- Split user and admin documentation - Use new location paths - Add new Continuous Integration guide for the Admin area - Link to new guide from the Admin area
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Introduction to build artifacts
Notes:
- Since GitLab 8.2 and GitLab Runner 0.7.0, build artifacts that are created by GitLab Runner are uploaded to GitLab and are downloadable as a single archive (
tar.gz
) using the GitLab UI.- Starting from GitLab 8.4 and GitLab Runner 1.0, the artifacts archive format changed to
ZIP
, and it is now possible to browse its contents, with the added ability of downloading the files separately.- The artifacts browser will be available only for new artifacts that are sent to GitLab using GitLab Runner version 1.0 and up. It will not be possible to browse old artifacts already uploaded to GitLab.
- This is the user documentation. For the administration guide see administration/build_artifacts.md.
Artifacts is a list of files and directories which are attached to a build after it completes successfully. This feature is enabled by default in all GitLab installations.
Defining artifacts in .gitlab-ci.yml
A simple example of using the artifacts definition in .gitlab-ci.yml
would be
the following:
pdf:
script: xelatex mycv.tex
artifacts:
paths:
- mycv.pdf
A job named pdf
calls the xelatex
command in order to build a pdf file from
the latex source file mycv.tex
. We then define the artifacts
paths which in
turn are defined with the paths
keyword. All paths to files and directories
are relative to the repository that was cloned during the build.
For more examples on artifacts, follow the artifacts reference in
.gitlab-ci.yml
documentation.
Browsing build artifacts
When GitLab receives an artifacts archive, an archive metadata file is also generated. This metadata file describes all the entries that are located in the artifacts archive itself. The metadata file is in a binary format, with additional GZIP compression.
GitLab does not extract the artifacts archive in order to save space, memory and disk I/O. It instead inspects the metadata file which contains all the relevant information. This is especially important when there is a lot of artifacts, or an archive is a very large file.
After a build finishes, if you visit the build's specific page, you can see that there are two buttons. One is for downloading the artifacts archive and the other for browsing its contents.
The archive browser shows the name and the actual file size of each file in the archive. If your artifacts contained directories, then you are also able to browse inside them.
Below you can see how browsing looks like. In this case we have browsed inside the archive and at this point there is one directory and one HTML file.
Downloading build artifacts
Note: GitLab does not extract the entire artifacts archive to send just a single file to the user. When clicking on a specific file, GitLab Workhorse extracts it from the archive and the download begins. This implementation saves space, memory and disk I/O.
If you need to download the whole archive, there are buttons in various places inside GitLab that make that possible.
-
While on the pipelines page, you can see the download icon for each build's artifacts archive in the right corner:
-
While on the builds page, you can see the download icon for each build's artifacts archive in the right corner:
-
While inside a specific build, you are presented with a download button along with the one that browses the archive:
-
And finally, when browsing an archive you can see the download button at the top right corner: