- Parent-child pipelines
- Multi-project pipelines
-
Trigger a downstream pipeline from a job in the
.gitlab-ci.yml
file - Trigger a multi-project pipeline by using the API
- View a downstream pipeline
- Fetch artifacts from an upstream pipeline
- Pass CI/CD variables to a downstream pipeline
- Downstream pipelines for deployments
Downstream pipelines
A downstream pipeline is any GitLab CI/CD pipeline triggered by another pipeline. Downstream pipelines run independently and concurrently to the upstream pipeline that triggered them.
- A parent-child pipeline is a downstream pipeline triggered in the same project as the first pipeline.
- A multi-project pipeline is a downstream pipeline triggered in a different project than the first pipeline.
You can sometimes use parent-child pipelines and multi-project pipelines for similar purposes, but there are key differences.
Parent-child pipelines
A parent pipeline is a pipeline that triggers a downstream pipeline in the same project. The downstream pipeline is called a child pipeline.
Child pipelines:
- Run under the same project, ref, and commit SHA as the parent pipeline.
- Do not directly affect the overall status of the ref the pipeline runs against. For example,
if a pipeline fails for the main branch, it’s common to say that “main is broken”.
The status of child pipelines only affects the status of the ref if the child
pipeline is triggered with
strategy:depend
. - Are automatically canceled if the pipeline is configured with
interruptible
when a new pipeline is created for the same ref. - Are not displayed in the project’s pipeline list. You can only view child pipelines on their parent pipeline’s details page.
Nested child pipelines
Parent and child pipelines have a maximum depth of two levels of child pipelines.
A parent pipeline can trigger many child pipelines, and these child pipelines can trigger their own child pipelines. You cannot trigger another level of child pipelines.
For an overview, see Nested Dynamic Pipelines.
Multi-project pipelines
A pipeline in one project can trigger downstream pipelines in another project, called multi-project pipelines. The user triggering the upstream pipeline must be able to start pipelines in the downstream project, otherwise the downstream pipeline fails to start.
Multi-project pipelines:
- Are triggered from another project’s pipeline, but the upstream (triggering) pipeline does not have much control over the downstream (triggered) pipeline. However, it can choose the ref of the downstream pipeline, and pass CI/CD variables to it.
- Affect the overall status of the ref of the project it runs in, but does not
affect the status of the triggering pipeline’s ref, unless it was triggered with
strategy:depend
. - Are not automatically canceled in the downstream project when using
interruptible
if a new pipeline runs for the same ref in the upstream pipeline. They can be automatically canceled if a new pipeline is triggered for the same ref on the downstream project. - Are visible in the downstream project’s pipeline list.
- Are independent, so there are no nesting limits.
If you use a public project to trigger downstream pipelines in a private project, make sure there are no confidentiality problems. The upstream project’s pipelines page always displays:
- The name of the downstream project.
- The status of the pipeline.
Trigger a downstream pipeline from a job in the .gitlab-ci.yml
file
Use the trigger
keyword in your .gitlab-ci.yml
file
to create a job that triggers a downstream pipeline. This job is called a trigger job.
For example:
trigger_job:
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/child-pipeline.yml
trigger_job:
trigger:
project: project-group/my-downstream-project
After the trigger job starts, the initial status of the job is pending
while GitLab
attempts to create the downstream pipeline. The trigger job shows passed
if the
downstream pipeline is created successfully, otherwise it shows failed
. Alternatively,
you can set the trigger job to show the downstream pipeline’s status
instead.
Use rules
to control downstream pipeline jobs
Use CI/CD variables or the rules
keyword to
control job behavior in downstream pipelines.
When you trigger a downstream pipeline with the trigger
keyword,
the value of the $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE
predefined variable
for all jobs is:
-
pipeline
for multi-project pipelines. -
parent_pipeline
for parent-child pipelines.
For example, to control jobs in multi-project pipelines in a project that also runs merge request pipelines:
job1:
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "pipeline"
script: echo "This job runs in multi-project pipelines only"
job2:
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
script: echo "This job runs in merge request pipelines only"
job3:
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "pipeline"
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
script: echo "This job runs in both multi-project and merge request pipelines"
Use a child pipeline configuration file in a different project
You can use include:project
in a trigger job
to trigger child pipelines with a configuration file in a different project:
microservice_a:
trigger:
include:
- project: 'my-group/my-pipeline-library'
ref: 'main'
file: '/path/to/child-pipeline.yml'
Combine multiple child pipeline configuration files
You can include up to three configuration files when defining a child pipeline. The child pipeline’s configuration is composed of all configuration files merged together:
microservice_a:
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/microservice_a.yml
- template: Jobs/SAST.gitlab-ci.yml
- project: 'my-group/my-pipeline-library'
ref: 'main'
file: '/path/to/child-pipeline.yml'
Dynamic child pipelines
You can trigger a child pipeline from a YAML file generated in a job, instead of a static file saved in your project. This technique can be very powerful for generating pipelines targeting content that changed or to build a matrix of targets and architectures.
The artifact containing the generated YAML file must not be larger than 5 MB.
For an overview, see Create child pipelines using dynamically generated configurations.
For an example project that generates a dynamic child pipeline, see
Dynamic Child Pipelines with Jsonnet.
This project shows how to use a data templating language to generate your .gitlab-ci.yml
at runtime.
You can use a similar process for other templating languages like
Dhall or ytt.
Trigger a dynamic child pipeline
To trigger a child pipeline from a dynamically generated configuration file:
-
Generate the configuration file in a job and save it as an artifact:
generate-config: stage: build script: generate-ci-config > generated-config.yml artifacts: paths: - generated-config.yml
-
Configure the trigger job to run after the job that generated the configuration file. Set
include: artifact
to the generated artifact, and setinclude: job
to the job that created the artifact:child-pipeline: stage: test trigger: include: - artifact: generated-config.yml job: generate-config
In this example, GitLab retrieves generated-config.yml
and triggers a child pipeline
with the CI/CD configuration in that file.
The artifact path is parsed by GitLab, not the runner, so the path must match the
syntax for the OS running GitLab. If GitLab is running on Linux but using a Windows
runner for testing, the path separator for the trigger job is /
. Other CI/CD
configuration for jobs that use the Windows runner, like scripts, use \
.
You cannot use CI/CD variables in an include
section in a dynamic child pipeline’s configuration.
Issue 378717 proposes fixing
this issue.
Run child pipelines with merge request pipelines
Pipelines, including child pipelines, run as branch pipelines by default when not using
rules
or workflow:rules
.
To configure child pipelines to run when triggered from a merge request (parent) pipeline, use rules
or workflow:rules
.
For example, using rules
:
-
Set the parent pipeline’s trigger job to run on merge requests:
trigger-child-pipeline-job: trigger: include: path/to/child-pipeline-configuration.yml rules: - if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
-
Use
rules
to configure the child pipeline jobs to run when triggered by the parent pipeline:job1: script: echo "This child pipeline job runs any time the parent pipeline triggers it." rules: - if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "parent_pipeline" job2: script: echo "This child pipeline job runs only when the parent pipeline is a merge request pipeline" rules: - if: $CI_MERGE_REQUEST_ID
In child pipelines, $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE
always has a value of parent_pipeline
, so:
- You can use
if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "parent_pipeline"
to ensure child pipeline jobs always run. - You can’t use
if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
to configure child pipeline jobs to run for merge request pipelines. Instead, useif: $CI_MERGE_REQUEST_ID
to set child pipeline jobs to run only when the parent pipeline is a merge request pipeline. The parent pipeline’sCI_MERGE_REQUEST_*
predefined variables are passed to the child pipeline jobs.
Specify a branch for multi-project pipelines
You can specify the branch to use when triggering a multi-project pipeline. GitLab uses the commit on the head of the branch to create the downstream pipeline. For example:
staging:
stage: deploy
trigger:
project: my/deployment
branch: stable-11-2
Use:
- The
project
keyword to specify the full path to the downstream project. In GitLab 15.3 and later, you can use variable expansion. - The
branch
keyword to specify the name of a branch or tag in the project specified byproject
. You can use variable expansion.
Trigger a multi-project pipeline by using the API
You can use the CI/CD job token (CI_JOB_TOKEN
) with the
pipeline trigger API endpoint
to trigger multi-project pipelines from inside a CI/CD job. GitLab sets pipelines triggered
with a job token as downstream pipelines of the pipeline that contains the job that
made the API call.
For example:
trigger_pipeline:
stage: deploy
script:
- curl --request POST --form "token=$CI_JOB_TOKEN" --form ref=main "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/9/trigger/pipeline"
rules:
- if: $CI_COMMIT_TAG
environment: production
View a downstream pipeline
In the pipeline details page, downstream pipelines display as a list of cards on the right of the graph. From this view, you can:
- Select a trigger job to see the triggered downstream pipeline’s jobs.
- Select Expand jobs on a pipeline card to expand the view with the downstream pipeline’s jobs. You can view one downstream pipeline at a time.
- Hover over a pipeline card to have the job that triggered the downstream pipeline highlighted.
Retry failed and canceled jobs in a downstream pipeline
- Retry from graph view introduced in GitLab 15.0 with a flag named
downstream_retry_action
. Disabled by default. - Retry from graph view generally available and feature flag removed in GitLab 15.1.
To retry failed and canceled jobs, select Retry ():
- From the downstream pipeline’s details page.
- On the pipeline’s card in the pipeline graph view.
Recreate a downstream pipeline
- Retry trigger job from graph view introduced in GitLab 15.10 with a flag named
ci_recreate_downstream_pipeline
. Disabled by default. -
Generally available in GitLab 15.11. Feature flag
ci_recreate_downstream_pipeline
removed.
You can recreate a downstream pipeline by retrying its corresponding trigger job. The newly created downstream pipeline replaces the current downstream pipeline in the pipeline graph.
To recreate a downstream pipeline:
- Select Run again () on the trigger job’s card in the pipeline graph view.
Cancel a downstream pipeline
- Retry from graph view introduced in GitLab 15.0 with a flag named
downstream_retry_action
. Disabled by default. - Retry from graph view generally available and feature flag removed in GitLab 15.1.
To cancel a downstream pipeline that is still running, select Cancel ():
- From the downstream pipeline’s details page.
- On the pipeline’s card in the pipeline graph view.
Auto-cancel the parent pipeline from a downstream pipeline
You can configure a child pipeline to auto-cancel as soon as one of its jobs fail.
The parent pipeline only auto-cancels when a job in the child pipeline fails if:
- The parent pipeline is also set up to auto-cancel on job failure.
- The trigger job is configured with
strategy: depend
.
For example:
-
Content of
.gitlab-ci.yml
:workflow: auto_cancel: on_job_failure: all trigger_job: trigger: include: child-pipeline.yml strategy: depend job3: script: - sleep 120
-
Content of
child-pipeline.yml
# Contents of child-pipeline.yml workflow: auto_cancel: on_job_failure: all job1: script: sleep 60 job2: script: - sleep 30 - exit 1
In this example:
- The parent pipeline triggers the child pipeline and
job3
at the same time -
job2
from the child pipeline fails and the child pipeline is canceled, stoppingjob1
as well - The child pipeline has been cancelled so the parent pipeline is auto-canceled
Mirror the status of a downstream pipeline in the trigger job
You can mirror the status of the downstream pipeline in the trigger job
by using strategy: depend
:
trigger_job:
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/child-pipeline.yml
strategy: depend
trigger_job:
trigger:
project: my/project
strategy: depend
View multi-project pipelines in pipeline graphs
- Moved from GitLab Premium to GitLab Free in 16.8.
After you trigger a multi-project pipeline, the downstream pipeline displays to the right of the pipeline graph.
In pipeline mini graphs, the downstream pipeline displays to the right of the mini graph.
Fetch artifacts from an upstream pipeline
Use needs:pipeline:job
to fetch artifacts from an
upstream pipeline:
-
In the upstream pipeline, save the artifacts in a job with the
artifacts
keyword, then trigger the downstream pipeline with a trigger job:build_artifacts: stage: build script: - echo "This is a test artifact!" >> artifact.txt artifacts: paths: - artifact.txt deploy: stage: deploy trigger: include: - local: path/to/child-pipeline.yml variables: PARENT_PIPELINE_ID: $CI_PIPELINE_ID
-
Use
needs:pipeline:job
in a job in the downstream pipeline to fetch the artifacts.test: stage: test script: - cat artifact.txt needs: - pipeline: $PARENT_PIPELINE_ID job: build_artifacts
Set
job
to the job in the upstream pipeline that created the artifacts.
Use needs:project
to fetch artifacts from an
upstream pipeline:
- In GitLab 15.9 and later, add the downstream project to the job token scope allowlist of the upstream project.
-
In the upstream pipeline, save the artifacts in a job with the
artifacts
keyword, then trigger the downstream pipeline with a trigger job:build_artifacts: stage: build script: - echo "This is a test artifact!" >> artifact.txt artifacts: paths: - artifact.txt deploy: stage: deploy trigger: my/downstream_project # Path to the project to trigger a pipeline in
-
Use
needs:project
in a job in the downstream pipeline to fetch the artifacts.test: stage: test script: - cat artifact.txt needs: - project: my/upstream_project job: build_artifacts ref: main artifacts: true
Set:
-
job
to the job in the upstream pipeline that created the artifacts. -
ref
to the branch. -
artifacts
totrue
.
-
Fetch artifacts from an upstream merge request pipeline
When you use needs:project
to pass artifacts to a downstream pipeline,
the ref
value is usually a branch name, like main
or development
.
For merge request pipelines, the ref
value is in the form of refs/merge-requests/<id>/head
,
where id
is the merge request ID. You can retrieve this ref with the CI_MERGE_REQUEST_REF_PATH
CI/CD variable. Do not use a branch name as the ref
with merge request pipelines,
because the downstream pipeline attempts to fetch artifacts from the latest branch pipeline.
To fetch the artifacts from the upstream merge request
pipeline instead of the branch
pipeline,
pass CI_MERGE_REQUEST_REF_PATH
to the downstream pipeline using variable inheritance:
- In GitLab 15.9 and later, add the downstream project to the job token scope allowlist of the upstream project.
- In a job in the upstream pipeline, save the artifacts using the
artifacts
keyword. -
In the job that triggers the downstream pipeline, pass the
$CI_MERGE_REQUEST_REF_PATH
variable:build_artifacts: rules: - if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == 'merge_request_event' stage: build script: - echo "This is a test artifact!" >> artifact.txt artifacts: paths: - artifact.txt upstream_job: rules: - if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == 'merge_request_event' variables: UPSTREAM_REF: $CI_MERGE_REQUEST_REF_PATH trigger: project: my/downstream_project branch: my-branch
-
In a job in the downstream pipeline, fetch the artifacts from the upstream pipeline by using
needs:project
and the passed variable as theref
:test: stage: test script: - cat artifact.txt needs: - project: my/upstream_project job: build_artifacts ref: $UPSTREAM_REF artifacts: true
You can use this method to fetch artifacts from upstream merge request pipeline, but not from merge results pipelines.
Pass CI/CD variables to a downstream pipeline
You can pass CI/CD variables to a downstream pipeline with a few different methods, based on where the variable is created or defined.
Pass YAML-defined CI/CD variables
You can use the variables
keyword to pass CI/CD variables to a downstream pipeline.
These variables are “trigger variables” for variable precedence.
For example:
variables:
VERSION: "1.0.0"
staging:
variables:
ENVIRONMENT: staging
stage: deploy
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/child-pipeline.yml
variables:
VERSION: "1.0.0"
staging:
variables:
ENVIRONMENT: staging
stage: deploy
trigger: my-group/my-deployment-project
The ENVIRONMENT
variable is available in every job defined in the downstream pipeline.
The VERSION
global variable is also available in the downstream pipeline, because
all jobs in a pipeline, including trigger jobs, inherit global variables
.
Prevent global variables from being passed
You can stop global CI/CD variables from reaching the downstream pipeline with
inherit:variables:false
.
For example:
variables:
GLOBAL_VAR: value
trigger-job:
inherit:
variables: false
variables:
JOB_VAR: value
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/child-pipeline.yml
variables:
GLOBAL_VAR: value
trigger-job:
inherit:
variables: false
variables:
JOB_VAR: value
trigger: my-group/my-project
The GLOBAL_VAR
variable is not available in the triggered pipeline, but JOB_VAR
is available.
Pass a predefined variable
To pass information about the upstream pipeline using predefined CI/CD variables use interpolation. Save the predefined variable as a new job variable in the trigger job, which is passed to the downstream pipeline. For example:
trigger-job:
variables:
PARENT_BRANCH: $CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME
trigger:
include:
- local: path/to/child-pipeline.yml
trigger-job:
variables:
UPSTREAM_BRANCH: $CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME
trigger: my-group/my-project
The UPSTREAM_BRANCH
variable, which contains the value of the upstream pipeline’s $CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME
predefined CI/CD variable, is available in the downstream pipeline.
Do not use this method to pass masked variables to a multi-project pipeline. The CI/CD masking configuration is not passed to the downstream pipeline and the variable could be unmasked in job logs in the downstream project.
You cannot use this method to forward job-only variables to a downstream pipeline, as they are not available in trigger jobs.
Upstream pipelines take precedence over downstream ones. If there are two variables with the same name defined in both upstream and downstream projects, the ones defined in the upstream project take precedence.
Pass dotenv variables created in a job
You can pass variables to a downstream pipeline with dotenv
variable inheritance.
For example, in a multi-project pipeline:
- Save the variables in a
.env
file. - Save the
.env
file as adotenv
report. -
Trigger the downstream pipeline.
build_vars: stage: build script: - echo "BUILD_VERSION=hello" >> build.env artifacts: reports: dotenv: build.env deploy: stage: deploy trigger: my/downstream_project
-
Set the
test
job in the downstream pipeline to inherit the variables from thebuild_vars
job in the upstream project withneeds
. Thetest
job inherits the variables in thedotenv
report and it can accessBUILD_VERSION
in the script:test: stage: test script: - echo $BUILD_VERSION needs: - project: my/upstream_project job: build_vars ref: master artifacts: true
Control what type of variables to forward to downstream pipelines
Use the trigger:forward
keyword to specify
what type of variables to forward to the downstream pipeline. Forwarded variables
are considered trigger variables, which have the highest precedence.
Downstream pipelines for deployments
- Introduced in GitLab 16.4.
You can use the environment
keyword with trigger
.
You might want to use environment
from a trigger job if your deployment and application projects are separately managed.
deploy:
trigger:
project: project-group/my-downstream-project
environment: production
A downstream pipeline can provision infrastructure, deploy to a designated environment, and return the deployment status to the upstream project.
You can view the environment and deployment from the upstream project.
Advanced example
This example configuration has the following behaviors:
- The upstream project dynamically composes an environment name based on a branch name.
- The upstream project passes the context of the deployment to the downstream project with
UPSTREAM_*
variables.
The .gitlab-ci.yml
in an upstream project:
stages:
- deploy
- cleanup
.downstream-deployment-pipeline:
variables:
UPSTREAM_PROJECT_ID: $CI_PROJECT_ID
UPSTREAM_ENVIRONMENT_NAME: $CI_ENVIRONMENT_NAME
UPSTREAM_ENVIRONMENT_ACTION: $CI_ENVIRONMENT_ACTION
trigger:
project: project-group/deployment-project
branch: main
strategy: depend
deploy-review:
stage: deploy
extends: .downstream-deployment-pipeline
environment:
name: review/$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG
on_stop: stop-review
stop-review:
stage: cleanup
extends: .downstream-deployment-pipeline
environment:
name: review/$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG
action: stop
when: manual
The .gitlab-ci.yml
in a downstream project:
deploy:
script: echo "Deploy to ${UPSTREAM_ENVIRONMENT_NAME} for ${UPSTREAM_PROJECT_ID}"
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "pipeline" && $UPSTREAM_ENVIRONMENT_ACTION == "start"
stop:
script: echo "Stop ${UPSTREAM_ENVIRONMENT_NAME} for ${UPSTREAM_PROJECT_ID}"
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "pipeline" && $UPSTREAM_ENVIRONMENT_ACTION == "stop"