gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/development/cicd/templates.md

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Development guide for GitLab CI/CD templates

This document explains how to develop GitLab CI/CD templates.

Place the template file in a relevant directory

All template files reside in the lib/gitlab/ci/templates directory, and are categorized by the following sub-directories:

Sub-directory Content Selectable in UI
/AWS/* Cloud Deployment (AWS) related jobs No
/Jobs/* Auto DevOps related jobs No
/Pages/* Static site generators for GitLab Pages (for example Jekyll) Yes
/Security/* Security related jobs Yes
/Terraform/* Infrastructure as Code related templates No
/Verify/* Verify/testing related jobs Yes
/Workflows/* Common uses of the workflow: keyword No
/* (root) General templates Yes

Criteria

The file must follow the .gitlab-ci.yml syntax. Verify it's valid by pasting it into the CI lint tool at https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/ci/lint.

Also, all templates must be named with the *.gitlab-ci.yml suffix.

Backward compatibility

A template might be dynamically included with the include:template: keyword. If you make a change to an existing template, you must make sure that it won't break CI/CD in existing projects.

For example, changing a job name in a template could break pipelines in an existing project. Let's say there is a template named Performance.gitlab-ci.yml with the following content:

performance:
  image: registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/verify-tools/performance:v0.1.0
  script: ./performance-test $TARGET_URL

and users include this template with passing an argument to the performance job. This can be done by specifying the environment variable TARGET_URL in their .gitlab-ci.yml:

include:
  template: Performance.gitlab-ci.yml

performance:
  variables:
    TARGET_URL: https://awesome-app.com

If the job name performance in the template is renamed to browser-performance, user's .gitlab-ci.yml will immediately cause a lint error because there are no such jobs named performance in the included template anymore. Therefore, users have to fix their .gitlab-ci.yml that could annoy their workflow.

Please read versioning section for introducing breaking change safely.

Versioning

Versioning allows you to introduce a new template without modifying the existing one. This process is useful when we need to introduce a breaking change, but don't want to affect the existing projects that depends on the current template.

Stable version

A stable CI/CD template is a template that only introduces breaking changes in major release milestones. Name the stable version of a template as <template-name>.gitlab-ci.yml, for example Jobs/Deploy.gitlab-ci.yml.

You can make a new stable template by copying the latest template available in a major milestone release of GitLab like 13.0. All breaking changes must be announced in a blog post before the official release, for example GitLab.com is moving to 13.0, with narrow breaking changes

You can change a stable template version in a minor GitLab release like 13.1 if:

Latest version

Templates marked as latest can be updated in any release, even with breaking changes. Add .latest to the template name if it's considered the latest version, for example Jobs/Deploy.latest.gitlab-ci.yml.

When you introduce a breaking change, you must test and document the upgrade path. In general, we should not promote the latest template as the best option, as it could surprise users with unexpected problems.

If the latest template does not exist yet, you can copy the stable template.

How to include an older stable template

Users may want to use an older stable template that is not bundled in the current GitLab package. For example, the stable templates in GitLab v13.0 and GitLab v14.0 could be so different that a user will want to continue using the v13.0 template even after upgrading to GitLab 14.0.

You can add a note in the template or in documentation explaining how to use include:remote to include older template versions. If other templates are included with include: template, they can be combined with the include: remote:

# To use the v13 stable template, which is not included in v14, fetch the specific
# template from the remote template repository with the `include:remote:` keyword.
# If you fetch from the GitLab canonical project, use the following URL format:
# https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/raw/<version>/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/<template-name>
include:
  - template: Auto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml
  - remote: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/raw/v13.0.1-ee/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Jobs/Deploy.gitlab-ci.yml

Further reading

There is an open issue about introducing versioning concepts in GitLab CI Templates. You can check that issue to follow the progress.

Testing

Each CI/CD template must be tested in order to make sure that it's safe to be published.

Manual QA

It's always good practice to test the template in a minimal demo project. To do so, please follow the following steps:

  1. Create a public sample project on https://gitlab.com.
  2. Add a .gitlab-ci.yml to the project with the proposed template.
  3. Run pipelines and make sure that everything runs properly, in all possible cases (merge request pipelines, schedules, and so on).
  4. Link to the project in the description of the merge request that is adding a new template.

This is useful information for reviewers to make sure the template is safe to be merged.

Make sure the new template can be selected in UI

Templates located under some directories are also selectable in the New file UI. When you add a template into one of those directories, make sure that it correctly appears in the dropdown:

CI/CD template selection

Write an RSpec test

You should write an RSpec test to make sure that pipeline jobs will be generated correctly:

  1. Add a test file at spec/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/<template-category>/<template-name>_spec.rb
  2. Test that pipeline jobs are properly created via Ci::CreatePipelineService.

Verify breaking changes

When you introduce a breaking change to a latest template, you must:

  1. Test the upgrade path from the stable template.
  2. Verify what kind of errors users will encounter.
  3. Document it as a troubleshooting guide.

This information will be important for users when a stable template is updated in a major version GitLab release.

Security

A template could contain malicious code. For example, a template that contains the export shell command in a job might accidentally expose project secret variables in a job log. If you're unsure if it's secure or not, you need to ask security experts for cross-validation.