- Workflow rules
- Default image
- Default variables
- Stages
- Dependency Proxy
- Common job definitions
-
rules
,if:
conditions andchanges:
patterns - Best Practices
- CI Configuration Testing
CI configuration internals
Workflow rules
Pipelines for the GitLab project are created using the workflow:rules
keyword
feature of the GitLab CI/CD.
Pipelines are always created for the following scenarios:
-
main
branch, including on schedules, pushes, merges, and so on. - Merge requests.
- Tags.
- Stable,
auto-deploy
, and security branches.
Pipeline creation is also affected by the following CI/CD variables:
- If
$FORCE_GITLAB_CI
is set, pipelines are created. Not recommended to use. See Avoid$FORCE_GITLAB_CI
. - If
$GITLAB_INTERNAL
is not set, pipelines are not created.
No pipeline is created in any other cases (for example, when pushing a branch with no MR for it).
The source of truth for these workflow rules is defined in .gitlab-ci.yml
.
Avoid $FORCE_GITLAB_CI
The pipeline is very complex and we need to clearly understand the kind of pipeline we want to trigger. We need to know which jobs we should run and which ones we shouldn’t.
If we use $FORCE_GITLAB_CI
to force trigger a pipeline,
we don’t really know what kind of pipeline it is. The result can be that we don’t
run the jobs we want, or we run too many jobs we don’t care about.
Some more context and background can be found at: Avoid blanket changes to avoid unexpected run
Here’s a list of where we’re using this right now, and should try to move away
from using $FORCE_GITLAB_CI
.
See the next section for how we can enable pipelines without using
$FORCE_GITLAB_CI
.
Alternative to $FORCE_GITLAB_CI
Essentially, we use different variables to enable different pipelines.
An example doing this is $START_AS_IF_FOSS
. When we want to trigger a
cross project FOSS pipeline, we set $START_AS_IF_FOSS
, along with a set of
other variables like $ENABLE_RSPEC_UNIT
, $ENABLE_RSPEC_SYSTEM
, and so on
so forth to enable each jobs we want to run in the as-if-foss cross project
downstream pipeline.
The advantage of this over $FORCE_GITLAB_CI
is that we have full control
over how we want to run the pipeline because $START_AS_IF_FOSS
is only used
for this purpose, and changing how the pipeline behaves under this variable
will not affect other types of pipelines, while using $FORCE_GITLAB_CI
we
do not know what exactly the pipeline is because it’s used for multiple
purposes.
Default image
The default image is defined in .gitlab-ci.yml
.
It includes Ruby, Go, Git, Git LFS, Chrome, Node, Yarn, PostgreSQL, and Graphics Magick.
The images used in our pipelines are configured in the
gitlab-org/gitlab-build-images
project, which is push-mirrored to gitlab/gitlab-build-images
for redundancy.
The current version of the build images can be found in the “Used by GitLab section”.
Default variables
In addition to the predefined CI/CD variables,
each pipeline includes default variables defined in
.gitlab-ci.yml
.
Stages
The current stages are:
-
sync
: This stage is used to synchronize changes fromgitlab-org/gitlab
togitlab-org/gitlab-foss
. -
prepare
: This stage includes jobs that prepare artifacts that are needed by jobs in subsequent stages. -
build-images
: This stage includes jobs that prepare Docker images that are needed by jobs in subsequent stages or downstream pipelines. -
fixtures
: This stage includes jobs that prepare fixtures needed by frontend tests. -
lint
: This stage includes linting and static analysis jobs. -
test
: This stage includes most of the tests, and DB/migration jobs. -
post-test
: This stage includes jobs that build reports or gather data from thetest
stage’s jobs (for example, coverage, Knapsack metadata, and so on). -
review
: This stage includes jobs that build the CNG images, deploy them, and run end-to-end tests against review apps (see review apps for details). It also includes Docs Review App jobs. -
qa
: This stage includes jobs that perform QA tasks against the Review App that is deployed in stagereview
. -
post-qa
: This stage includes jobs that build reports or gather data from theqa
stage’s jobs (for example, Review App performance report). -
pages
: This stage includes a job that deploys the various reports as GitLab Pages (for example,coverage-ruby
, andwebpack-report
(found athttps://gitlab-org.gitlab.io/gitlab/webpack-report/
, but there is an issue with the deployment). -
notify
: This stage includes jobs that notify various failures to Slack.
Dependency Proxy
Some of the jobs are using images from Docker Hub, where we also use
${GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY_ADDRESS}
as a prefix to the image path, so that we pull
images from our Dependency Proxy.
By default, this variable is set from the value of ${GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY}
.
${GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY}
is a group CI/CD variable defined in
gitlab-org
as
${CI_DEPENDENCY_PROXY_GROUP_IMAGE_PREFIX}/
. This means when we use an image
defined as:
image: ${GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY_ADDRESS}alpine:edge
Projects in the gitlab-org
group pull from the Dependency Proxy, while
forks that reside on any other personal namespaces or groups fall back to
Docker Hub unless ${GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY}
is also defined there.
Work around for when a pipeline is started by a Project access token user
When a pipeline is started by a Project access token user (for example, the release-tools approver bot
user which
automatically updates the Gitaly version used in the main project),
the Dependency proxy isn’t accessible
and the job fails at the Preparing the "docker+machine" executor
step.
To work around that, we have a special workflow rule, that overrides the
${GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY_ADDRESS}
variable so that Dependency proxy isn’t used in that case:
- if: '$CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH && $GITLAB_USER_LOGIN =~ /project_\d+_bot\d*/'
variables:
GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY_ADDRESS: ""
${GITLAB_DEPENDENCY_PROXY}
variable because group-level
variables have higher precedence over .gitlab-ci.yml
variables.Common job definitions
Most of the jobs extend from a few CI definitions
defined in .gitlab/ci/global.gitlab-ci.yml
that are scoped to a single configuration keyword.
Job definitions | Description |
---|---|
.default-retry
| Allows a job to retry upon unknown_failure , api_failure , runner_system_failure , job_execution_timeout , or stuck_or_timeout_failure .
|
.default-before_script
| Allows a job to use a default before_script definition suitable for Ruby/Rails tasks that may need a database running (for example, tests).
|
.repo-from-artifacts
| Allows a job to fetch the repository from artifacts in clone-gitlab-repo instead of cloning. This should reduce GitLab.com Gitaly load and also slightly improve the speed because downloading from artifacts is faster than cloning. Note that this should be avoided to be used with jobs having needs: [] because otherwise it’ll start later and we normally want all jobs to start as soon as possible. Use this only on jobs which has other dependencies so that we don’t wait longer than just cloning. Note that this behavior can be controlled via CI_FETCH_REPO_GIT_STRATEGY . See Fetch repository via artifacts instead of cloning/fetching from Gitaly for more details.
|
.setup-test-env-cache
| Allows a job to use a default cache definition suitable for setting up test environment for subsequent Ruby/Rails tasks.
|
.ruby-cache
| Allows a job to use a default cache definition suitable for Ruby tasks.
|
.static-analysis-cache
| Allows a job to use a default cache definition suitable for static analysis tasks.
|
.ruby-gems-coverage-cache
| Allows a job to use a default cache definition suitable for coverage tasks.
|
.qa-cache
| Allows a job to use a default cache definition suitable for QA tasks.
|
.yarn-cache
| Allows a job to use a default cache definition suitable for frontend jobs that do a yarn install .
|
.assets-compile-cache
| Allows a job to use a default cache definition suitable for frontend jobs that compile assets.
|
.use-pg14
| Allows a job to use the postgres 14, redis , and rediscluster services (see .gitlab/ci/global.gitlab-ci.yml for the specific versions of the services).
|
.use-pg14-ee
| Same as .use-pg14 but also use an elasticsearch service (see .gitlab/ci/global.gitlab-ci.yml for the specific version of the service).
|
.use-pg15
| Allows a job to use the postgres 15, redis , and rediscluster services (see .gitlab/ci/global.gitlab-ci.yml for the specific versions of the services).
|
.use-pg15-ee
| Same as .use-pg15 but also use an elasticsearch service (see .gitlab/ci/global.gitlab-ci.yml for the specific version of the service).
|
.use-pg16
| Allows a job to use the postgres 16, redis , and rediscluster services (see .gitlab/ci/global.gitlab-ci.yml for the specific versions of the services).
|
.use-pg16-ee
| Same as .use-pg16 but also use an elasticsearch service (see .gitlab/ci/global.gitlab-ci.yml for the specific version of the service).
|
.use-kaniko
| Allows a job to use the kaniko tool to build Docker images.
|
.as-if-foss
| Simulate the FOSS project by setting the FOSS_ONLY='1' CI/CD variable.
|
.use-docker-in-docker
| Allows a job to use Docker in Docker. For more details, see the handbook about CI/CD configuration. |
rules
, if:
conditions and changes:
patterns
We’re using the rules
keyword extensively.
All rules
definitions are defined in
rules.gitlab-ci.yml
,
then included in individual jobs via extends
.
The rules
definitions are composed of if:
conditions and changes:
patterns,
which are also defined in
rules.gitlab-ci.yml
and included in rules
definitions via YAML anchors
if:
conditions
if: conditions
| Description | Notes |
---|---|---|
if-not-canonical-namespace
| Matches if the project isn’t in the canonical (gitlab-org/ and gitlab-cn/ ) or security (gitlab-org/security ) namespace.
| Use to create a job for forks (by using when: on_success or when: manual ), or not create a job for forks (by using when: never ).
|
if-not-ee
| Matches if the project isn’t EE (that is, project name isn’t gitlab or gitlab-ee ).
| Use to create a job only in the FOSS project (by using when: on_success or when: manual ), or not create a job if the project is EE (by using when: never ).
|
if-not-foss
| Matches if the project isn’t FOSS (that is, project name isn’t gitlab-foss , gitlab-ce , or gitlabhq ).
| Use to create a job only in the EE project (by using when: on_success or when: manual ), or not create a job if the project is FOSS (by using when: never ).
|
if-default-refs
| Matches if the pipeline is for master , main , /^[\d-]+-stable(-ee)?$/ (stable branches), /^\d+-\d+-auto-deploy-\d+$/ (auto-deploy branches), /^security\// (security branches), merge requests, and tags.
| Note that jobs aren’t created for branches with this default configuration. |
if-master-refs
| Matches if the current branch is master or main .
| |
if-master-push
| Matches if the current branch is master or main and pipeline source is push .
| |
if-master-schedule-maintenance
| Matches if the current branch is master or main and pipeline runs on a 2-hourly schedule.
| |
if-master-schedule-nightly
| Matches if the current branch is master or main and pipeline runs on a nightly schedule.
| |
if-auto-deploy-branches
| Matches if the current branch is an auto-deploy one. | |
if-master-or-tag
| Matches if the pipeline is for the master or main branch or for a tag.
| |
if-merge-request
| Matches if the pipeline is for a merge request. | |
if-merge-request-title-as-if-foss
| Matches if the pipeline is for a merge request and the MR has label ~"pipeline:run-as-if-foss" | |
if-merge-request-title-update-caches
| Matches if the pipeline is for a merge request and the MR has label ~"pipeline:update-cache". | |
if-merge-request-labels-run-all-rspec
| Matches if the pipeline is for a merge request and the MR has label ~"pipeline:run-all-rspec". | |
if-merge-request-labels-run-cs-evaluation
| Matches if the pipeline is for a merge request and the MR has label ~"pipeline:run-CS-evaluation". | |
if-security-merge-request
| Matches if the pipeline is for a security merge request. | |
if-security-schedule
| Matches if the pipeline is for a security scheduled pipeline. | |
if-nightly-master-schedule
| Matches if the pipeline is for a master scheduled pipeline with $NIGHTLY set.
| |
if-dot-com-gitlab-org-schedule
| Limits jobs creation to scheduled pipelines for the gitlab-org group on GitLab.com.
| |
if-dot-com-gitlab-org-master
| Limits jobs creation to the master or main branch for the gitlab-org group on GitLab.com.
| |
if-dot-com-gitlab-org-merge-request
| Limits jobs creation to merge requests for the gitlab-org group on GitLab.com.
| |
if-dot-com-ee-schedule
| Limits jobs to scheduled pipelines for the gitlab-org/gitlab project on GitLab.com.
|
changes:
patterns
changes: patterns
| Description |
---|---|
ci-patterns
| Only create job for CI configuration-related changes. |
ci-build-images-patterns
| Only create job for CI configuration-related changes related to the build-images stage.
|
ci-review-patterns
| Only create job for CI configuration-related changes related to the review stage.
|
ci-qa-patterns
| Only create job for CI configuration-related changes related to the qa stage.
|
yaml-lint-patterns
| Only create job for YAML-related changes. |
docs-patterns
| Only create job for docs-related changes. |
frontend-dependency-patterns
| Only create job when frontend dependencies are updated (for example, package.json , and yarn.lock ) changes.
|
frontend-patterns-for-as-if-foss
| Only create job for frontend-related changes that have impact on FOSS. |
backend-patterns
| Only create job for backend-related changes. |
db-patterns
| Only create job for DB-related changes. |
backstage-patterns
| Only create job for backstage-related changes (that is, Danger, fixtures, RuboCop, specs). |
code-patterns
| Only create job for code-related changes. |
qa-patterns
| Only create job for QA-related changes. |
code-backstage-patterns
| Combination of code-patterns and backstage-patterns .
|
code-qa-patterns
| Combination of code-patterns and qa-patterns .
|
code-backstage-qa-patterns
| Combination of code-patterns , backstage-patterns , and qa-patterns .
|
static-analysis-patterns
| Only create jobs for Static Analytics configuration-related changes. |
Best Practices
When to use extends:
, <<: *xyz
(YAML anchors), or !reference
Key takeaways
- If you need to extend a hash, you should use
extends
- If you need to extend an array, you’ll need to use
!reference
, orYAML anchors
as last resort - For more complex cases (for example, extend hash inside array, extend array inside hash, …), you’ll have to use
!reference
orYAML anchors
What can extends
and YAML anchors
do?
extends
- Deep merge for hashes
- NO merge for arrays. It overwrites (source)
YAML anchors
- NO deep merge for hashes, BUT it can be used to extend a hash (see the example below)
- NO merge for arrays, BUT it can be used to extend an array (see the example below)
A great example
This example shows how to extend complex YAML data structures with !reference
and YAML anchors
:
.strict-ee-only-rules:
# `rules` is an array of hashes
rules:
- if: '$CI_PROJECT_NAME !~ /^gitlab(-ee)?$/ '
when: never
# `if-security-merge-request` is a hash
.if-security-merge-request: &if-security-merge-request
if: '$CI_PROJECT_NAMESPACE == "gitlab-org/security"'
# `code-qa-patterns` is an array
.code-qa-patterns: &code-qa-patterns
- "{package.json,yarn.lock}"
- ".browserslistrc"
- "babel.config.js"
- "jest.config.{base,integration,unit}.js"
.qa:rules:as-if-foss:
rules:
# We extend the `rules` array with an array of hashes directly
- !reference [".strict-ee-only-rules", rules]
# We extend a single array entry with a hash
- <<: *if-security-merge-request
# `changes` is an array, so we pass it an entire array
changes: *code-qa-patterns
qa:selectors-as-if-foss:
# We include the rules from .qa:rules:as-if-foss in this job
extends:
- .qa:rules:as-if-foss
Extend the .fast-no-clone-job
job
Downloading the branch for the canonical project takes between 20 and 30 seconds.
Some jobs only need a limited number of files, which we can download via the GitLab API.
You can skip a job git clone
/git fetch
by adding the following pattern to a job.
Scenario 1: no before_script
is defined in the job
This applies to the parent sections the job extends from as well.
You can just extend the .fast-no-clone-job
:
Before:
# Note: No `extends:` is present in the job
a-job:
script:
- source scripts/rspec_helpers.sh scripts/slack
- echo "No need for a git clone!"
After:
# Note: No `extends:` is present in the job
a-job:
extends:
- .fast-no-clone-job
variables:
FILES_TO_DOWNLOAD: >
scripts/rspec_helpers.sh
scripts/slack
script:
- source scripts/rspec_helpers.sh scripts/slack
- echo "No need for a git clone!"
Scenario 2: a before_script
block is already defined in the job (or in jobs it extends)
For this scenario, you have to:
- Extend the
.fast-no-clone-job
as in the first scenario (this will merge theFILES_TO_DOWNLOAD
variable with the other variables) - Make sure the
before_script
section from.fast-no-clone-job
is referenced in thebefore_script
we use for this job.
Before:
.base-job:
before_script:
echo "Hello from .base-job"
a-job:
extends:
- .base-job
script:
- source scripts/rspec_helpers.sh scripts/slack
- echo "No need for a git clone!"
After:
.base-job:
before_script:
echo "Hello from .base-job"
a-job:
extends:
- .base-job
- .fast-no-clone-job
variables:
FILES_TO_DOWNLOAD: >
scripts/rspec_helpers.sh
scripts/slack
before_script:
- !reference [".fast-no-clone-job", before_script]
- !reference [".base-job", before_script]
script:
- source scripts/rspec_helpers.sh scripts/slack
- echo "No need for a git clone!"
Caveats
- This pattern does not work if a script relies on
git
to access the repository, because we don’t have the repository without cloning or fetching. - The job using this pattern needs to have
curl
available. - If you need to run
bundle install
in the job (even usingBUNDLE_ONLY
), you need to:- Download the gems that are stored in the
gitlab-org/gitlab
project.- You can use the
download_local_gems
shell command for that purpose.
- You can use the
- Include the
Gemfile
,Gemfile.lock
andGemfile.checksum
(if applicable)
- Download the gems that are stored in the
Where is this pattern used?
- For now, we use this pattern for the following jobs, and those do not block private repositories:
-
review-build-cng-env
for:GITALY_SERVER_VERSION
GITLAB_ELASTICSEARCH_INDEXER_VERSION
GITLAB_KAS_VERSION
GITLAB_PAGES_VERSION
GITLAB_SHELL_VERSION
scripts/trigger-build.rb
VERSION
-
review-deploy
for:GITALY_SERVER_VERSION
GITLAB_SHELL_VERSION
scripts/review_apps/review-apps.sh
scripts/review_apps/seed-dast-test-data.sh
VERSION
-
rspec:coverage
for:config/bundler_setup.rb
Gemfile
Gemfile.checksum
Gemfile.lock
scripts/merge-simplecov
spec/simplecov_env_core.rb
spec/simplecov_env.rb
-
prepare-as-if-foss-env
for:scripts/setup/generate-as-if-foss-env.rb
-
Additionally, scripts/utils.sh
is always downloaded from the API when this pattern is used (this file contains the code for .fast-no-clone-job
).
Runner tags
On GitLab.com, both unprivileged and privileged runners are
available. For projects in the gitlab-org
group and forks of those
projects, only one of the following tags should be added to a job:
-
gitlab-org
: Jobs randomly use privileged and unprivileged runners. -
gitlab-org-docker
: Jobs must use a privileged runner. If you need Docker-in-Docker support, usegitlab-org-docker
instead ofgitlab-org
.
The gitlab-org-docker
tag is added by the .use-docker-in-docker
job
definition above.
To ensure compatibility with forks, avoid using both gitlab-org
and
gitlab-org-docker
simultaneously. No instance runners
have both gitlab-org
and gitlab-org-docker
tags. For forks of
gitlab-org
projects, jobs will get stuck if both tags are supplied because
no matching runners are available.
See the GitLab Repositories handbook page for more information.
Using the gitlab
Ruby gem in the canonical project
When calling require 'gitlab'
in the canonical project, it will require the lib/gitlab.rb
file when $LOAD_PATH
has lib
, which happens when we’re loading the application (config/application.rb
) or tests (spec/spec_helper.rb
).
This means we’re not able to load the gitlab
gem under the above conditions and even if we can, the constant name will conflict, breaking internal assumptions and causing random errors.
If you are working on a script that is using the gitlab
Ruby gem, you will need to take a few precautions:
1 - Conditional require of the gem
To avoid potential conflicts, only require the gitlab
gem if the Gitlab
constant isn’t defined:
# Bad
require 'gitlab'
# Good
if Object.const_defined?(:RSpec)
# Ok, we're testing, we know we're going to stub `Gitlab`, so we just ignore
else
require 'gitlab'
if Gitlab.singleton_class.method_defined?(:com?)
abort 'lib/gitlab.rb is loaded, and this means we can no longer load the client and we cannot proceed'
end
end
2 - Mock the gitlab
gem entirely in your specs
In your specs, require 'gitlab'
will reference the lib/gitlab.rb
file:
# Bad
allow(GitLab).to receive(:a_method).and_return(...)
# Good
client = double('GitLab')
# In order to easily stub the client, consider using a method to return the client.
# We can then stub the method to return our fake client, which we can further stub its methods.
#
# This is the pattern followed below
let(:instance) { described_class.new }
allow(instance).to receive(:gitlab).and_return(client)
allow(client).to receive(:a_method).and_return(...)
In case you need to query jobs for instance, the following snippet will be useful:
# Bad
allow(GitLab).to receive(:pipeline_jobs).and_return(...)
# Good
#
# rubocop:disable RSpec/VerifiedDoubles -- We do not load the Gitlab client directly
client = double('GitLab')
allow(instance).to receive(:gitlab).and_return(client)
jobs = ['job1', 'job2']
allow(client).to yield_jobs(:pipeline_jobs, jobs)
def yield_jobs(api_method, jobs)
messages = receive_message_chain(api_method, :auto_paginate)
jobs.inject(messages) do |stub, job_name|
stub.and_yield(double(name: job_name))
end
end
# rubocop:enable RSpec/VerifiedDoubles
3 - Do not call your script with bundle exec
Executing with bundle exec
will change the $LOAD_PATH
for Ruby, and it will load lib/gitlab.rb
when calling require 'gitlab'
:
# Bad
bundle exec scripts/my-script.rb
# Good
scripts/my-script.rb
CI Configuration Testing
We now have RSpec tests to verify changes to the CI configuration by simulating pipeline creation with the updated YAML files. You can find these tests and a documentation of the current test coverage in spec/dot_gitlab_ci/job_dependency_spec.rb
.
How Do the Tests Work
With the help of Ci::CreatePipelineService
, we are able to simulate pipeline creation with different attributes such as branch name, MR labels, pipeline source (scheduled v.s push), pipeline type (merge train v.s merged results), etc. This is the same service utilized by the GitLab CI Lint API for validating CI/CD configurations.
These tests will automatically run for merge requests that update CI configurations. However, team members can opt to skip these tests by adding the label ~"pipeline:skip-ci-validation" to their merge requests.
Running these tests locally is encouraged, as it provides the fastest feedback.