301 lines
8.3 KiB
Markdown
301 lines
8.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Verify
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group: Pipeline Execution
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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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type: reference
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---
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# Pipeline architecture **(FREE)**
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Pipelines are the fundamental building blocks for CI/CD in GitLab. This page documents
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some of the important concepts related to them.
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You can structure your pipelines with different methods, each with their
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own advantages. These methods can be mixed and matched if needed:
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- [Basic](#basic-pipelines): Good for straightforward projects where all the configuration is in one easy to find place.
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- [Directed Acyclic Graph](#directed-acyclic-graph-pipelines): Good for large, complex projects that need efficient execution.
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- [Parent-child pipelines](#parent-child-pipelines): Good for monorepos and projects with lots of independently defined components.
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<i class="fa fa-youtube-play youtube" aria-hidden="true"></i>
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For an overview, see the [Parent-Child Pipelines feature demo](https://youtu.be/n8KpBSqZNbk).
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- [Multi-project pipelines](downstream_pipelines.md#multi-project-pipelines): Good for larger products that require cross-project interdependencies,
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like those with a [microservices architecture](https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2016/08/16/trends-in-version-control-land-microservices/).
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<i class="fa fa-youtube-play youtube" aria-hidden="true"></i>
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For an overview, see the [Multi-project pipelines demo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_PIwBM1J84).
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## Basic Pipelines
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This is the simplest pipeline in GitLab. It runs everything in the build stage concurrently,
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and once all of those finish, it runs everything in the test stage the same way, and so on.
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It's not the most efficient, and if you have lots of steps it can grow quite complex, but it's
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easier to maintain:
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```mermaid
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graph LR
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subgraph deploy stage
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deploy --> deploy_a
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deploy --> deploy_b
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end
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subgraph test stage
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test --> test_a
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test --> test_b
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end
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subgraph build stage
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build --> build_a
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build --> build_b
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end
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build_a -.-> test
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build_b -.-> test
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test_a -.-> deploy
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test_b -.-> deploy
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```
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Example basic `/.gitlab-ci.yml` pipeline configuration matching the diagram:
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```yaml
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stages:
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- build
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- test
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- deploy
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image: alpine
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build_a:
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stage: build
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script:
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- echo "This job builds something."
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build_b:
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stage: build
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script:
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- echo "This job builds something else."
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test_a:
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stage: test
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script:
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- echo "This job tests something. It will only run when all jobs in the"
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- echo "build stage are complete."
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test_b:
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stage: test
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script:
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- echo "This job tests something else. It will only run when all jobs in the"
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- echo "build stage are complete too. It will start at about the same time as test_a."
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deploy_a:
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stage: deploy
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script:
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- echo "This job deploys something. It will only run when all jobs in the"
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- echo "test stage complete."
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environment: production
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deploy_b:
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stage: deploy
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script:
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- echo "This job deploys something else. It will only run when all jobs in the"
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- echo "test stage complete. It will start at about the same time as deploy_a."
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environment: production
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```
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## Directed Acyclic Graph Pipelines
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If efficiency is important to you and you want everything to run as quickly as possible,
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you can use [Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAG)](../directed_acyclic_graph/index.md). Use the
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[`needs` keyword](../yaml/index.md#needs) to define dependency relationships between
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your jobs. When GitLab knows the relationships between your jobs, it can run everything
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as fast as possible, and even skips into subsequent stages when possible.
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In the example below, if `build_a` and `test_a` are much faster than `build_b` and
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`test_b`, GitLab starts `deploy_a` even if `build_b` is still running.
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```mermaid
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graph LR
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subgraph Pipeline using DAG
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build_a --> test_a --> deploy_a
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build_b --> test_b --> deploy_b
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end
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```
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Example DAG `/.gitlab-ci.yml` configuration matching the diagram:
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```yaml
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stages:
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- build
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- test
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- deploy
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image: alpine
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build_a:
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stage: build
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script:
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- echo "This job builds something quickly."
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build_b:
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stage: build
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script:
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- echo "This job builds something else slowly."
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test_a:
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stage: test
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needs: [build_a]
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script:
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- echo "This test job will start as soon as build_a finishes."
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- echo "It will not wait for build_b, or other jobs in the build stage, to finish."
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test_b:
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stage: test
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needs: [build_b]
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script:
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- echo "This test job will start as soon as build_b finishes."
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- echo "It will not wait for other jobs in the build stage to finish."
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deploy_a:
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stage: deploy
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needs: [test_a]
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script:
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- echo "Since build_a and test_a run quickly, this deploy job can run much earlier."
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- echo "It does not need to wait for build_b or test_b."
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environment: production
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deploy_b:
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stage: deploy
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needs: [test_b]
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script:
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- echo "Since build_b and test_b run slowly, this deploy job will run much later."
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environment: production
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```
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## Parent-child pipelines
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As pipelines grow more complex, a few related problems start to emerge:
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- The staged structure, where all steps in a stage must complete before the first
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job in next stage begins, causes waits that slow things down.
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- Configuration for the single global pipeline becomes
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hard to manage.
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- Imports with [`include`](../yaml/index.md#include) increase the complexity of the configuration, and can cause
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namespace collisions where jobs are unintentionally duplicated.
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- Pipeline UX has too many jobs and stages to work with.
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Additionally, sometimes the behavior of a pipeline needs to be more dynamic. The ability
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to choose to start sub-pipelines (or not) is a powerful ability, especially if the
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YAML is dynamically generated.
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![Parent pipeline graph expanded](img/parent_pipeline_graph_expanded_v14_3.png)
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In the [basic pipeline](#basic-pipelines) and [directed acyclic graph](#directed-acyclic-graph-pipelines)
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examples above, there are two packages that could be built independently.
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These cases are ideal for using [parent-child pipelines](downstream_pipelines.md#parent-child-pipelines).
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It separates out the configuration into multiple files, keeping things simpler.
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You can combine parent-child pipelines with:
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- The [`rules` keyword](../yaml/index.md#rules): For example, have the child pipelines triggered only
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when there are changes to that area.
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- The [`include` keyword](../yaml/index.md#include): Bring in common behaviors, ensuring
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you are not repeating yourself.
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- [DAG pipelines](#directed-acyclic-graph-pipelines) inside of child pipelines, achieving the benefits of both.
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```mermaid
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graph LR
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subgraph Parent pipeline
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trigger_a -.-> build_a
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trigger_b -.-> build_b
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subgraph child pipeline B
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build_b --> test_b --> deploy_b
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end
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subgraph child pipeline A
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build_a --> test_a --> deploy_a
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end
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end
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```
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Example `/.gitlab-ci.yml` configuration for the parent pipeline matching the diagram:
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```yaml
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stages:
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- triggers
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trigger_a:
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stage: triggers
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trigger:
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include: a/.gitlab-ci.yml
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rules:
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- changes:
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- a/*
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trigger_b:
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stage: triggers
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trigger:
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include: b/.gitlab-ci.yml
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rules:
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- changes:
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- b/*
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```
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Example child `a` pipeline configuration, located in `/a/.gitlab-ci.yml`, making
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use of the DAG `needs` keyword:
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```yaml
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stages:
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- build
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- test
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- deploy
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image: alpine
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build_a:
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stage: build
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script:
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- echo "This job builds something."
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test_a:
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stage: test
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needs: [build_a]
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script:
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- echo "This job tests something."
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deploy_a:
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stage: deploy
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needs: [test_a]
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script:
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- echo "This job deploys something."
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environment: production
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```
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Example child `b` pipeline configuration, located in `/b/.gitlab-ci.yml`, making
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use of the DAG `needs` keyword:
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```yaml
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stages:
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- build
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- test
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- deploy
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image: alpine
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build_b:
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stage: build
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script:
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- echo "This job builds something else."
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test_b:
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stage: test
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needs: [build_b]
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script:
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- echo "This job tests something else."
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deploy_b:
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stage: deploy
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needs: [test_b]
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script:
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- echo "This job deploys something else."
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environment: production
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```
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It's also possible to set jobs to run before or after triggering child pipelines,
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for example if you have common setup steps or a unified deployment at the end.
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