11 KiB
redirect_from | author | author_gitlab | level | article_type | date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/articles/artifactory_and_gitlab/index.html | Fabio Busatto | bikebilly | intermediary | tutorial | 2017-08-15 |
How to deploy Maven projects to Artifactory with GitLab CI/CD
Introduction
In this article, we will show how you can leverage the power of GitLab CI/CD to build a Maven project, deploy it to Artifactory, and then use it from another Maven application as a dependency.
You'll create two different projects:
simple-maven-dep
: the app built and deployed to Artifactory (available at https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-dep)simple-maven-app
: the app using the previous one as a dependency (available at https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-app)
We assume that you already have a GitLab account on GitLab.com, and that you know the basic usage of Git and GitLab CI/CD. We also assume that an Artifactory instance is available and reachable from the internet, and that you have valid credentials to deploy on it.
Create the simple Maven dependency
First of all, you need an application to work with: in this specific case we will use a simple one, but it could be any Maven application. This will be the dependency you want to package and deploy to Artifactory, in order to be available to other projects.
Prepare the dependency application
For this article you'll use a Maven app that can be cloned from our example project:
-
Log in to your GitLab account
-
Create a new project by selecting Import project from ➔ Repo by URL
-
Add the following URL:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-dep.git
-
Click Create project
This application is nothing more than a basic class with a stub for a JUnit based test suite.
It exposes a method called hello
that accepts a string as input, and prints a hello message on the screen.
The project structure is really simple, and you should consider these two resources:
pom.xml
: project object model (POM) configuration filesrc/main/java/com/example/dep/Dep.java
: source of our application
Configure the Artifactory deployment
The application is ready to use, but you need some additional steps to deploy it to Artifactory:
-
Log in to Artifactory with your user's credentials.
-
From the main screen, click on the
libs-release-local
item in the Set Me Up panel. -
Copy to clipboard the configuration snippet under the Deploy paragraph.
-
Change the
url
value in order to have it configurable via secret variables. -
Copy the snippet in the
pom.xml
file for your project, just after thedependencies
section. The snippet should look like this:<distributionManagement> <repository> <id>central</id> <name>83d43b5afeb5-releases</name> <url>${env.MAVEN_REPO_URL}/libs-release-local</url> </repository> </distributionManagement>
Another step you need to do before you can deploy the dependency to Artifactory
is to configure the authentication data. It is a simple task, but Maven requires
it to stay in a file called settings.xml
that has to be in the .m2
subdirectory
in the user's homedir.
Since you want to use GitLab Runner to automatically deploy the application, you
should create the file in the project's home directory and set a command line
parameter in .gitlab-ci.yml
to use the custom location instead of the default one:
-
Create a folder called
.m2
in the root of your repository -
Create a file called
settings.xml
in the.m2
folder -
Copy the following content into a
settings.xml
file:<settings xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.1.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.1.0.xsd" xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"> <servers> <server> <id>central</id> <username>${env.MAVEN_REPO_USER}</username> <password>${env.MAVEN_REPO_PASS}</password> </server> </servers> </settings>
Username and password will be replaced by the correct values using secret variables.
Configure GitLab CI/CD for simple-maven-dep
Now it's time we set up GitLab CI/CD to automatically build, test and deploy the dependency!
GitLab CI/CD uses a file in the root of the repo, named .gitlab-ci.yml
, to read the definitions for jobs
that will be executed by the configured GitLab Runners. You can read more about this file in the GitLab Documentation.
First of all, remember to set up secret variables for your deployment. Navigate to your project's Settings > CI/CD page and add the following secret variables (replace them with your current values, of course):
- MAVEN_REPO_URL:
http://artifactory.example.com:8081/artifactory
(your Artifactory URL) - MAVEN_REPO_USER:
gitlab
(your Artifactory username) - MAVEN_REPO_PASS:
AKCp2WXr3G61Xjz1PLmYa3arm3yfBozPxSta4taP3SeNu2HPXYa7FhNYosnndFNNgoEds8BCS
(your Artifactory Encrypted Password)
Now it's time to define jobs in .gitlab-ci.yml
and push it to the repo:
image: maven:latest
variables:
MAVEN_CLI_OPTS: "-s .m2/settings.xml --batch-mode"
MAVEN_OPTS: "-Dmaven.repo.local=.m2/repository"
cache:
paths:
- .m2/repository/
- target/
build:
stage: build
script:
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS compile
test:
stage: test
script:
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS test
deploy:
stage: deploy
script:
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS deploy
only:
- master
GitLab Runner will use the latest Maven Docker image, which already contains all the tools and the dependencies you need to manage the project, in order to run the jobs.
Environment variables are set to instruct Maven to use the homedir
of the repo instead of the user's home when searching for configuration and dependencies.
Caching the .m2/repository folder
(where all the Maven files are stored), and the target
folder (where our application will be created), is useful for speeding up the process
by running all Maven phases in a sequential order, therefore, executing mvn test
will automatically run mvn compile
if necessary.
Both build
and test
jobs leverage the mvn
command to compile the application and to test it as defined in the test suite that is part of the application.
Deploy to Artifactory is done as defined by the secret variables we have just set up.
The deployment occurs only if we're pushing or merging to master
branch, so that the development versions are tested but not published.
Done! Now you have all the changes in the GitLab repo, and a pipeline has already been started for this commit. In the Pipelines tab you can see what's happening. If the deployment has been successful, the deploy job log will output:
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] BUILD SUCCESS
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Total time: 1.983 s
Note
the
mvn
command downloads a lot of files from the internet, so you'll see a lot of extra activity in the log the first time you run it.
Yay! You did it! Checking in Artifactory will confirm that you have a new artifact available in the libs-release-local
repo.
Create the main Maven application
Now that you have the dependency available on Artifactory, it's time to use it! Let's see how we can have it as a dependency to our main application.
Prepare the main application
We'll use again a Maven app that can be cloned from our example project:
-
Create a new project by selecting Import project from ➔ Repo by URL
-
Add the following URL:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-app.git
-
Click Create project
This one is a simple app as well. If you look at the src/main/java/com/example/app/App.java
file you can see that it imports the com.example.dep.Dep
class and calls the hello
method passing GitLab
as a parameter.
Since Maven doesn't know how to resolve the dependency, you need to modify the configuration:
-
Go back to Artifactory
-
Browse the
libs-release-local
repository -
Select the
simple-maven-dep-1.0.jar
file -
Find the configuration snippet from the Dependency Declaration section of the main panel
-
Copy the snippet in the
dependencies
section of thepom.xml
file. The snippet should look like this:<dependency> <groupId>com.example.dep</groupId> <artifactId>simple-maven-dep</artifactId> <version>1.0</version> </dependency>
Configure the Artifactory repository location
At this point you defined the dependency for the application, but you still miss where you can find the required files.
You need to create a .m2/settings.xml
file as you did for the dependency project, and let Maven know the location using environment variables.
Here is how you can get the content of the file directly from Artifactory:
- From the main screen, click on the
libs-release-local
item in the Set Me Up panel - Click on Generate Maven Settings
- Click on Generate Settings
- Copy to clipboard the configuration file
- Save the file as
.m2/settings.xml
in your repo
Now you are ready to use the Artifactory repository to resolve dependencies and use simple-maven-dep
in your main application!
Configure GitLab CI/CD for simple-maven-app
You need a last step to have everything in place: configure the .gitlab-ci.yml
file for this project, as you already did for simple-maven-dep
.
You want to leverage GitLab CI/CD to automatically build, test and run your awesome application, and see if you can get the greeting as expected!
All you need to do is to add the following .gitlab-ci.yml
to the repo:
image: maven:latest
stages:
- build
- test
- run
variables:
MAVEN_CLI_OPTS: "-s .m2/settings.xml --batch-mode"
MAVEN_OPTS: "-Dmaven.repo.local=.m2/repository"
cache:
paths:
- .m2/repository/
- target/
build:
stage: build
script:
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS compile
test:
stage: test
script:
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS test
run:
stage: run
script:
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS package
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS exec:java -Dexec.mainClass="com.example.app.App"
It is very similar to the configuration used for simple-maven-dep
, but instead of the deploy
job there is a run
job.
Probably something that you don't want to use in real projects, but here it is useful to see the application executed automatically.
And that's it! In the run
job output log you will find a friendly hello to GitLab!
Conclusion
In this article we covered the basic steps to use an Artifactory Maven repository to automatically publish and consume artifacts.
A similar approach could be used to interact with any other Maven compatible Binary Repository Manager.
Obviously, you can improve these examples, optimizing the .gitlab-ci.yml
file to better suit your needs, and adapting to your workflow.