71 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
71 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Create
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group: Ecosystem
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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/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Atlassian Bamboo CI Service
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GitLab provides integration with Atlassian Bamboo for continuous integration.
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When configured, pushes to a project trigger a build in Bamboo automatically.
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Merge requests also display CI status showing whether the build is pending,
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failed, or completed successfully. It also provides a link to the Bamboo build
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page for more information.
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Bamboo doesn't quite provide the same features as a traditional build system when
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it comes to accepting webhooks and commit data. There are a few things that
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need to be configured in a Bamboo build plan before GitLab can integrate.
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## Setup
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### Complete these steps in Bamboo
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1. Navigate to a Bamboo build plan and choose 'Configure plan' from the 'Actions'
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dropdown.
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1. Select the 'Triggers' tab.
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1. Click 'Add trigger'.
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1. Enter a description such as 'GitLab trigger'
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1. Choose 'Repository triggers the build when changes are committed'
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1. Check one or more repositories checkboxes
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1. Enter the GitLab IP address in the 'Trigger IP addresses' box. This is a
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list of IP addresses that are allowed to trigger Bamboo builds.
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1. Save the trigger.
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1. In the left pane, select a build stage. If you have multiple build stages
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you want to select the last stage that contains the Git checkout task.
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1. Select the 'Miscellaneous' tab.
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1. Under 'Pattern Match Labeling' put `${bamboo.repository.revision.number}`
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in the 'Labels' box.
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1. Save
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Bamboo is now ready to accept triggers from GitLab. Next, set up the Bamboo
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service in GitLab.
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### Complete these steps in GitLab
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1. Navigate to the project you want to configure to trigger builds.
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1. Navigate to the [Integrations page](overview.md#accessing-integrations)
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1. Click 'Atlassian Bamboo CI'
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1. Ensure that the **Active** toggle is enabled.
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1. Enter the base URL of your Bamboo server. `https://bamboo.example.com`
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1. Enter the build key from your Bamboo build plan. Build keys are typically made
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up from the Project Key and Plan Key that are set on project/plan creation and
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separated with a dash (`-`), for example **PROJ-PLAN**. This is a short, all
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uppercase identifier that is unique. When viewing a plan in Bamboo, the
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build key is also shown in the browser URL, for example `https://bamboo.example.com/browse/PROJ-PLAN`.
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1. If necessary, enter username and password for a Bamboo user that has
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access to trigger the build plan. Leave these fields blank if you do not require
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authentication.
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1. Save or optionally click 'Test Settings'. Please note that 'Test Settings'
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actually triggers a build in Bamboo.
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## Troubleshooting
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### Builds not triggered
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If builds are not triggered, ensure you entered the right GitLab IP address in
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Bamboo under 'Trigger IP addresses'. Also check [service hook logs](overview.md#troubleshooting-integrations) for request failures.
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### Advanced Atlassian Bamboo features not available in GitLab UI
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Advanced Atlassian Bamboo features are not compatible with GitLab. These features
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include, but are not limited to, the ability to watch the build logs from the GitLab UI.
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