103 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
103 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Verify
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group: Continuous Integration
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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
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type: reference
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---
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# Using Git submodules with GitLab CI
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> **Notes:**
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>
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> - GitLab 8.12 introduced a new [CI job permissions model](../user/project/new_ci_build_permissions_model.md) and you
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> are encouraged to upgrade your GitLab instance if you haven't done already.
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> If you are **not** using GitLab 8.12 or higher, you would need to work your way
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> around submodules in order to access the sources of e.g., `gitlab.com/group/project`
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> with the use of [SSH keys](ssh_keys/README.md).
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> - With GitLab 8.12 onward, your permissions are used to evaluate what a CI job
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> can access. More information about how this system works can be found in the
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> [Jobs permissions model](../user/permissions.md#job-permissions).
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> - The HTTP(S) Git protocol [must be enabled](../user/admin_area/settings/visibility_and_access_controls.md#enabled-git-access-protocols) in your GitLab instance.
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## Configuring the `.gitmodules` file
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If dealing with [Git submodules](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Submodules), your project probably has a file
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named `.gitmodules`.
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Let's consider the following example:
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1. Your project is located at `https://gitlab.com/secret-group/my-project`.
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1. To checkout your sources you usually use an SSH address like
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`git@gitlab.com:secret-group/my-project.git`.
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1. Your project depends on `https://gitlab.com/group/project`, which you want
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to include as a submodule.
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If you are using GitLab 8.12+ and your submodule is on the same GitLab server,
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you must update your `.gitmodules` file to use **relative URLs**.
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Since Git allows the usage of relative URLs for your `.gitmodules` configuration,
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this easily allows you to use HTTP(S) for cloning all your CI jobs and SSH
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for all your local checkouts. The `.gitmodules` would look like:
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```ini
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[submodule "project"]
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path = project
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url = ../../group/project.git
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```
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The above configuration instructs Git to automatically deduce the URL that
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should be used when cloning sources. Whether you use HTTP(S) or SSH, Git uses
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that same channel and it makes all your CI jobs use HTTP(S).
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GitLab CI/CD only uses HTTP(S) for cloning your sources, and all your local
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clones continue using SSH.
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For all other submodules not located on the same GitLab server, use the full
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HTTP(S) protocol URL:
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```ini
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[submodule "project-x"]
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path = project-x
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url = https://gitserver.com/group/project-x.git
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```
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Once `.gitmodules` is correctly configured, you can move on to
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[configuring your `.gitlab-ci.yml`](#using-git-submodules-in-your-ci-jobs).
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## Using Git submodules in your CI jobs
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There are a few steps you need to take in order to make submodules work
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correctly with your CI jobs:
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1. First, make sure you have used [relative URLs](#configuring-the-gitmodules-file)
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for the submodules located in the same GitLab server.
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1. Next, if you are using `gitlab-runner` v1.10+, you can set the
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`GIT_SUBMODULE_STRATEGY` variable to either `normal` or `recursive` to tell
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the runner to fetch your submodules before the job:
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```yaml
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variables:
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GIT_SUBMODULE_STRATEGY: recursive
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```
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See the [GitLab Runner documentation](runners/README.md#git-submodule-strategy)
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for more details about `GIT_SUBMODULE_STRATEGY`.
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1. If you are using an older version of `gitlab-runner`, then use
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`git submodule sync/update` in `before_script`:
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```yaml
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before_script:
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- git submodule sync --recursive
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- git submodule update --init --recursive
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```
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`--recursive` should be used in either both or none (`sync/update`) depending on
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whether you have recursive submodules.
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The rationale to set the `sync` and `update` in `before_script` is because of
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the way Git submodules work. On a fresh runner workspace, Git sets the
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submodule URL including the token in `.git/config`
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(or `.git/modules/<submodule>/config`) based on `.gitmodules` and the current
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remote URL. On subsequent jobs on the same runner, `.git/config` is cached
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and already contains a full URL for the submodule, corresponding to the previous
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job, and to **a token from a previous job**. `sync` allows to force updating
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the full URL.
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