woodpecker/docs/docs/20-usage/10-intro.md
qwerty287 f56f9cb1c0
Cleanups + prefer .yaml (#3069)
Co-authored-by: Robert Kaussow <xoxys@rknet.org>
2024-01-11 18:43:54 +01:00

2 KiB

Getting started

Repository 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, Woodpecker automatically adds webhooks to your forge (e.g. GitHub, Gitea, ...).

Webhooks are used to trigger pipeline executions. When you push code to your repository, open a pull request, or create a tag, your forge will automatically send a webhook to Woodpecker which will in turn trigger the pipeline execution.

repository list

Required Permissions

The user who enables a repo in Woodpecker must have Admin rights on that repo, so that Woodpecker can add the webhook.

:::note 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. :::

Configuration

To configure your pipeline you must create a .woodpecker.yaml file in the root of your repository. The .woodpecker.yaml file is used to define your pipeline steps.

:::note We support most of YAML 1.2, but preserve some behavior from 1.1 for backward compatibility. Read more at: https://github.com/go-yaml/yaml :::

Example pipeline configuration:

steps:
  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:

steps:
  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: woodpecker

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 forge and execute your pipeline.