265 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
265 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: reference
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---
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# Review Apps
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> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/21971) in GitLab 8.12. Further additions were made in GitLab 8.13 and 8.14.
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> - Inspired by [Heroku's Review Apps](https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/github-integration-review-apps), which itself was inspired by [Fourchette](https://github.com/rainforestapp/fourchette).
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Review Apps is a collaboration tool that takes the hard work out of providing an environment to showcase product changes.
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## Introduction
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Review Apps:
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- Provide an automatic live preview of changes made in a feature branch by spinning up a dynamic environment for your merge requests.
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- Allow designers and product managers to see your changes without needing to check out your branch and run your changes in a sandbox environment.
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- Are fully integrated with the [GitLab DevOps LifeCycle](../../README.md#the-entire-devops-lifecycle).
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- Allow you to deploy your changes wherever you want.
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![Review Apps Workflow](img/continuous-delivery-review-apps.svg)
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In the above example:
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- A Review App is built every time a commit is pushed to `topic branch`.
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- The reviewer fails two reviews before passing the third review.
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- Once the review has passed, `topic branch` is merged into `master` where it is deployed to staging.
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- After having been approved in staging, the changes that were merged into `master` are deployed in to production.
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## How Review Apps work
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A Review App is a mapping of a branch with an [environment](../environments.md).
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Access to the Review App is made available as a link on the [merge request](../../user/project/merge_requests.md) relevant to the branch.
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The following is an example of a merge request with an environment set dynamically.
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![Review App in merge request](img/review_apps_preview_in_mr.png)
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In this example, a branch was:
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- Successfully built.
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- Deployed under a dynamic environment that can be reached by clicking on the **View app** button.
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After adding Review Apps to your workflow, you follow the branched Git flow. That is:
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1. Push a branch and let the Runner deploy the Review App based on the `script` definition of the dynamic environment job.
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1. Wait for the Runner to build and deploy your web application.
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1. Click on the link provided in the merge request related to the branch to see the changes live.
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## Configuring Review Apps
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Review Apps are built on [dynamic environments](../environments.md#configuring-dynamic-environments), which allow you to dynamically create a new environment for each branch.
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The process of configuring Review Apps is as follows:
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1. Set up the infrastructure to host and deploy the Review Apps (check the [examples](#review-apps-examples) below).
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1. [Install](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/install/) and [configure](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/commands/) a Runner to do deployment.
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1. Set up a job in `.gitlab-ci.yml` that uses the [predefined CI environment variable](../variables/README.md) `${CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME}` to create dynamic environments and restrict it to run only on branches.
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1. Optionally, set a job that [manually stops](../environments.md#stopping-an-environment) the Review Apps.
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## Review Apps examples
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The following are example projects that demonstrate Review App configuration:
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- [NGINX](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/review-apps-nginx).
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- [OpenShift](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/review-apps-openshift).
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<i class="fa fa-youtube-play youtube" aria-hidden="true"></i>
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See also the video [Demo: Cloud Native Development with GitLab](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfIyQEwrocw), which includes a Review Apps example.
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## Route Maps
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> Introduced in GitLab 8.17. In GitLab 11.5, the file links are available in the merge request widget.
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Route Maps allows you to go directly from source files
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to public pages on the [environment](../environments.md) defined for
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Review Apps.
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Once set up, the review app link in the merge request
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widget can take you directly to the pages changed, making it easier
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and faster to preview proposed modifications.
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Configuring Route Maps involves telling GitLab how the paths of files
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in your repository map to paths of pages on your website using a Route Map.
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Once set, GitLab will display **View on ...** buttons, which will take you
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to the pages changed directly from merge requests.
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To set up a route map, add a file inside the repository at `.gitlab/route-map.yml`,
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which contains a YAML array that maps `source` paths (in the repository) to `public`
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paths (on the website).
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### Route Maps example
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The following is an example of a route map for [Middleman](https://middlemanapp.com),
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a static site generator (SSG) used to build [GitLab's website](https://about.gitlab.com),
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deployed from its [project on GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/www-gitlab-com):
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```yaml
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# Team data
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- source: 'data/team.yml' # data/team.yml
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public: 'team/' # team/
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# Blogposts
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- source: /source\/posts\/([0-9]{4})-([0-9]{2})-([0-9]{2})-(.+?)\..*/ # source/posts/2017-01-30-around-the-world-in-6-releases.html.md.erb
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public: '\1/\2/\3/\4/' # 2017/01/30/around-the-world-in-6-releases/
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# HTML files
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- source: /source\/(.+?\.html).*/ # source/index.html.haml
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public: '\1' # index.html
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# Other files
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- source: /source\/(.*)/ # source/images/blogimages/around-the-world-in-6-releases-cover.png
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public: '\1' # images/blogimages/around-the-world-in-6-releases-cover.png
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```
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Mappings are defined as entries in the root YAML array, and are identified by a `-` prefix. Within an entry, there is a hash map with two keys:
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- `source`
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- A string, starting and ending with `'`, for an exact match.
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- A regular expression, starting and ending with `/`, for a pattern match:
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- The regular expression needs to match the entire source path - `^` and `$` anchors are implied.
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- Can include capture groups denoted by `()` that can be referred to in the `public` path.
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- Slashes (`/`) can, but don't have to, be escaped as `\/`.
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- Literal periods (`.`) should be escaped as `\.`.
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- `public`, a string starting and ending with `'`.
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- Can include `\N` expressions to refer to capture groups in the `source` regular expression in order of their occurrence, starting with `\1`.
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The public path for a source path is determined by finding the first
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`source` expression that matches it, and returning the corresponding
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`public` path, replacing the `\N` expressions with the values of the
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`()` capture groups if appropriate.
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In the example above, the fact that mappings are evaluated in order
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of their definition is used to ensure that `source/index.html.haml`
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will match `/source\/(.+?\.html).*/` instead of `/source\/(.*)/`,
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and will result in a public path of `index.html`, instead of
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`index.html.haml`.
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Once you have the route mapping set up, it will take effect in the following locations:
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- In the merge request widget. The:
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- **View app** button will take you to the environment URL set in `.gitlab-ci.yml`.
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- Dropdown will list the first 5 matched items from the route map, but you can filter them if more
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than 5 are available.
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![View app file list in merge request widget](img/view_on_mr_widget.png)
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- In the diff for a merge request, comparison, or commit.
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!["View on env" button in merge request diff](img/view_on_env_mr.png)
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- In the blob file view.
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!["View on env" button in file view](img/view_on_env_blob.png)
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## Visual Reviews **(STARTER)**
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/10761) in GitLab Starter 12.0.
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With Visual Reviews, you can provide a feedback form to your Review Apps so
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that reviewers can post comments directly from the app back to the merge request
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that spawned the Review App.
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### Configuring Visual Reviews
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Ensure that the `anonymous_visual_review_feedback` feature flag is enabled.
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Administrators can enable with a Rails console as follows:
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```ruby
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Feature.enabled(:anonymous_visual_review_feedback)
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```
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The feedback form is served through a script you add to pages in your Review App.
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If you have [Developer permissions](../../user/permissions.md) to the project,
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you can access it by clicking the **Review** button in the **Pipeline** section
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of the merge request.
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![review button](img/review_button.png)
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The provided script should be added to the `<head>` of you application and
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consists of some project and merge request specific values. Here's what it
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looks like:
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```html
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<script
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data-project-id='11790219'
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data-merge-request-id='1'
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data-mr-url='https://gitlab.example.com'
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data-project-path='sarah/review-app-tester'
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id='review-app-toolbar-script'
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src='https://gitlab.example.com/assets/webpack/visual_review_toolbar.js'>
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</script>
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```
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Ideally, you should use [environment variables](../variables/predefined_variables.md)
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to replace those values at runtime when each review app is created:
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- `data-project-id` is the project ID, which can be found by the `CI_PROJECT_ID`
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variable.
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- `data-merge-request-id` is the merge request ID, which can be found by the
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`CI_MERGE_REQUEST_IID` variable. `CI_MERGE_REQUEST_IID` is available only if
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[`only: [merge_requests]`](../merge_request_pipelines/index.md)
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is used and the merge request is created.
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- `data-mr-url` is the URL of the GitLab instance and will be the same for all
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review apps.
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- `data-project-path` is the project's path, which can be found by `CI_PROJECT_PATH`.
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- `id` is always `review-app-toolbar-script`, you don't need to change that.
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- `src` is the source of the review toolbar script, which resides in the
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respective GitLab instance and will be the same for all review apps.
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For example, in a Ruby application, you would need to have this script:
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```html
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<script
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data-project-id="ENV['CI_PROJECT_ID']"
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data-merge-request-id="ENV['CI_MERGE_REQUEST_IID']"
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data-mr-url='https://gitlab.example.com'
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data-project-path="ENV['CI_PROJECT_PATH']"
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id='review-app-toolbar-script'
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src='https://gitlab.example.com/assets/webpack/visual_review_toolbar.js'>
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</script>
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```
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Then, when your app is deployed via GitLab CI/CD, those variables should get
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replaced with their real values.
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NOTE: **Note:**
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Future enhancements [are planned](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/11322)
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to make this process even easier.
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### Determining merge request ID
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The visual review tools retrieve the merge request ID from the `data-merge-request-id`
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data attribute included in the `script` HTML tag used to add the visual review tools
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to your review app.
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After determining the ID for the merge request to link to a visual review app, you
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can supply the ID by either:
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- Hardcoding it in the script tag via the data attribute `data-merge-request-id` of the app.
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- Dynamically adding the `data-merge-request-id` value during the build of the app.
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- Supplying it manually through the visual review form in the app.
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### Using Visual Reviews
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After Visual Reviews has been [enabled](#configuring-visual-reviews) for the
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Review App, the Visual Reviews feedback form is overlaid on the app's pages at
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the bottom-right corner.
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![Visual review feedback form](img/toolbar_feeback_form.png)
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To use the feedback form:
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1. Make a comment on the visual review. You can make use of all the
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[Markdown annotations](../../user/markdown.md) that are also available in
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merge request comments.
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1. Submit your feedback anonymously or add your name.
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1. Finally, click **Send feedback**.
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After you make and submit a comment in the visual review box, it will appear
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automatically in the respective merge request.
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## Limitations
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Review App limitations are the same as [environments limitations](../environments.md#limitations).
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