gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/ci/yaml/gitlab_ci_yaml.md

90 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

---
stage: Verify
group: Pipeline Authoring
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: reference
---
# The `.gitlab-ci.yml` file **(FREE)**
To use GitLab CI/CD, you need:
- Application code hosted in a Git repository.
- A file called [`.gitlab-ci.yml`](index.md) in the root of your repository, which
contains the CI/CD configuration.
In the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file, you can define:
- The scripts you want to run.
- Other configuration files and templates you want to include.
- Dependencies and caches.
- The commands you want to run in sequence and those you want to run in parallel.
- The location to deploy your application to.
- Whether you want to run the scripts automatically or trigger any of them manually.
The scripts are grouped into **jobs**, and jobs run as part of a larger
**pipeline**. You can group multiple independent jobs into **stages** that run in a defined order.
The CI/CD configuration needs at least one job that is [not hidden](../jobs/index.md#hide-jobs).
You should organize your jobs in a sequence that suits your application and is in accordance with
the tests you wish to perform. To [visualize](../pipeline_editor/index.md#visualize-ci-configuration) the process, imagine
the scripts you add to jobs are the same as CLI commands you run on your computer.
When you add a `.gitlab-ci.yml` file to your
repository, GitLab detects it and an application called [GitLab Runner](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/)
runs the scripts defined in the jobs.
A `.gitlab-ci.yml` file might contain:
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test
build-code-job:
stage: build
script:
- echo "Check the ruby version, then build some Ruby project files:"
- ruby -v
- rake
test-code-job1:
stage: test
script:
- echo "If the files are built successfully, test some files with one command:"
- rake test1
test-code-job2:
stage: test
script:
- echo "If the files are built successfully, test other files with a different command:"
- rake test2
```
In this example, the `build-code-job` job in the `build` stage runs first. It outputs
the Ruby version the job is using, then runs `rake` to build project files.
If this job completes successfully, the two `test-code-job` jobs in the `test` stage start
in parallel and run tests on the files.
The full pipeline in the example is composed of three jobs, grouped into two stages,
`build` and `test`. The pipeline runs every time changes are pushed to any
branch in the project.
GitLab CI/CD not only executes the jobs but also shows you what's happening during execution,
just as you would see in your terminal:
![job running](img/job_running_v13_10.png)
You create the strategy for your app and GitLab runs the pipeline
according to what you've defined. Your pipeline status is also
displayed by GitLab:
![pipeline status](img/pipeline_status.png)
If anything goes wrong, you can
[roll back](../environments/index.md#retry-or-roll-back-a-deployment) the changes:
![rollback button](img/rollback.png)
[View the full syntax for the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file](index.md).