381 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
381 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Verify
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group: Runner
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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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comments: false
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type: index
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---
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# Services
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The `services` keyword defines a Docker image that runs during a `job`
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linked to the Docker image that the image keyword defines. This allows
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you to access the service image during build time.
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The service image can run any application, but the most common use
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case is to run a database container, for example:
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- [MySQL](mysql.md)
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- [PostgreSQL](postgres.md)
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- [Redis](redis.md)
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- [GitLab](gitlab.md) as an example for a microservice offering a JSON API
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It's easier and faster to use an existing image and run it as an additional container
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than to install `mysql`, for example, every time the project is built.
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You're not limited to only database services. You can add as many
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services you need to `.gitlab-ci.yml` or manually modify `config.toml`.
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Any image found at [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/) or your private Container Registry can be
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used as a service.
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Services inherit the same DNS servers, search domains, and additional hosts as
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the CI container itself.
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## How services are linked to the job
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To better understand how container linking works, read
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[Linking containers together](https://docs.docker.com/engine/userguide/networking/default_network/dockerlinks/).
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If you add `mysql` as service to your application, the image is
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used to create a container that's linked to the job container.
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The service container for MySQL is accessible under the hostname `mysql`.
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To access your database service, connect to the host named `mysql` instead of a
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socket or `localhost`. Read more in [accessing the services](#accessing-the-services).
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## How the health check of services works
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Services are designed to provide additional features which are **network accessible**.
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They may be a database like MySQL, or Redis, and even `docker:stable-dind` which
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allows you to use Docker-in-Docker. It can be practically anything that's
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required for the CI/CD job to proceed, and is accessed by network.
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To make sure this works, the runner:
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1. Checks which ports are exposed from the container by default.
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1. Starts a special container that waits for these ports to be accessible.
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If the second stage of the check fails, it prints the warning: `*** WARNING: Service XYZ probably didn't start properly`.
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This issue can occur because:
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- There is no opened port in the service.
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- The service was not started properly before the timeout, and the port is not
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responding.
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In most cases it affects the job, but there may be situations when the job
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still succeeds even if that warning was printed. For example:
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- The service was started shortly after the warning was raised, and the job is
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not using the linked service from the beginning. In that case, when the
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job needed to access the service, it may have been already there waiting for
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connections.
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- The service container is not providing any networking service, but it's doing
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something with the job's directory (all services have the job directory mounted
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as a volume under `/builds`). In that case, the service does its job, and
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because the job is not trying to connect to it, it does not fail.
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## What services are not for
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As mentioned before, this feature is designed to provide **network accessible**
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services. A database is the simplest example of such a service.
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The services feature is not designed to, and does not, add any software from the
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defined `services` image(s) to the job's container.
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For example, if you have the following `services` defined in your job, the `php`,
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`node` or `go` commands are **not** available for your script, and the job fails:
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```yaml
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job:
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services:
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- php:7
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- node:latest
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- golang:1.10
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image: alpine:3.7
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script:
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- php -v
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- node -v
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- go version
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```
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If you need to have `php`, `node` and `go` available for your script, you should
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either:
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- Choose an existing Docker image that contains all required tools.
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- Create your own Docker image, with all the required tools included,
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and use that in your job.
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## Define `services` in the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file
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It's also possible to define different images and services per job:
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```yaml
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default:
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before_script:
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- bundle install
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test:2.6:
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image: ruby:2.6
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services:
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- postgres:11.7
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script:
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- bundle exec rake spec
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test:2.7:
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image: ruby:2.7
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services:
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- postgres:12.2
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script:
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- bundle exec rake spec
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```
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Or you can pass some [extended configuration options](../docker/using_docker_images.md#extended-docker-configuration-options)
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for `image` and `services`:
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```yaml
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default:
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image:
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name: ruby:2.6
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entrypoint: ["/bin/bash"]
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services:
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- name: my-postgres:11.7
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alias: db-postgres
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entrypoint: ["/usr/local/bin/db-postgres"]
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command: ["start"]
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before_script:
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- bundle install
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test:
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script:
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- bundle exec rake spec
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```
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## Accessing the services
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Let's say that you need a Wordpress instance to test some API integration with
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your application. You can then use for example the
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[`tutum/wordpress`](https://hub.docker.com/r/tutum/wordpress/) image in your
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`.gitlab-ci.yml` file:
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```yaml
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services:
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- tutum/wordpress:latest
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```
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If you don't [specify a service alias](#available-settings-for-services),
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when the job runs, `tutum/wordpress` is started. You have
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access to it from your build container under two hostnames:
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- `tutum-wordpress`
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- `tutum__wordpress`
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Hostnames with underscores are not RFC valid and may cause problems in third-party
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applications.
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The default aliases for the service's hostname are created from its image name
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following these rules:
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- Everything after the colon (`:`) is stripped.
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- Slash (`/`) is replaced with double underscores (`__`) and the primary alias
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is created.
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- Slash (`/`) is replaced with a single dash (`-`) and the secondary alias is
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created (requires GitLab Runner v1.1.0 or higher).
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To override the default behavior, you can
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[specify a service alias](#available-settings-for-services).
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## Passing CI/CD variables to services
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You can also pass custom CI/CD [variables](../variables/index.md)
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to fine tune your Docker `images` and `services` directly in the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
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For more information, read about [`.gitlab-ci.yml` defined variables](../variables/index.md#create-a-custom-cicd-variable-in-the-gitlab-ciyml-file).
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```yaml
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# The following variables are automatically passed down to the Postgres container
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# as well as the Ruby container and available within each.
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variables:
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HTTPS_PROXY: "https://10.1.1.1:8090"
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HTTP_PROXY: "https://10.1.1.1:8090"
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POSTGRES_DB: "my_custom_db"
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POSTGRES_USER: "postgres"
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POSTGRES_PASSWORD: "example"
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PGDATA: "/var/lib/postgresql/data"
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POSTGRES_INITDB_ARGS: "--encoding=UTF8 --data-checksums"
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services:
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- name: postgres:11.7
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alias: db
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entrypoint: ["docker-entrypoint.sh"]
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command: ["postgres"]
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image:
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name: ruby:2.6
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entrypoint: ["/bin/bash"]
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before_script:
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- bundle install
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test:
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script:
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- bundle exec rake spec
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```
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## Available settings for `services`
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> Introduced in GitLab and GitLab Runner 9.4.
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| Setting | Required | GitLab version | Description |
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|------------|----------|----------------| ----------- |
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| `name` | yes, when used with any other option | 9.4 | Full name of the image to use. If the full image name includes a registry hostname, use the `alias` option to define a shorter service access name. For more information, see [Accessing the services](#accessing-the-services). |
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| `entrypoint` | no | 9.4 |Command or script to execute as the container's entrypoint. It's translated to Docker's `--entrypoint` option while creating the container. The syntax is similar to [`Dockerfile`'s `ENTRYPOINT`](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#entrypoint) directive, where each shell token is a separate string in the array. |
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| `command` | no | 9.4 |Command or script that should be used as the container's command. It's translated to arguments passed to Docker after the image's name. The syntax is similar to [`Dockerfile`'s `CMD`](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd) directive, where each shell token is a separate string in the array. |
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| `alias` (1) | no | 9.4 |Additional alias that can be used to access the service from the job's container. Read [Accessing the services](#accessing-the-services) for more information. |
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(1) Alias support for the Kubernetes executor was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/-/issues/2229) in GitLab Runner 12.8, and is only available for Kubernetes version 1.7 or later.
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## Starting multiple services from the same image
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> Introduced in GitLab and GitLab Runner 9.4. Read more about the [extended configuration options](../docker/using_docker_images.md#extended-docker-configuration-options).
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Before the new extended Docker configuration options, the following configuration
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would not work properly:
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```yaml
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services:
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- mysql:latest
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- mysql:latest
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```
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The runner would start two containers, each that uses the `mysql:latest` image.
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However, both of them would be added to the job's container with the `mysql` alias, based on
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the [default hostname naming](#accessing-the-services). This would end with one
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of the services not being accessible.
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After the new extended Docker configuration options, the above example would
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look like:
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```yaml
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services:
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- name: mysql:latest
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alias: mysql-1
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- name: mysql:latest
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alias: mysql-2
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```
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The runner still starts two containers using the `mysql:latest` image,
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however now each of them are also accessible with the alias configured
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in `.gitlab-ci.yml` file.
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## Setting a command for the service
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> Introduced in GitLab and GitLab Runner 9.4. Read more about the [extended configuration options](../docker/using_docker_images.md#extended-docker-configuration-options).
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Let's assume you have a `super/sql:latest` image with some SQL database
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in it. You would like to use it as a service for your job. Let's also
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assume that this image does not start the database process while starting
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the container. The user needs to manually use `/usr/bin/super-sql run` as
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a command to start the database.
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Before the new extended Docker configuration options, you would need to:
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- Create your own image based on the `super/sql:latest` image.
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- Add the default command.
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- Use the image in the job's configuration:
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```dockerfile
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# my-super-sql:latest image's Dockerfile
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FROM super/sql:latest
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CMD ["/usr/bin/super-sql", "run"]
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```
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```yaml
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# .gitlab-ci.yml
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services:
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- my-super-sql:latest
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```
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After the new extended Docker configuration options, you can
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set a `command` in the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file instead:
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```yaml
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# .gitlab-ci.yml
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services:
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- name: super/sql:latest
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command: ["/usr/bin/super-sql", "run"]
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```
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The syntax of `command` is similar to [Dockerfile's `CMD`](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd).
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## How Docker integration works
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Below is a high level overview of the steps performed by Docker during job
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time.
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1. Create any service container: `mysql`, `postgresql`, `mongodb`, `redis`.
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1. Create a cache container to store all volumes as defined in `config.toml` and
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`Dockerfile` of build image (`ruby:2.6` as in above example).
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1. Create a build container and link any service container to build container.
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1. Start the build container, and send a job script to the container.
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1. Run the job script.
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1. Checkout code in: `/builds/group-name/project-name/`.
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1. Run any step defined in `.gitlab-ci.yml`.
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1. Check the exit status of build script.
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1. Remove the build container and all created service containers.
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## Debug a job locally
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The following commands are run without root privileges. You should be
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able to run Docker with your regular user account.
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First start with creating a file named `build_script`:
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```shell
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cat <<EOF > build_script
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git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner.git /builds/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner
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cd /builds/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner
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make
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EOF
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```
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Here we use as an example the GitLab Runner repository which contains a
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Makefile, so running `make` executes the commands defined in the Makefile.
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Instead of `make`, you could run the command which is specific to your project.
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Then create some service containers:
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```shell
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docker run -d --name service-mysql mysql:latest
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docker run -d --name service-postgres postgres:latest
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```
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This creates two service containers, named `service-mysql` and
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`service-postgres` which use the latest MySQL and PostgreSQL images
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respectively. They both run in the background (`-d`).
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Finally, create a build container by executing the `build_script` file we
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created earlier:
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```shell
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docker run --name build -i --link=service-mysql:mysql --link=service-postgres:postgres ruby:2.6 /bin/bash < build_script
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```
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The above command creates a container named `build` that's spawned from
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the `ruby:2.6` image and has two services linked to it. The `build_script` is
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piped using `stdin` to the bash interpreter which in turn executes the
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`build_script` in the `build` container.
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When you finish testing and no longer need the containers, you can remove them
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with:
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```shell
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docker rm -f -v build service-mysql service-postgres
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```
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This forcefully (`-f`) removes the `build` container, the two service
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containers, and all volumes (`-v`) that were created with the container
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creation.
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