woodpecker/docs/versioned_docs/version-0.15/20-usage/20-pipeline-syntax.md
2022-09-01 01:52:52 +02:00

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Pipeline syntax

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:

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.

Global Pipeline Conditionals

Woodpecker gives the ability to skip whole pipelines (not just steps) based on certain conditions.

branches

Woodpecker can 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:

pipeline:
  build:
    image: golang
    commands:
      - go build
      - go test

+branches: master

Example matching multiple target branches:

pipeline:
  build:
    image: golang
    commands:
      - go build
      - go test

+branches: [ master, develop ]

Example uses glob matching:

pipeline:
  build:
    image: golang
    commands:
      - go build
      - go test

+branches: [ master, feature/* ]

Example includes branches:

pipeline:
  build:
    image: golang
    commands:
      - go build
      - go test

+branches:
+  include: [ master, feature/* ]

Example excludes branches:

pipeline:
  build:
    image: golang
    commands:
      - go build
      - go test

+branches:
+  exclude: [ develop, feature/* ]

platform

To configure your pipeline to only be executed on an agent with a specific platform, you can use the platform key. Have a look at the official go docs for the available platforms. The syntax of the platform is GOOS/GOARCH like linux/arm64 or linux/amd64.

Example:

Assuming we have two agents, one arm and one amd64. Previously this pipeline would have executed on either agent, as Woodpecker is not fussy about where it runs the pipelines. By setting the following option it will only be executed on an agent with the platform linux/arm64.

+platform: linux/arm64

 pipeline:
   build:
     image: golang
     commands:
       - go build
       - go test

Skip Commits

Woodpecker gives the ability to skip individual commits by adding [CI SKIP] to the commit message. Note this is case-insensitive.

git commit -m "updated README [CI SKIP]"

services

Woodpecker can provide service containers. They can for example be used to run databases or cache containers during the execution of pipeline.

For more details check the services docs.

Steps

Every step of your pipeline executes arbitrary commands inside a specified docker container. The defined commands are executed serially. The associated commit of a current pipeline run is checked out with git to a workspace which is mounted to every step of the pipeline as the working directory.

 pipeline:
   backend:
     image: golang
     commands:
+      - go build
+      - go test

File changes are incremental

  • Woodpecker clones the source code in the beginning pipeline
  • Changes to files are persisted through steps as the same volume is mounted to all steps
# .woodpecker.yml
pipeline:
  build:
    image: debian
    commands:
      - echo "test content" > myfile
  a-test-step:
    image: debian
    commands:
      - cat myfile

image

Woodpecker 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:

 pipeline:
   build:
+    image: golang:1.6
     commands:
       - go build
       - go test

   publish:
+    image: plugins/docker
     repo: foo/bar

 services:
   database:
+    image: mysql

Woodpecker supports any valid Docker image from any Docker registry:

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

Woodpecker does not automatically upgrade docker images. Example configuration to always pull the latest image when updates are available:

 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:

 pipeline:
   build:
+    image: gcr.io/custom/golang
     commands:
       - go build
       - go test

Woodpecker 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 Woodpecker 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

Global registry support

To make a private registry globally available check the server configuration docs.

GCR registry support

For specific details on configuring access to Google Container Registry, please view the docs here.

commands

Commands of every pipeline step are executed serially as if you would enter them into your local shell.

 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:

#!/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.

environment

Woodpecker provides the ability to pass environment variables to individual pipeline steps.

For more details check the environment docs.

secrets

Woodpecker provides the ability to store named parameters external to the Yaml configuration file, in a central secret store. These secrets can be passed to individual steps of the pipeline at runtime.

For more details check the secrets docs.

when - Conditional Execution

Woodpecker supports defining conditional pipeline steps in the when block.

For more details check the Conditional Step Execution.

group - Parallel execution

Woodpecker 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:

 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.

volumes

Woodpecker 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.

For more details check the volumes docs.

detach

Woodpecker gives the ability to detach steps to run them in background until the pipeline finishes.

For more details check the service docs.

Advanced Configurations

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:

+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.

 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.

 workspace:
   base: /go
+  path: src/github.com/octocat/hello-world
git clone https://github.com/octocat/hello-world \
  /go/src/github.com/octocat/hello-world

matrix

Woodpecker has integrated support for matrix builds. Woodpecker executes a separate build task for each combination in the matrix, allowing you to build and test a single commit against multiple configurations.

For more details check the matrix build docs.

clone

Woodpecker automatically configures a default clone step if not explicitly defined. You can manually configure the clone step in your pipeline for customization:

+clone:
+  git:
+    image: woodpeckerci/plugin-git

 pipeline:
   build:
     image: golang
     commands:
       - go build
       - go test

Example configuration to override depth:

 clone:
   git:
     image: woodpeckerci/plugin-git
+    settings:
+      depth: 50

Example configuration to use a custom clone plugin:

clone:
  git:
+   image: octocat/custom-git-plugin

Example configuration to clone Mercurial repository:

 clone:
   hg:
+    image: plugins/hg
+    settings:
+      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:

 [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 Woodpecker, add submodule_override:

 clone:
   git:
     image: woodpeckerci/plugin-git
     settings:
       recursive: true
+      submodule_override:
+        my-module: https://github.com/octocat/my-module.git

pipeline:
  ...

Privileged mode

Woodpecker 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. See project settings to enable trusted mode.

 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