**Table of Contents** _generated with [DocToc](https://github.com/thlorenz/doctoc)_ - [Pipeline basics](#pipeline-basics) - [Activation](#activation) - [Configuration](#configuration) - [Execution](#execution) - [Pipelines](#pipelines) - [Build Steps](#build-steps) - [Images](#images) - [Images from private registries](#images-from-private-registries) - [GCR Registry Support](#gcr-registry-support) - [Parallel Execution](#parallel-execution) - [Conditional Pipeline Execution](#conditional-pipeline-execution) - [Conditional Step Execution](#conditional-step-execution) - [Failure Execution](#failure-execution) - [Services](#services) - [Configuration](#configuration-1) - [Detachment](#detachment) - [Initialization](#initialization) - [Plugins](#plugins) - [Plugin Isolation](#plugin-isolation) - [Plugin Marketplace](#plugin-marketplace) - [Environment variables](#environment-variables) - [Built-in environment variables](#built-in-environment-variables) - [String Substitution](#string-substitution) - [String Operations](#string-operations) - [Secrets](#secrets) - [Adding Secrets](#adding-secrets) - [Alternate Names](#alternate-names) - [Pull Requests](#pull-requests) - [Examples](#examples) - [Volumes](#volumes) - [Webhooks](#webhooks) - [Required Permissions](#required-permissions) - [Skip Commits](#skip-commits) - [Skip Branches](#skip-branches) - [Workspace](#workspace) - [Cloning](#cloning) - [Git Submodules](#git-submodules) - [Privileged mode](#privileged-mode) - [Promoting](#promoting) - [Triggering Deployments](#triggering-deployments) - [Matrix builds](#matrix-builds) - [Interpolation](#interpolation) - [Examples](#examples-1) - [Multi-pipeline builds](#multi-pipeline-builds) - [Example multi-pipeline definition](#example-multi-pipeline-definition) - [Flow control](#flow-control) - [Status lines](#status-lines) - [Rational](#rational) - [Badges](#badges) This document explains the process for activating and configuring a continuous delivery pipeline. # Pipeline basics ## Activation To activate your project navigate to your account settings. You will see a list of repositories which can be activated with a simple toggle. When you activate your repository, Drone automatically adds webhooks to your version control system (e.g. GitHub). Webhooks are used to trigger pipeline executions. When you push code to your repository, open a pull request, or create a tag, your version control system will automatically send a webhook to Drone which will in turn trigger pipeline execution. ![repository list](`repo_list.png) ## Configuration To configure you pipeline you should place a `.drone.yml` file in the root of your repository. The .drone.yml file is used to define your pipeline steps. It is a superset of the widely used docker-compose file format. Example pipeline configuration: ```yaml pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go get - go build - go test services: postgres: image: postgres:9.4.5 environment: - POSTGRES_USER=myapp ``` Example pipeline configuration with multiple, serial steps: ```yaml pipeline: backend: image: golang commands: - go get - go build - go test frontend: image: node:6 commands: - npm install - npm test notify: image: plugins/slack channel: developers username: drone ``` ## Execution To trigger your first pipeline execution you can push code to your repository, open a pull request, or push a tag. Any of these events triggers a webhook from your version control system and execute your pipeline. # Pipelines The pipeline section defines a list of steps to build, test and deploy your code. Pipeline steps are executed serially, in the order in which they are defined. If a step returns a non-zero exit code, the pipeline immediately aborts and returns a failure status. Example pipeline: ```yaml pipeline: backend: image: golang commands: - go build - go test frontend: image: node commands: - npm install - npm run test - npm run build ``` In the above example we define two pipeline steps, `frontend` and `backend`. The names of these steps are completely arbitrary. ## Build Steps Build steps are steps in your pipeline that execute arbitrary commands inside the specified docker container. The commands are executed using the workspace as the working directory. ```diff pipeline: backend: image: golang commands: + - go build + - go test ``` There is no magic here. The above commands are converted to a simple shell script. The commands in the above example are roughly converted to the below script: ```diff #!/bin/sh set -e go build go test ``` The above shell script is then executed as the docker entrypoint. The below docker command is an (incomplete) example of how the script is executed: ``` docker run --entrypoint=build.sh golang ``` > Please note that only build steps can define commands. You cannot use commands with plugins or services. ## Images Drone uses Docker images for the build environment, for plugins and for service containers. The image field is exposed in the container blocks in the Yaml: ```diff pipeline: build: + image: golang:1.6 commands: - go build - go test publish: + image: plugins/docker repo: foo/bar services: database: + image: mysql ``` Drone supports any valid Docker image from any Docker registry: ```text image: golang image: golang:1.7 image: library/golang:1.7 image: index.docker.io/library/golang image: index.docker.io/library/golang:1.7 ``` Drone does not automatically upgrade docker images. Example configuration to always pull the latest image when updates are available: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang:latest + pull: true ``` #### Images from private registries You must provide registry credentials on the UI in order to pull private pipeline images defined in your Yaml configuration file. These credentials are never exposed to your pipeline, which means they cannot be used to push, and are safe to use with pull requests, for example. Pushing to a registry still require setting credentials for the appropriate plugin. Example configuration using a private image: ```diff pipeline: build: + image: gcr.io/custom/golang commands: - go build - go test ``` Drone matches the registry hostname to each image in your yaml. If the hostnames match, the registry credentials are used to authenticate to your registry and pull the image. Note that registry credentials are used by the Drone agent and are never exposed to your build containers. Example registry hostnames: - Image `gcr.io/foo/bar` has hostname `gcr.io` - Image `foo/bar` has hostname `docker.io` - Image `qux.com:8000/foo/bar` has hostname `qux.com:8000` Example registry hostname matching logic: - Hostname `gcr.io` matches image `gcr.io/foo/bar` - Hostname `docker.io` matches `golang` - Hostname `docker.io` matches `library/golang` - Hostname `docker.io` matches `bradyrydzewski/golang` - Hostname `docker.io` matches `bradyrydzewski/golang:latest` #### GCR Registry Support For specific details on configuring access to Google Container Registry, please view the docs [here](https://cloud.google.com/container-registry/docs/advanced-authentication#using_a_json_key_file). ## Parallel Execution Drone supports parallel step execution for same-machine fan-in and fan-out. Parallel steps are configured using the `group` attribute. This instructs the pipeline runner to execute the named group in parallel. Example parallel configuration: ```diff pipeline: backend: + group: build image: golang commands: - go build - go test frontend: + group: build image: node commands: - npm install - npm run test - npm run build publish: image: plugins/docker repo: octocat/hello-world ``` In the above example, the `frontend` and `backend` steps are executed in parallel. The pipeline runner will not execute the `publish` step until the group completes. ## Conditional Pipeline Execution Drone supports defining conditional pipelines to skip commits based on the target branch. If the branch matches the `branches:` block the pipeline is executed, otherwise it is skipped. Example skipping a commit when the target branch is not master: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test +branches: master ``` Example matching multiple target branches: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test +branches: [ master, develop ] ``` Example uses glob matching: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test +branches: [ master, feature/* ] ``` Example includes branches: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test +branches: + include: [ master, feature/* ] ``` Example excludes branches: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test +branches: + exclude: [ develop, feature/* ] ``` ## Conditional Step Execution Drone supports defining conditional pipeline steps in the `when` block. If all conditions in the `when` block evaluate to true the step is executed, otherwise it is skipped. Example conditional execution by branch: ```diff pipeline: slack: image: plugins/slack channel: dev + when: + branch: master ``` > The step now triggers on master, but also if the target branch of a pull request is `master`. Add an event condition to limit it further to pushes on master only. Execute a step if the branch is `master` or `develop`: ```diff when: branch: [master, develop] ``` Execute a step if the branch starts with `prefix/*`: ```diff when: branch: prefix/* ``` Execute a step using custom include and exclude logic: ```diff when: branch: include: [ master, release/* ] exclude: [ release/1.0.0, release/1.1.* ] ``` Execute a step if the build event is a `tag`: ```diff when: event: tag ``` Execute a step if the build event is a `tag` created from the specified branch: ```diff when: event: tag + branch: master ``` Execute a step for all non-pull request events: ```diff when: event: [push, tag, deployment] ``` Execute a step for all build events: ```diff when: event: [push, pull_request, tag, deployment] ``` Execute a step if the tag name starts with `release`: ```diff when: tag: release* ``` Execute a step when the build status changes: ```diff when: status: changed ``` Execute a step when the build is passing or failing: ```diff when: status: [ failure, success ] ``` Execute a step for a specific platform: ```diff when: platform: linux/amd64 ``` Execute a step for a specific platform using wildcards: ```diff when: platform: [ linux/*, windows/amd64 ] ``` Execute a step for deployment events matching the target deployment environment: ```diff when: environment: production event: deployment ``` Execute a step for a single matrix permutation: ```diff when: matrix: GO_VERSION: 1.5 REDIS_VERSION: 2.8 ``` Execute a step only on a certain Drone instance: ```diff when: instance: stage.drone.company.com ``` #### Failure Execution Drone uses the container exit code to determine the success or failure status of a build. Non-zero exit codes fail the build and cause the pipeline to immediately exit. There are use cases for executing pipeline steps on failure, such as sending notifications for failed builds. Use the status constraint to override the default behavior and execute steps even when the build status is failure: ```diff pipeline: slack: image: plugins/slack channel: dev + when: + status: [ success, failure ] ``` # Services Drone provides a services section in the Yaml file used for defining service containers. The below configuration composes database and cache containers. ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test services: database: image: mysql cache: image: redis ``` Services are accessed using custom hostnames. In the above example the mysql service is assigned the hostname `database` and is available at `database:3306`. ## Configuration Service containers generally expose environment variables to customize service startup such as default usernames, passwords and ports. Please see the official image documentation to learn more. ```diff services: database: image: mysql + environment: + - MYSQL_DATABASE=test + - MYSQL_ALLOW_EMPTY_PASSWORD=yes cache: image: redis ``` ## Detachment Service and long running containers can also be included in the pipeline section of the configuration using the detach parameter without blocking other steps. This should be used when explicit control over startup order is required. ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test database: image: redis + detach: true test: image: golang commands: - go test ``` Containers from detached steps will terminate when the pipeline ends. ## Initialization Service containers require time to initialize and begin to accept connections. If you are unable to connect to a service you may need to wait a few seconds or implement a backoff. ```diff pipeline: test: image: golang commands: + - sleep 15 - go get - go test services: database: image: mysql ``` # Plugins Plugins are Docker containers that perform pre-defined tasks and are configured as steps in your pipeline. Plugins can be used to deploy code, publish artifacts, send notification, and more. Example pipeline using the Docker and Slack plugins: ```yaml pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test publish: image: plugins/docker repo: foo/bar tags: latest notify: image: plugins/slack channel: dev ``` ## Plugin Isolation Plugins are executed in Docker containers and are isolated from the other steps in your build pipeline. Plugins do share the build workspace, mounted as a volume, and therefore have access to your source tree. ## Plugin Marketplace Plugins are packaged and distributed as Docker containers. They are conceptually similar to software libraries (think npm) and can be published and shared with the community. You can find a list of available plugins at [http://plugins.drone.io](http://plugins.drone.io). # Environment variables Drone provides the ability to define environment variables scoped to individual build steps. Example pipeline step with custom environment variables: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang + environment: + - CGO=0 + - GOOS=linux + - GOARCH=amd64 commands: - go build - go test ``` Please note that the environment section is not able to expand environment variables. If you need to expand variables they should be exported in the commands section. ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang - environment: - - PATH=$PATH:/go commands: + - export PATH=$PATH:/go - go build - go test ``` Please be warned that `${variable}` expressions are subject to pre-processing. If you do not want the pre-processor to evaluate your expression it must be escaped: ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - - export PATH=${PATH}:/go + - export PATH=$${PATH}:/go - go build - go test ``` ## Built-in environment variables This is the reference list of all environment variables available to your build environment. These are injected into your build and plugins containers, at runtime. | NAME | DESC | | ---------------------------- | -------------------------------------- | | `CI=drone` | environment is drone | | `DRONE=true` | environment is drone | | `DRONE_ARCH` | environment architecture (linux/amd64) | | `DRONE_REPO` | repository full name | | `DRONE_REPO_OWNER` | repository owner | | `DRONE_REPO_NAME` | repository name | | `DRONE_REPO_SCM` | repository scm (git) | | `DRONE_REPO_LINK` | repository link | | `DRONE_REPO_AVATAR` | repository avatar | | `DRONE_REPO_BRANCH` | repository default branch (master) | | `DRONE_REPO_PRIVATE` | repository is private | | `DRONE_REPO_TRUSTED` | repository is trusted | | `DRONE_REMOTE_URL` | repository clone url | | `DRONE_COMMIT_SHA` | commit sha | | `DRONE_COMMIT_REF` | commit ref | | `DRONE_COMMIT_BRANCH` | commit branch | | `DRONE_COMMIT_LINK` | commit link in remote | | `DRONE_COMMIT_MESSAGE` | commit message | | `DRONE_COMMIT_AUTHOR` | commit author username | | `DRONE_COMMIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL` | commit author email address | | `DRONE_COMMIT_AUTHOR_AVATAR` | commit author avatar | | `DRONE_BUILD_NUMBER` | build number | | `DRONE_BUILD_EVENT` | build event (push, pull_request, tag) | | `DRONE_BUILD_STATUS` | build status (success, failure) | | `DRONE_BUILD_LINK` | build result link | | `DRONE_BUILD_CREATED` | build created unix timestamp | | `DRONE_BUILD_STARTED` | build started unix timestamp | | `DRONE_BUILD_FINISHED` | build finished unix timestamp | | `DRONE_PREV_BUILD_STATUS` | prior build status | | `DRONE_PREV_BUILD_NUMBER` | prior build number | | `DRONE_PREV_COMMIT_SHA` | prior build commit sha | | `DRONE_JOB_NUMBER` | job number | | `DRONE_JOB_STATUS` | job status | | `DRONE_JOB_STARTED` | job started | | `DRONE_JOB_FINISHED` | job finished | | `DRONE_BRANCH` | commit branch | | `DRONE_TARGET_BRANCH` | The target branch of a Pull Request | | `DRONE_SOURCE_BRANCH` | The source branch of a Pull Request | | `DRONE_COMMIT` | commit sha | | `DRONE_TAG` | commit tag | | `DRONE_PULL_REQUEST` | pull request number | | `DRONE_DEPLOY_TO` | deployment target (ie production) | ## String Substitution Drone provides the ability to substitute environment variables at runtime. This gives us the ability to use dynamic build or commit details in our pipeline configuration. Example commit substitution: ```diff pipeline: docker: image: plugins/docker + tags: ${DRONE_COMMIT_SHA} ``` Example tag substitution: ```diff pipeline: docker: image: plugins/docker + tags: ${DRONE_TAG} ``` ## String Operations Drone also emulates bash string operations. This gives us the ability to manipulate the strings prior to substitution. Example use cases might include substring and stripping prefix or suffix values. | OPERATION | DESC | | ------------------ | ------------------------------------------------ | | `${param}` | parameter substitution | | `${param,}` | parameter substitution with lowercase first char | | `${param,,}` | parameter substitution with lowercase | | `${param^}` | parameter substitution with uppercase first char | | `${param^^}` | parameter substitution with uppercase | | `${param:pos}` | parameter substitution with substring | | `${param:pos:len}` | parameter substitution with substring and length | | `${param=default}` | parameter substitution with default | | `${param##prefix}` | parameter substitution with prefix removal | | `${param%%suffix}` | parameter substitution with suffix removal | | `${param/old/new}` | parameter substitution with find and replace | Example variable substitution with substring: ```diff pipeline: docker: image: plugins/docker + tags: ${DRONE_COMMIT_SHA:0:8} ``` Example variable substitution strips `v` prefix from `v.1.0.0`: ```diff pipeline: docker: image: plugins/docker + tags: ${DRONE_TAG##v} ``` # Secrets Drone provides the ability to store named parameters external to the Yaml configuration file, in a central secret store. Individual steps in the yaml can request access to these named parameters at runtime. Secrets are exposed to your pipeline steps and plugins as uppercase environment variables and can therefore be referenced in the commands section of your pipeline. ```diff pipeline: docker: image: docker commands: + - echo $DOCKER_USERNAME + - echo $DOCKER_PASSWORD secrets: [ docker_username, docker_password ] ``` Please note parameter expressions are subject to pre-processing. When using secrets in parameter expressions they should be escaped. ```diff pipeline: docker: image: docker commands: - - echo ${DOCKER_USERNAME} - - echo ${DOCKER_PASSWORD} + - echo $${DOCKER_USERNAME} + - echo $${DOCKER_PASSWORD} secrets: [ docker_username, docker_password ] ``` ## Adding Secrets Secrets are added to the Drone secret store on the UI or with the CLI. ## Alternate Names There may be scenarios where you are required to store secrets using alternate names. You can map the alternate secret name to the expected name using the below syntax: ```diff pipeline: docker: image: plugins/docker repo: octocat/hello-world tags: latest + secrets: + - source: docker_prod_password + target: docker_password ``` ## Pull Requests Secrets are not exposed to pull requests by default. You can override this behavior by creating the secret and enabling the `pull_request` event type. ```diff drone secret add \ -repository octocat/hello-world \ -image plugins/docker \ + -event pull_request \ + -event push \ + -event tag \ -name docker_username \ -value ``` Please be careful when exposing secrets to pull requests. If your repository is open source and accepts pull requests your secrets are not safe. A bad actor can submit a malicious pull request that exposes your secrets. ## Examples Create the secret using default settings. The secret will be available to all images in your pipeline, and will be available to all push, tag, and deployment events (not pull request events). ```diff drone secret add \ -repository octocat/hello-world \ -name aws_access_key_id \ -value ``` Create the secret and limit to a single image: ```diff drone secret add \ -repository octocat/hello-world \ + -image plugins/s3 \ -name aws_access_key_id \ -value ``` Create the secrets and limit to a set of images: ```diff drone secret add \ -repository octocat/hello-world \ + -image plugins/s3 \ + -image peloton/drone-ecs \ -name aws_access_key_id \ -value ``` Create the secret and enable for multiple hook events: ```diff drone secret add \ -repository octocat/hello-world \ -image plugins/s3 \ + -event pull_request \ + -event push \ + -event tag \ -name aws_access_key_id \ -value ``` Loading secrets from file using curl `@` syntax. This is the recommended approach for loading secrets from file to preserve newlines: ```diff drone secret add \ -repository octocat/hello-world \ -name ssh_key \ + -value @/root/ssh/id_rsa ``` # Volumes Drone gives the ability to define Docker volumes in the Yaml. You can use this parameter to mount files or folders on the host machine into your containers. > Volumes are only available to trusted repositories and for security reasons should only be used in private environments. ```diff pipeline: build: image: docker commands: - docker build --rm -t octocat/hello-world . - docker run --rm octocat/hello-world --test - docker push octocat/hello-world - docker rmi octocat/hello-world volumes: + - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock ``` Please note that Drone mounts volumes on the host machine. This means you must use absolute paths when you configure volumes. Attempting to use relative paths will result in an error. ```diff - volumes: [ ./certs:/etc/ssl/certs ] + volumes: [ /etc/ssl/certs:/etc/ssl/certs ] ``` # Webhooks When you activate your repository Drone automatically add webhooks to your version control system (e.g. GitHub). There is no manual configuration required. Webhooks are used to trigger pipeline executions. When you push code to your repository, open a pull request, or create a tag, your version control system will automatically send a webhook to Drone which will in turn trigger pipeline execution. ## Required Permissions The user who enables a repo in Drone must have `Admin` rights on that repo, so that Drone can add the webhook. Note that manually creating webhooks yourself is not possible. This is because webhooks are signed using a per-repository secret key which is not exposed to end users. ## Skip Commits Drone gives the ability to skip individual commits by adding `[CI SKIP]` to the commit message. Note this is case-insensitive. ```diff git commit -m "updated README [CI SKIP]" ``` ## Skip Branches Drone gives the ability to skip commits based on the target branch. The below example will skip a commit when the target branch is not master. ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test +branches: master ``` Please see the pipeline conditions [documentation]({{< ref "usage/config/pipeline-conditions.md" >}}) for more options and details. # Workspace The workspace defines the shared volume and working directory shared by all pipeline steps. The default workspace matches the below pattern, based on your repository url. ``` /drone/src/github.com/octocat/hello-world ``` The workspace can be customized using the workspace block in the Yaml file: ```diff +workspace: + base: /go + path: src/github.com/octocat/hello-world pipeline: build: image: golang:latest commands: - go get - go test ``` The base attribute defines a shared base volume available to all pipeline steps. This ensures your source code, dependencies and compiled binaries are persisted and shared between steps. ```diff workspace: + base: /go path: src/github.com/octocat/hello-world pipeline: deps: image: golang:latest commands: - go get - go test build: image: node:latest commands: - go build ``` This would be equivalent to the following docker commands: ``` docker volume create my-named-volume docker run --volume=my-named-volume:/go golang:latest docker run --volume=my-named-volume:/go node:latest ``` The path attribute defines the working directory of your build. This is where your code is cloned and will be the default working directory of every step in your build process. The path must be relative and is combined with your base path. ```diff workspace: base: /go + path: src/github.com/octocat/hello-world ``` ```text git clone https://github.com/octocat/hello-world \ /go/src/github.com/octocat/hello-world ``` # Cloning Drone automatically configures a default clone step if not explicitly defined. You can manually configure the clone step in your pipeline for customization: ```diff +clone: + git: + image: plugins/git pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test ``` Example configuration to override depth: ```diff clone: git: image: plugins/git + depth: 50 ``` Example configuration to use a custom clone plugin: ```diff clone: git: + image: octocat/custom-git-plugin ``` Example configuration to clone Mercurial repository: ```diff clone: hg: + image: plugins/hg + path: bitbucket.org/foo/bar ``` ## Git Submodules To use the credentials that cloned the repository to clone it's submodules, update `.gitmodules` to use `https` instead of `git`: ```diff [submodule "my-module"] path = my-module - url = git@github.com:octocat/my-module.git + url = https://github.com/octocat/my-module.git ``` To use the ssh git url in `.gitmodules` for users cloning with ssh, and also use the https url in drone, add `submodule_override`: ```diff clone: git: image: plugins/git recursive: true + submodule_override: + my-module: https://github.com/octocat/my-module.git pipeline: ... ``` # Privileged mode Drone gives the ability to configure privileged mode in the Yaml. You can use this parameter to launch containers with escalated capabilities. > Privileged mode is only available to trusted repositories and for security reasons should only be used in private environments. ```diff pipeline: build: image: docker environment: - DOCKER_HOST=tcp://docker:2375 commands: - docker --tls=false ps services: docker: image: docker:dind command: [ "--storage-driver=vfs", "--tls=false" ] + privileged: true ``` # Promoting Drone provides the ability to promote individual commits or tags (e.g. promote to production). When you promote a commit or tag it triggers a new pipeline execution with event type `deployment`. You can use the event type and target environment to limit step execution. ```diff pipeline: build: image: golang commands: - go build - go test publish: image: plugins/docker registry: registry.heroku.com repo: registry.heroku.com/my-staging-app/web when: + event: deployment + environment: staging publish_to_prod: image: plugins/docker registry: registry.heroku.com repo: registry.heroku.com/my-production-app/web when: + event: deployment + environment: production ``` The above example demonstrates how we can configure pipeline steps to only execute when the deployment matches a specific target environment. ## Triggering Deployments Deployments are triggered from the command line utility. They are triggered from an existing build. This is conceptually similar to promoting builds. ```text drone deploy ``` Promote the specified build number to your staging environment: ```text drone deploy octocat/hello-world 24 staging ``` Promote the specified build number to your production environment: ```text drone deploy octocat/hello-world 24 production ``` # Matrix builds Drone has integrated support for matrix builds. Drone executes a separate build task for each combination in the matrix, allowing you to build and test a single commit against multiple configurations. Example matrix definition: ```yaml matrix: GO_VERSION: - 1.4 - 1.3 REDIS_VERSION: - 2.6 - 2.8 - 3.0 ``` Example matrix definition containing only specific combinations: ```yaml matrix: include: - GO_VERSION: 1.4 REDIS_VERSION: 2.8 - GO_VERSION: 1.5 REDIS_VERSION: 2.8 - GO_VERSION: 1.6 REDIS_VERSION: 3.0 ``` ## Interpolation Matrix variables are interpolated in the yaml using the `${VARIABLE}` syntax, before the yaml is parsed. This is an example yaml file before interpolating matrix parameters: ```yaml pipeline: build: image: golang:${GO_VERSION} commands: - go get - go build - go test services: database: image: ${DATABASE} matrix: GO_VERSION: - 1.4 - 1.3 DATABASE: - mysql:5.5 - mysql:6.5 - mariadb:10.1 ``` Example Yaml file after injecting the matrix parameters: ```diff pipeline: build: - image: golang:${GO_VERSION} + image: golang:1.4 commands: - go get - go build - go test + environment: + - GO_VERSION=1.4 + - DATABASE=mysql:5.5 services: database: - image: ${DATABASE} + image: mysql:5.5 ``` ## Examples Example matrix build based on Docker image tag: ```yaml pipeline: build: image: golang:${TAG} commands: - go build - go test matrix: TAG: - 1.7 - 1.8 - latest ``` Example matrix build based on Docker image: ```yaml pipeline: build: image: ${IMAGE} commands: - go build - go test matrix: IMAGE: - golang:1.7 - golang:1.8 - golang:latest ``` # Multi-pipeline builds By default, Drone looks for the pipeline definition in `.drone.yml` in the project root. The Multi-Pipeline feature allows the pipeline to be splitted to several files and placed in the `.drone/` folder ## Example multi-pipeline definition ```bash .drone ├── .build.yml ├── .deploy.yml ├── .lint.yml └── .test.yml ``` .drone/.build.yml ```yaml pipeline: build: image: debian:stable-slim commands: - echo building - sleep 5 ``` .drone/.deploy.yml ```yaml pipeline: deploy: image: debian:stable-slim commands: - echo deploying depends_on: - lint - build - test ``` .drone/.test.yml ```yaml pipeline: test: image: debian:stable-slim commands: - echo testing - sleep 5 depends_on: - build ``` .drone/.lint.yml ```yaml pipeline: lint: image: debian:stable-slim commands: - echo linting - sleep 5 ``` ## Flow control The pipelines run in parallel on a separate agents and share nothing. Dependencies between pipelines can be set with the `depends_on` element. A pipeline doesn't execute until its dependencies did not complete succesfully. ```diff pipeline: deploy: image: debian:stable-slim commands: - echo deploying +depends_on: + - lint + - build + - test ``` Pipelines that need to run even on failures should set the `run_on` tag. ```diff pipeline: notify: image: debian:stable-slim commands: - echo notifying depends_on: - deploy +run_on: [ success, failure ] ``` Some pipelines don't need the source code, set the `skip_clone` tag to skip cloning: ```diff pipeline: notify: image: debian:stable-slim commands: - echo notifying depends_on: - deploy run_on: [ success, failure ] +skip_clone: true ``` ## Status lines Each pipeline has its own status line on Github. ## Rational - faster lint/test feedback, the pipeline doesn't have to run fully to have a lint status pushed to the the remote - better organization of the pipeline along various concerns: testing, linting, feature apps - utilizaing more agents to speed up build # Badges Drone has integrated support for repository status badges. These badges can be added to your website or project readme file to display the status of your code. Badge endpoint: ```text :///api/badges///status.svg ``` The status badge displays the status for the latest build to your default branch (e.g. master). You can customize the branch by adding the `branch` query parameter. ```diff -:///api/badges///status.svg +:///api/badges///status.svg?branch= ``` Please note status badges do not include pull request results, since the status of a pull request does not provide an accurate representation of your repository state.