## Troubleshooting ### `404 not found` when triggering a pipeline A response of `{"message":"404 Not Found"}` when triggering a pipeline might be caused by using a [personal access token](../../user/profile/personal_access_tokens.md) instead of a trigger token. [Create a new trigger token](#create-a-trigger-token) and use it instead of the personal access token.