## Variables When receiving a build from GitLab CI, the runner prepares the build environment. It starts by setting a list of **predefined variables** (Environment Variables) and a list of **user-defined variables** The variables can be overwritten. They take precedence over each other in this order: 1. Secure variables 1. YAML-defined variables 1. Predefined variables For example, if you define: 1. API_TOKEN=SECURE as Secure Variable 1. API_TOKEN=YAML as YAML-defined variable The API_TOKEN will take the Secure Variable value: `SECURE`. ### Predefined variables (Environment Variables) | Variable | Runner | Description | |-------------------------|-------------| | **CI** | 0.4 | Mark that build is executed in CI environment | | **GITLAB_CI** | all | Mark that build is executed in GitLab CI environment | | **CI_SERVER** | all | Mark that build is executed in CI environment | | **CI_SERVER_NAME** | all | CI server that is used to coordinate builds | | **CI_SERVER_VERSION** | all | Not yet defined | | **CI_SERVER_REVISION** | all | Not yet defined | | **CI_BUILD_REF** | all | The commit revision for which project is built | | **CI_BUILD_TAG** | 0.5 | The commit tag name. Present only when building tags. | | **CI_BUILD_NAME** | 0.5 | The name of the build as defined in `.gitlab-ci.yml` | | **CI_BUILD_STAGE** | 0.5 | The name of the stage as defined in `.gitlab-ci.yml` | | **CI_BUILD_REF_NAME** | all | The branch or tag name for which project is built | | **CI_BUILD_ID** | all | The unique id of the current build that GitLab CI uses internally | | **CI_BUILD_REPO** | all | The URL to clone the Git repository | | **CI_BUILD_TRIGGERED** | 0.5 | The flag to indicate that build was triggered | | **CI_PROJECT_ID** | all | The unique id of the current project that GitLab CI uses internally | | **CI_PROJECT_DIR** | all | The full path where the repository is cloned and where the build is ran | **Some of the variables are only available when using runner with at least defined version.** Example values: ```bash export CI_BUILD_ID="50" export CI_BUILD_REF="1ecfd275763eff1d6b4844ea3168962458c9f27a" export CI_BUILD_REF_NAME="master" export CI_BUILD_REPO="https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce.git" export CI_BUILD_TAG="1.0.0" export CI_BUILD_NAME="spec:other" export CI_BUILD_STAGE="test" export CI_BUILD_TRIGGERED="true" export CI_PROJECT_DIR="/builds/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce" export CI_PROJECT_ID="34" export CI_SERVER="yes" export CI_SERVER_NAME="GitLab CI" export CI_SERVER_REVISION="" export CI_SERVER_VERSION="" ``` ### YAML-defined variables **This feature requires GitLab Runner 0.5.0 or higher and GitLab CI 7.14 or higher ** GitLab CI allows you to add to `.gitlab-ci.yml` variables that are set in build environment. The variables are stored in repository and are meant to store non-sensitive project configuration, ie. RAILS_ENV or DATABASE_URL. ```yaml variables: DATABASE_URL: "postgres://postgres@postgres/my_database" ``` These variables can be later used in all executed commands and scripts. The YAML-defined variables are also set to all created service containers, thus allowing to fine tune them. More information about Docker integration can be found in [Using Docker Images](../docker/using_docker_images.md). ### User-defined variables (Secure Variables) **This feature requires GitLab Runner 0.4.0 or higher** GitLab CI allows you to define per-project **Secure Variables** that are set in build environment. The secure variables are stored out of the repository (the `.gitlab-ci.yml`). The variables are securely passed to GitLab Runner and are available in build environment. It's desired method to use them for storing passwords, secret keys or whatever you want. **The value of the variable can be shown in build log if explicitly asked to do so.** If your project is public or internal you can make the builds private. Secure Variables can added by going to `Project > Variables > Add Variable`. They will be available for all subsequent builds. ### Use variables The variables are set as environment variables in build environment and are accessible with normal methods that are used to access such variables. In most cases the **bash** is used to execute build script. To access variables (predefined and user-defined) in bash environment, prefix the variable name with `$`: ``` job_name: script: - echo $CI_BUILD_ID ``` You can also list all environment variables with `export` command, but be aware that this will also expose value of all **Secure Variables** in build log: ``` job_name: script: - export ```