Change Pipelines to CI/CD for Settings page
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@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ What is important is that each job is run independently from each other.
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If you want to check whether your `.gitlab-ci.yml` file is valid, there is a
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Lint tool under the page `/ci/lint` of your GitLab instance. You can also find
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a "CI Lint" button to go to this page under **Pipelines ➔ Pipelines** and
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a "CI Lint" button to go to this page under **CI/CD ➔ Pipelines** and
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**Pipelines ➔ Jobs** in your project.
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For more information and a complete `.gitlab-ci.yml` syntax, please read
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@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ Find more information about different Runners in the
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[Runners](../runners/README.md) documentation.
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You can find whether any Runners are assigned to your project by going to
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines**. Setting up a Runner is easy and straightforward. The
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD**. Setting up a Runner is easy and straightforward. The
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official Runner supported by GitLab is written in Go and its documentation
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can be found at <https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/>.
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@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ Follow the links above to set up your own Runner or use a Shared Runner as
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described in the next section.
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Once the Runner has been set up, you should see it on the Runners page of your
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project, following **Settings ➔ Pipelines**.
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project, following **Settings ➔ CI/CD**.
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![Activated runners](img/runners_activated.png)
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@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ These are special virtual machines that run on GitLab's infrastructure and can
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build any project.
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To enable the **Shared Runners** you have to go to your project's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines** and click **Enable shared runners**.
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD** and click **Enable shared runners**.
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[Read more on Shared Runners](../runners/README.md).
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@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ are:
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A Runner that is specific only runs for the specified project(s). A shared Runner
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can run jobs for every project that has enabled the option **Allow shared Runners**
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under **Settings ➔ Pipelines**.
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under **Settings ➔ CI/CD**.
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Projects with high demand of CI activity can also benefit from using specific
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Runners. By having dedicated Runners you are guaranteed that the Runner is not
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@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ You can only register a shared Runner if you are an admin of the GitLab instance
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Shared Runners are enabled by default as of GitLab 8.2, but can be disabled
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with the **Disable shared Runners** button which is present under each project's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines** page. Previous versions of GitLab defaulted shared
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD** page. Previous versions of GitLab defaulted shared
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Runners to disabled.
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## Registering a specific Runner
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@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ Registering a specific can be done in two ways:
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To create a specific Runner without having admin rights to the GitLab instance,
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visit the project you want to make the Runner work for in GitLab:
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1. Go to **Settings ➔ Pipelines** to obtain the token
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1. Go to **Settings ➔ CI/CD** to obtain the token
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1. [Register the Runner][register]
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### Making an existing shared Runner specific
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@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ can be changed afterwards under each Runner's settings.
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To lock/unlock a Runner:
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ Pipelines**
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ CI/CD**
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1. Find the Runner you wish to lock/unlock and make sure it's enabled
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1. Click the pencil button
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1. Check the **Lock to current projects** option
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@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ you can enable the Runner also on any other project where you have Master permis
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To enable/disable a Runner in your project:
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ Pipelines**
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ CI/CD**
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1. Find the Runner you wish to enable/disable
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1. Click **Enable for this project** or **Disable for this project**
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@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ Whenever a Runner is protected, the Runner picks only jobs created on
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To protect/unprotect Runners:
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ Pipelines**
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ CI/CD**
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1. Find a Runner you want to protect/unprotect and make sure it's enabled
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1. Click the pencil button besides the Runner name
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1. Check the **Protected** option
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@ -220,7 +220,7 @@ each Runner's settings.
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To make a Runner pick tagged/untagged jobs:
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ Pipelines**
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1. Visit your project's **Settings ➔ CI/CD**
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1. Find the Runner you wish and make sure it's enabled
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1. Click the pencil button
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1. Check the **Run untagged jobs** option
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@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ instructions to [generate an SSH key](../../ssh/README.md). Do not add a
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passphrase to the SSH key, or the `before_script` will prompt for it.
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Then, create a new **Secret Variable** in your project settings on GitLab
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following **Settings > Pipelines** and look for the "Secret Variables" section.
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following **Settings > CI/CD** and look for the "Secret Variables" section.
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As **Key** add the name `SSH_PRIVATE_KEY` and in the **Value** field paste the
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content of your _private_ key that you created earlier.
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@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ A unique trigger token can be obtained when [adding a new trigger](#adding-a-new
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## Adding a new trigger
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You can add a new trigger by going to your project's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines** under **Triggers**. The **Add trigger** button will
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD** under **Triggers**. The **Add trigger** button will
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create a new token which you can then use to trigger a rerun of this
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particular project's pipeline.
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@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ From now on the trigger will be run as you.
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## Revoking a trigger
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You can revoke a trigger any time by going at your project's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines** under **Triggers** and hitting the **Revoke** button.
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD** under **Triggers** and hitting the **Revoke** button.
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The action is irreversible.
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## Triggering a pipeline
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@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ POST /projects/:id/trigger/pipeline
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The required parameters are the [trigger's `token`](#authentication-tokens)
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and the Git `ref` on which the trigger will be performed. Valid refs are the
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branch and the tag. The `:id` of a project can be found by
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[querying the API](../../api/projects.md) or by visiting the **Pipelines**
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[querying the API](../../api/projects.md) or by visiting the **CI/CD**
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settings page which provides self-explanatory examples.
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When a rerun of a pipeline is triggered, the information is exposed in GitLab's
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@ -165,10 +165,10 @@ making them available in the build environment. It's the recommended method to
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use for storing things like passwords, secret keys and credentials.
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Project-level secret variables can be added by going to your project's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines**, then finding the section called **Secret variables**.
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD**, then finding the section called **Secret variables**.
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Likewise, group-level secret variables can be added by going to your group's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines**, then finding the section called **Secret variables**.
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD**, then finding the section called **Secret variables**.
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Any variables of [subgroups] will be inherited recursively.
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Once you set them, they will be available for all subsequent pipelines. You can also
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@ -185,7 +185,7 @@ protected, it would only be securely passed to pipelines running on the
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protected variables.
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Protected variables can be added by going to your project's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines**, then finding the section called
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD**, then finding the section called
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**Secret variables**, and check *Protected*.
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Once you set them, they will be available for all subsequent pipelines.
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@ -253,7 +253,7 @@ only.
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[^1]: On public and internal projects, all users are able to perform this action.
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[^2]: Guest users can only view the confidential issues they created themselves
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[^3]: If **Public pipelines** is enabled in **Project Settings > Pipelines**
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[^3]: If **Public pipelines** is enabled in **Project Settings > CI/CD**
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[^4]: Not allowed for Guest, Reporter, Developer, Master, or Owner
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[^5]: Only if user is not external one.
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[^6]: Only if user is a member of the project.
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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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# Pipelines settings
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To reach the pipelines settings navigate to your project's
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**Settings ➔ Pipelines**.
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**Settings ➔ CI/CD**.
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The following settings can be configured per project.
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