| :title: Project Configuration |
| |
| .. _project-config: |
| |
| Project Configuration |
| ===================== |
| |
| The following sections describe the main part of Zuul's configuration. |
| All of what follows is found within files inside of the repositories |
| that Zuul manages. |
| |
| Security Contexts |
| ----------------- |
| |
| When a system administrator configures Zuul to operate on a project, |
| they specify one of two security contexts for that project. A |
| *config-project* is one which is primarily tasked with holding |
| configuration information and job content for Zuul. Jobs which are |
| defined in a *config-project* are run with elevated privileges, and |
| all Zuul configuration items are available for use. It is expected |
| that changes to *config-projects* will undergo careful scrutiny before |
| being merged. |
| |
| An *untrusted-project* is a project whose primary focus is not to |
| operate Zuul, but rather it is one of the projects being tested or |
| deployed. The Zuul configuration language available to these projects |
| is somewhat restricted (as detailed in individual section below), and |
| jobs defined in these projects run in a restricted execution |
| environment since they may be operating on changes which have not yet |
| undergone review. |
| |
| Configuration Loading |
| --------------------- |
| |
| When Zuul starts, it examines all of the git repositories which are |
| specified by the system administrator in :ref:`tenant-config` and searches |
| for files in the root of each repository. Zuul looks first for a file named |
| `zuul.yaml` or a directory named `zuul.d`, and if they are not found, |
| `.zuul.yaml` or `.zuul.d` (with a leading dot). In the case of an |
| *untrusted-project*, the configuration from every branch is included, |
| however, in the case of a *config-project*, only the `master` branch is |
| examined. |
| |
| When a change is proposed to one of these files in an |
| *untrusted-project*, the configuration proposed in the change is |
| merged into the running configuration so that any changes to Zuul's |
| configuration are self-testing as part of that change. If there is a |
| configuration error, no jobs will be run and the error will be |
| reported by any applicable pipelines. In the case of a change to a |
| *config-project*, the new configuration is parsed and examined for |
| errors, but the new configuration is not used in testing the change. |
| This is because configuration in *config-projects* is able to access |
| elevated privileges and should always be reviewed before being merged. |
| |
| As soon as a change containing a Zuul configuration change merges to |
| any Zuul-managed repository, the new configuration takes effect |
| immediately. |
| |
| Configuration Items |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The `zuul.yaml` and `.zuul.yaml` configuration files are |
| YAML-formatted and are structured as a series of items, each of which |
| is described below. |
| |
| In the case of a `zuul.d` directory, Zuul recurses the directory and extends |
| the configuration using all the .yaml files in the sorted path order. |
| For example, to keep job's variants in a separate file, it needs to be loaded |
| after the main entries, for example using number prefixes in file's names:: |
| |
| * zuul.d/pipelines.yaml |
| * zuul.d/projects.yaml |
| * zuul.d/01_jobs.yaml |
| * zuul.d/02_jobs-variants.yaml |
| |
| .. _pipeline: |
| |
| Pipeline |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A pipeline describes a workflow operation in Zuul. It associates jobs |
| for a given project with triggering and reporting events. |
| |
| Its flexible configuration allows for characterizing any number of |
| workflows, and by specifying each as a named configuration, makes it |
| easy to apply similar workflow operations to projects or groups of |
| projects. |
| |
| By way of example, one of the primary uses of Zuul is to perform |
| project gating. To do so, one can create a *gate* pipeline which |
| tells Zuul that when a certain event (such as approval by a code |
| reviewer) occurs, the corresponding change or pull request should be |
| enqueued into the pipeline. When that happens, the jobs which have |
| been configured to run for that project in the *gate* pipeline are |
| run, and when they complete, the pipeline reports the results to the |
| user. |
| |
| Pipeline configuration items may only appear in *config-projects*. |
| |
| Generally, a Zuul administrator would define a small number of |
| pipelines which represent the workflow processes used in their |
| environment. Each project can then be added to the available |
| pipelines as appropriate. |
| |
| Here is an example *check* pipeline, which runs whenever a new |
| patchset is created in Gerrit. If the associated jobs all report |
| success, the pipeline reports back to Gerrit with a *Verified* vote of |
| +1, or if at least one of them fails, a -1:: |
| |
| - pipeline: |
| name: check |
| manager: independent |
| trigger: |
| my_gerrit: |
| - event: patchset-created |
| success: |
| my_gerrit: |
| verified: 1 |
| failure: |
| my_gerrit |
| verified: -1 |
| |
| .. TODO: See TODO for more annotated examples of common pipeline configurations. |
| |
| The attributes available on a pipeline are as follows (all are |
| optional unless otherwise specified): |
| |
| **name** (required) |
| This is used later in the project definition to indicate what jobs |
| should be run for events in the pipeline. |
| |
| **manager** (required) |
| There are currently two schemes for managing pipelines: |
| |
| .. _independent_pipeline_manager: |
| |
| *independent* |
| Every event in this pipeline should be treated as independent of |
| other events in the pipeline. This is appropriate when the order of |
| events in the pipeline doesn't matter because the results of the |
| actions this pipeline performs can not affect other events in the |
| pipeline. For example, when a change is first uploaded for review, |
| you may want to run tests on that change to provide early feedback |
| to reviewers. At the end of the tests, the change is not going to |
| be merged, so it is safe to run these tests in parallel without |
| regard to any other changes in the pipeline. They are independent. |
| |
| Another type of pipeline that is independent is a post-merge |
| pipeline. In that case, the changes have already merged, so the |
| results can not affect any other events in the pipeline. |
| |
| .. _dependent_pipeline_manager: |
| |
| *dependent* |
| The dependent pipeline manager is designed for gating. It ensures |
| that every change is tested exactly as it is going to be merged |
| into the repository. An ideal gating system would test one change |
| at a time, applied to the tip of the repository, and only if that |
| change passed tests would it be merged. Then the next change in |
| line would be tested the same way. In order to achieve parallel |
| testing of changes, the dependent pipeline manager performs |
| speculative execution on changes. It orders changes based on |
| their entry into the pipeline. It begins testing all changes in |
| parallel, assuming that each change ahead in the pipeline will pass |
| its tests. If they all succeed, all the changes can be tested and |
| merged in parallel. If a change near the front of the pipeline |
| fails its tests, each change behind it ignores whatever tests have |
| been completed and are tested again without the change in front. |
| This way gate tests may run in parallel but still be tested |
| correctly, exactly as they will appear in the repository when |
| merged. |
| |
| For more detail on the theory and operation of Zuul's dependent |
| pipeline manager, see: :doc:`gating`. |
| |
| **allow-secrets** |
| This is a boolean which can be used to prevent jobs which require |
| secrets from running in this pipeline. Some pipelines run on |
| proposed changes and therefore execute code which has not yet been |
| reviewed. In such a case, allowing a job to use a secret could |
| result in that secret being exposed. The default is False, meaning |
| that in order to run jobs with secrets, this must be explicitly |
| enabled on each Pipeline where that is safe. |
| |
| For more information, see :ref:`secret`. |
| |
| **description** |
| This field may be used to provide a textual description of the |
| pipeline. It may appear in the status page or in documentation. |
| |
| **success-message** |
| The introductory text in reports when all the voting jobs are |
| successful. Defaults to "Build successful." |
| |
| **failure-message** |
| The introductory text in reports when at least one voting job fails. |
| Defaults to "Build failed." |
| |
| **merge-failure-message** |
| The introductory text in the message reported when a change fails to |
| merge with the current state of the repository. Defaults to "Merge |
| failed." |
| |
| **footer-message** |
| Supplies additional information after test results. Useful for |
| adding information about the CI system such as debugging and contact |
| details. |
| |
| **trigger** |
| At least one trigger source must be supplied for each pipeline. |
| Triggers are not exclusive -- matching events may be placed in |
| multiple pipelines, and they will behave independently in each of |
| the pipelines they match. |
| |
| Triggers are loaded from their connection name. The driver type of |
| the connection will dictate which options are available. |
| See :ref:`drivers`. |
| |
| **require** |
| If this section is present, it established pre-requisites for any |
| kind of item entering the Pipeline. Regardless of how the item is |
| to be enqueued (via any trigger or automatic dependency resolution), |
| the conditions specified here must be met or the item will not be |
| enqueued. |
| |
| .. _pipeline-require-approval: |
| |
| **approval** |
| This requires that a certain kind of approval be present for the |
| current patchset of the change (the approval could be added by the |
| event in question). It takes several sub-parameters, all of which |
| are optional and are combined together so that there must be an |
| approval matching all specified requirements. |
| |
| *username* |
| If present, an approval from this username is required. It is |
| treated as a regular expression. |
| |
| *email* |
| If present, an approval with this email address is required. It |
| is treated as a regular expression. |
| |
| *email-filter* (deprecated) |
| A deprecated alternate spelling of *email*. Only one of *email* or |
| *email_filter* should be used. |
| |
| *older-than* |
| If present, the approval must be older than this amount of time |
| to match. Provide a time interval as a number with a suffix of |
| "w" (weeks), "d" (days), "h" (hours), "m" (minutes), "s" |
| (seconds). Example ``48h`` or ``2d``. |
| |
| *newer-than* |
| If present, the approval must be newer than this amount of time |
| to match. Same format as "older-than". |
| |
| Any other field is interpreted as a review category and value |
| pair. For example ``verified: 1`` would require that the approval |
| be for a +1 vote in the "Verified" column. The value may either |
| be a single value or a list: ``verified: [1, 2]`` would match |
| either a +1 or +2 vote. |
| |
| **open** |
| A boolean value (``true`` or ``false``) that indicates whether the change |
| must be open or closed in order to be enqueued. |
| |
| **current-patchset** |
| A boolean value (``true`` or ``false``) that indicates whether the change |
| must be the current patchset in order to be enqueued. |
| |
| **status** |
| A string value that corresponds with the status of the change |
| reported by the trigger. |
| |
| **reject** |
| If this section is present, it establishes pre-requisites that can |
| block an item from being enqueued. It can be considered a negative |
| version of **require**. |
| |
| **approval** |
| This takes a list of approvals. If an approval matches the provided |
| criteria the change can not be entered into the pipeline. It follows |
| the same syntax as the :ref:`"require approval" pipeline above |
| <pipeline-require-approval>`. |
| |
| Example to reject a change with any negative vote:: |
| |
| reject: |
| approval: |
| - code-review: [-1, -2] |
| |
| **dequeue-on-new-patchset** |
| Normally, if a new patchset is uploaded to a change that is in a |
| pipeline, the existing entry in the pipeline will be removed (with |
| jobs canceled and any dependent changes that can no longer merge as |
| well. To suppress this behavior (and allow jobs to continue |
| running), set this to ``false``. Default: ``true``. |
| |
| **ignore-dependencies** |
| In any kind of pipeline (dependent or independent), Zuul will |
| attempt to enqueue all dependencies ahead of the current change so |
| that they are tested together (independent pipelines report the |
| results of each change regardless of the results of changes ahead). |
| To ignore dependencies completely in an independent pipeline, set |
| this to ``true``. This option is ignored by dependent pipelines. |
| The default is: ``false``. |
| |
| **precedence** |
| Indicates how the build scheduler should prioritize jobs for |
| different pipelines. Each pipeline may have one precedence, jobs |
| for pipelines with a higher precedence will be run before ones with |
| lower. The value should be one of ``high``, ``normal``, or ``low``. |
| Default: ``normal``. |
| |
| The following options configure *reporters*. Reporters are |
| complementary to triggers; where a trigger is an event on a connection |
| which causes Zuul to enqueue an item, a reporter is the action |
| performed on a connection when an item is dequeued after its jobs |
| complete. The actual syntax for a reporter is defined by the driver |
| which implements it. See :ref:`drivers` for more information. |
| |
| **success** |
| Describes where Zuul should report to if all the jobs complete |
| successfully. This section is optional; if it is omitted, Zuul will |
| run jobs and do nothing on success -- it will not report at all. If |
| the section is present, the listed reporters will be asked to report |
| on the jobs. The reporters are listed by their connection name. The |
| options available depend on the driver for the supplied connection. |
| |
| **failure** |
| These reporters describe what Zuul should do if at least one job |
| fails. |
| |
| **merge-failure** |
| These reporters describe what Zuul should do if it is unable to |
| merge in the patchset. If no merge-failure reporters are listed then |
| the ``failure`` reporters will be used to notify of unsuccessful |
| merges. |
| |
| **start** |
| These reporters describe what Zuul should do when a change is added |
| to the pipeline. This can be used, for example, to reset a |
| previously reported result. |
| |
| **disabled** |
| These reporters describe what Zuul should do when a pipeline is |
| disabled. See ``disable-after-consecutive-failures``. |
| |
| The following options can be used to alter Zuul's behavior to mitigate |
| situations in which jobs are failing frequently (perhaps due to a |
| problem with an external dependency, or unusually high |
| non-deterministic test failures). |
| |
| **disable-after-consecutive-failures** |
| If set, a pipeline can enter a ''disabled'' state if too many changes |
| in a row fail. When this value is exceeded the pipeline will stop |
| reporting to any of the ``success``, ``failure`` or ``merge-failure`` |
| reporters and instead only report to the ``disabled`` reporters. |
| (No ``start`` reports are made when a pipeline is disabled). |
| |
| **window** |
| Dependent pipeline managers only. Zuul can rate limit dependent |
| pipelines in a manner similar to TCP flow control. Jobs are only |
| started for items in the queue if they are within the actionable |
| window for the pipeline. The initial length of this window is |
| configurable with this value. The value given should be a positive |
| integer value. A value of ``0`` disables rate limiting on the |
| DependentPipelineManager. Default: ``20``. |
| |
| **window-floor** |
| Dependent pipeline managers only. This is the minimum value for the |
| window described above. Should be a positive non zero integer value. |
| Default: ``3``. |
| |
| **window-increase-type** |
| Dependent pipeline managers only. This value describes how the window |
| should grow when changes are successfully merged by zuul. A value of |
| ``linear`` indicates that ``window-increase-factor`` should be added |
| to the previous window value. A value of ``exponential`` indicates |
| that ``window-increase-factor`` should be multiplied against the |
| previous window value and the result will become the window size. |
| Default: ``linear``. |
| |
| **window-increase-factor** |
| Dependent pipeline managers only. The value to be added or multiplied |
| against the previous window value to determine the new window after |
| successful change merges. |
| Default: ``1``. |
| |
| **window-decrease-type** |
| Dependent pipeline managers only. This value describes how the window |
| should shrink when changes are not able to be merged by Zuul. A value |
| of ``linear`` indicates that ``window-decrease-factor`` should be |
| subtracted from the previous window value. A value of ``exponential`` |
| indicates that ``window-decrease-factor`` should be divided against |
| the previous window value and the result will become the window size. |
| Default: ``exponential``. |
| |
| **window-decrease-factor** |
| Dependent pipline managers only. The value to be subtracted or divided |
| against the previous window value to determine the new window after |
| unsuccessful change merges. |
| Default: ``2``. |
| |
| |
| .. _job: |
| |
| Job |
| ~~~ |
| |
| A job is a unit of work performed by Zuul on an item enqueued into a |
| pipeline. Items may run any number of jobs (which may depend on each |
| other). Each job is an invocation of an Ansible playbook with a |
| specific inventory of hosts. The actual tasks that are run by the job |
| appear in the playbook for that job while the attributes that appear in the |
| Zuul configuration specify information about when, where, and how the |
| job should be run. |
| |
| Jobs in Zuul support inheritance. Any job may specify a single parent |
| job, and any attributes not set on the child job are collected from |
| the parent job. In this way, a configuration structure may be built |
| starting with very basic jobs which describe characteristics that all |
| jobs on the system should have, progressing through stages of |
| specialization before arriving at a particular job. A job may inherit |
| from any other job in any project (however, if the other job is marked |
| as `final`, some attributes may not be overidden). |
| |
| Jobs also support a concept called variance. The first time a job |
| definition appears is called the reference definition of the job. |
| Subsequent job definitions with the same name are called variants. |
| These may have different selection criteria which indicate to Zuul |
| that, for instance, the job should behave differently on a different |
| git branch. Unlike inheritance, all job variants must be defined in |
| the same project. |
| |
| When Zuul decides to run a job, it performs a process known as |
| freezing the job. Because any number of job variants may be |
| applicable, Zuul collects all of the matching variants and applies |
| them in the order they appeared in the configuration. The resulting |
| frozen job is built from attributes gathered from all of the |
| matching variants. In this way, exactly what is run is dependent on |
| the pipeline, project, branch, and content of the item. |
| |
| In addition to the job's main playbook, each job may specify one or |
| more pre- and post-playbooks. These are run, in order, before and |
| after (respectively) the main playbook. They may be used to set up |
| and tear down resources needed by the main playbook. When combined |
| with inheritance, they provide powerful tools for job construction. A |
| job only has a single main playbook, and when inheriting from a |
| parent, the child's main playbook overrides (or replaces) the |
| parent's. However, the pre- and post-playbooks are appended and |
| prepended in a nesting fashion. So if a parent job and child job both |
| specified pre and post playbooks, the sequence of playbooks run would |
| be: |
| |
| * parent pre-run playbook |
| * child pre-run playbook |
| * child playbook |
| * child post-run playbook |
| * parent post-run playbook |
| |
| Further inheritance would nest even deeper. |
| |
| Here is an example of two job definitions:: |
| |
| - job: |
| name: base |
| pre-run: copy-git-repos |
| post-run: copy-logs |
| |
| - job: |
| name: run-tests |
| parent: base |
| nodes: |
| - name: test-node |
| image: fedora |
| |
| The following attributes are available on a job; all are optional |
| unless otherwise specified: |
| |
| **name** (required) |
| The name of the job. By default, Zuul looks for a playbook with |
| this name to use as the main playbook for the job. This name is |
| also referenced later in a project pipeline configuration. |
| |
| **parent** |
| Specifies a job to inherit from. The parent job can be defined in |
| this or any other project. Any attributes not specified on a job |
| will be collected from its parent. |
| |
| **description** |
| A textual description of the job. Not currently used directly by |
| Zuul, but it is used by the zuul-sphinx extension to Sphinx to |
| auto-document Zuul jobs (in which case it is interpreted as |
| ReStructuredText. |
| |
| **success-message** |
| Normally when a job succeeds, the string "SUCCESS" is reported as |
| the result for the job. If set, this option may be used to supply a |
| different string. Default: "SUCCESS". |
| |
| **failure-message** |
| Normally when a job fails, the string "FAILURE" is reported as |
| the result for the job. If set, this option may be used to supply a |
| different string. Default: "FAILURE". |
| |
| **success-url** |
| When a job succeeds, this URL is reported along with the result. If |
| this value is not supplied, Zuul uses the content of the job |
| :ref:`return value <return_values>` **zuul.log_url**. This is |
| recommended as it allows the code which stores the URL to the job |
| artifacts to report exactly where they were stored. To override |
| this value, or if it is not set, supply an absolute URL in this |
| field. If a relative URL is supplied in this field, and |
| **zuul.log_url** is set, then the two will be combined to produce |
| the URL used for the report. This can be used to specify that |
| certain jobs should "deep link" into the stored job artifacts. |
| Default: none. |
| |
| **failure-url** |
| When a job fails, this URL is reported along with the result. |
| Otherwise behaves the same as **success-url**. |
| |
| **hold-following-changes** |
| In a dependent pipeline, this option may be used to indicate that no |
| jobs should start on any items which depend on the current item |
| until this job has completed successfully. This may be used to |
| conserve build resources, at the expense of inhibiting the |
| parallelization which speeds the processing of items in a dependent |
| pipeline. A boolean value, default: false. |
| |
| **voting** |
| Indicates whether the result of this job should be used in |
| determining the overall result of the item. A boolean value, |
| default: true. |
| |
| **semaphore** |
| The name of a :ref:`semaphore` which should be acquired and released |
| when the job begins and ends. If the semaphore is at maximum |
| capacity, then Zuul will wait until it can be acquired before |
| starting the job. Default: none. |
| |
| **tags** |
| Metadata about this job. Tags are units of information attached to |
| the job; they do not affect Zuul's behavior, but they can be used |
| within the job to characterize the job. For example, a job which |
| tests a certain subsystem could be tagged with the name of that |
| subsystem, and if the job's results are reported into a database, |
| then the results of all jobs affecting that subsystem could be |
| queried. This attribute is specified as a list of strings, and when |
| inheriting jobs or applying variants, tags accumulate in a set, so |
| the result is always a set of all the tags from all the jobs and |
| variants used in constructing the frozen job, with no duplication. |
| Default: none. |
| |
| **branches** |
| A regular expression (or list of regular expressions) which describe |
| on what branches a job should run (or in the case of variants: to |
| alter the behavior of a job for a certain branch). |
| |
| If there is no job definition for a given job which matches the |
| branch of an item, then that job is not run for the item. |
| Otherwise, all of the job variants which match that branch (and any |
| other selection criteria) are used when freezing the job. |
| |
| This example illustrates a job called *run-tests* which uses a |
| nodeset based on the current release of an operating system to |
| perform its tests, except when testing changes to the stable/2.0 |
| branch, in which case it uses an older release:: |
| |
| - job: |
| name: run-tests |
| nodes: current-release |
| |
| - job: |
| name: run-tests |
| branch: stable/2.0 |
| nodes: old-release |
| |
| In some cases, Zuul uses an implied value for the branch specifier |
| if none is supplied: |
| |
| * For a job definition in a *config-project*, no implied branch |
| specifier is used. If no branch specifier appears, the job |
| applies to all branches. |
| |
| * In the case of an *untrusted-project*, no implied branch specifier |
| is applied to the reference definition of a job. That is to say, |
| that if the first appearance of the job definition appears without |
| a branch specifier, then it will apply to all branches. Note that |
| when collecting its configuration, Zuul reads the `master` branch |
| of a given project first, then other branches in alphabetical |
| order. |
| |
| * Any further job variants other than the reference definition in an |
| *untrusted-project* will, if they do not have a branch specifier, |
| will have an implied branch specifier for the current branch |
| applied. |
| |
| This allows for the very simple and expected workflow where if a |
| project defines a job on the master branch with no branch specifier, |
| and then creates a new branch based on master, any changes to that |
| job definition within the new branch only affect that branch. |
| |
| **files** |
| This attribute indicates that the job should only run on changes |
| where the specified files are modified. This is a regular |
| expression or list of regular expressions. Default: none. |
| |
| **irrelevant-files** |
| This is a negative complement of `files`. It indicates that the job |
| should run unless *all* of the files changed match this list. In |
| other words, if the regular expression `docs/.*` is supplied, then |
| this job will not run if the only files changed are in the docs |
| directory. A regular expression or list of regular expressions. |
| Default: none. |
| |
| **auth** |
| Authentication information to be made available to the job. This is |
| a dictionary with two potential keys: |
| |
| **inherit** |
| A boolean indicating that the authentication information referenced |
| by this job should be able to be inherited by child jobs. Normally |
| when a job inherits from another job, the auth section is not |
| included. This permits jobs to inherit the same basic structure and |
| playbook, but ensures that secret information is unable to be |
| exposed by a child job which may alter the job's behavior. If it is |
| safe for the contents of the authentication section to be used by |
| child jobs, set this to ``true``. Default: ``false``. |
| |
| **secrets** |
| A list of secrets which may be used by the job. A :ref:`secret` is |
| a named collection of private information defined separately in the |
| configuration. The secrets that appear here must be defined in the |
| same project as this job definition. |
| |
| In the future, other types of authentication information may be |
| added. |
| |
| **nodes** |
| A list of nodes which should be supplied to the job. This parameter |
| may be supplied either as a string, in which case it references a |
| :ref:`nodeset` definition which appears elsewhere in the |
| configuration, or a list, in which case it is interpreted in the |
| same way as a Nodeset definition (in essence, it is an anonymous |
| Node definition unique to this job). See the :ref:`nodeset` |
| reference for the syntax to use in that case. |
| |
| If a job has an empty or no node definition, it will still run and |
| may be able to perform actions on the Zuul executor. |
| |
| **override-branch** |
| When Zuul runs jobs for a proposed change, it normally checks out |
| the branch associated with that change on every project present in |
| the job. If jobs are running on a ref (such as a branch tip or |
| tag), then that ref is normally checked out. This attribute is used |
| to override that behavior and indicate that this job should, |
| regardless of the branch for the queue item, use the indicated |
| branch instead. This can be used, for example, to run a previous |
| version of the software (from a stable maintenance branch) under |
| test even if the change being tested applies to a different branch |
| (this is only likely to be useful if there is some cross-branch |
| interaction with some component of the system being tested). See |
| also the project-specific **override-branch** attribute under |
| **required-projects** to apply this behavior to a subset of a job's |
| projects. |
| |
| **timeout** |
| The time in minutes that the job should be allowed to run before it |
| is automatically aborted and failure is reported. If no timeout is |
| supplied, the job may run indefinitely. Supplying a timeout is |
| highly recommended. |
| |
| **attempts** |
| When Zuul encounters an error running a job's pre-run playbook, Zuul |
| will stop and restart the job. Errors during the main or |
| post-run -playbook phase of a job are not affected by this parameter |
| (they are reported immediately). This parameter controls the number |
| of attempts to make before an error is reported. Default: 3. |
| |
| **pre-run** |
| The name of a playbook or list of playbooks without file extension |
| to run before the main body of a job. The full path to the playbook |
| in the repo where the job is defined is expected. |
| |
| When a job inherits from a parent, the child's pre-run playbooks are |
| run after the parent's. See :ref:`job` for more information. |
| |
| **post-run** |
| The name of a playbook or list of playbooks without file extension |
| to run after the main body of a job. The full path to the playbook |
| in the repo where the job is defined is expected. |
| |
| When a job inherits from a parent, the child's post-run playbooks |
| are run before the parent's. See :ref:`job` for more information. |
| |
| **run** |
| The name of the main playbook for this job. This parameter is |
| not normally necessary, as it defaults to a playbook with the |
| same name as the job inside of the `playbooks/` directory (e.g., |
| the `foo` job would default to `playbooks/foo`. However, if a |
| playbook with a different name is needed, it can be specified |
| here. The file extension is not required, but the full path |
| within the repo is. When a child inherits from a parent, a |
| playbook with the name of the child job is implicitly searched |
| first, before falling back on the playbook used by the parent |
| job (unless the child job specifies a ``run`` attribute, in which |
| case that value is used). Example:: |
| |
| run: playbooks/<name of the job> |
| |
| **roles** |
| A list of Ansible roles to prepare for the job. Because a job runs |
| an Ansible playbook, any roles which are used by the job must be |
| prepared and installed by Zuul before the job begins. This value is |
| a list of dictionaries, each of which indicates one of two types of |
| roles: a Galaxy role, which is simply a role that is installed from |
| Ansible Galaxy, or a Zuul role, which is a role provided by a |
| project managed by Zuul. Zuul roles are able to benefit from |
| speculative merging and cross-project dependencies when used by |
| playbooks in untrusted projects. Roles are added to the Ansible |
| role path in the order they appear on the job -- roles earlier in |
| the list will take precedence over those which follow. |
| |
| In the case of job inheritance or variance, the roles used for each |
| of the playbooks run by the job will be only those which were |
| defined along with that playbook. If a child job inherits from a |
| parent which defines a pre and post playbook, then the pre and post |
| playbooks it inherits from the parent job will run only with the |
| roles that were defined on the parent. If the child adds its own |
| pre and post playbooks, then any roles added by the child will be |
| available to the child's playbooks. This is so that a job which |
| inherits from a parent does not inadvertantly alter the behavior of |
| the parent's playbooks by the addition of conflicting roles. Roles |
| added by a child will appear before those it inherits from its |
| parent. |
| |
| A project which supplies a role may be structured in one of two |
| configurations: a bare role (in which the role exists at the root of |
| the project), or a contained role (in which the role exists within |
| the `roles/` directory of the project, perhaps along with other |
| roles). In the case of a contained role, the `roles/` directory of |
| the project is added to the role search path. In the case of a bare |
| role, the project itself is added to the role search path. In case |
| the name of the project is not the name under which the role should |
| be installed (and therefore referenced from Ansible), the `name` |
| attribute may be used to specify an alternate. |
| |
| A job automatically has the project in which it is defined added to |
| the roles path if that project appears to contain a role or `roles/` |
| directory. By default, the project is added to the path under its |
| own name, however, that may be changed by explicitly listing the |
| project in the roles list in the usual way. |
| |
| .. note:: galaxy roles are not yet implemented |
| |
| **galaxy** |
| The name of the role in Ansible Galaxy. If this attribute is |
| supplied, Zuul will search Ansible Galaxy for a role by this name |
| and install it. Mutually exclusive with ``zuul``; either |
| ``galaxy`` or ``zuul`` must be supplied. |
| |
| **zuul** |
| The name of a Zuul project which supplies the role. Mutually |
| exclusive with ``galaxy``; either ``galaxy`` or ``zuul`` must be |
| supplied. |
| |
| **name** |
| The installation name of the role. In the case of a bare role, |
| the role will be made available under this name. Ignored in the |
| case of a contained role. |
| |
| **required-projects** |
| A list of other projects which are used by this job. Any Zuul |
| projects specified here will also be checked out by Zuul into the |
| working directory for the job. Speculative merging and cross-repo |
| dependencies will be honored. |
| |
| The format for this attribute is either a list of strings or |
| dictionaries. Strings are interpreted as project names, |
| dictionaries may have the following attributes: |
| |
| **name** |
| The name of the required project. |
| |
| **override-branch** |
| When Zuul runs jobs for a proposed change, it normally checks out |
| the branch associated with that change on every project present in |
| the job. If jobs are running on a ref (such as a branch tip or |
| tag), then that ref is normally checked out. This attribute is |
| used to override that behavior and indicate that this job should, |
| regardless of the branch for the queue item, use the indicated |
| branch instead, for only this project. See also the |
| **override-branch** attribute of jobs to apply the same behavior |
| to all projects in a job. |
| |
| **vars** |
| |
| A dictionary of variables to supply to Ansible. When inheriting from |
| a job (or creating a variant of a job) vars are merged with previous |
| definitions. This means a variable definition with the same name will |
| override a previously defined variable, but new variable names will be |
| added to the set of defined variables. |
| |
| **dependencies** |
| A list of other jobs upon which this job depends. Zuul will not |
| start executing this job until all of its dependencies have |
| completed successfully, and if one or more of them fail, this job |
| will not be run. |
| |
| **allowed-projects** |
| A list of Zuul projects which may use this job. By default, a job |
| may be used by any other project known to Zuul, however, some jobs |
| use resources or perform actions which are not appropriate for other |
| projects. In these cases, a list of projects which are allowed to |
| use this job may be supplied. If this list is not empty, then it |
| must be an exhaustive list of all projects permitted to use the job. |
| The current project (where the job is defined) is not automatically |
| included, so if it should be able to run this job, then it must be |
| explicitly listed. Default: the empty list (all projects may use |
| the job). |
| |
| |
| .. _project: |
| |
| Project |
| ~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A project corresponds to a source code repository with which Zuul is |
| configured to interact. The main responsibility of the `Project` |
| configuration item is to specify which jobs should run in which |
| pipelines for a given project. Within each `Project` definition, a |
| section for each `Pipeline` may appear. This project-pipeline |
| definition is what determines how a project participates in a |
| pipeline. |
| |
| Consider the following `Project` definition:: |
| |
| - project: |
| name: yoyodyne |
| check: |
| jobs: |
| - check-syntax |
| - unit-tests |
| gate: |
| queue: integrated |
| jobs: |
| - unit-tests |
| - integration-tests |
| |
| The project has two project-pipeline stanzas, one for the `check` |
| pipeline, and one for `gate`. Each specifies which jobs shuld run |
| when a change for that project enteres the respective pipeline -- when |
| a change enters `check`, the `check-syntax` and `unit-test` jobs are |
| run. |
| |
| Pipelines which use the dependent pipeline manager (e.g., the `gate` |
| example shown earlier) maintain separate queues for groups of |
| projects. When Zuul serializes a set of changes which represent |
| future potential project states, it must know about all of the |
| projects within Zuul which may have an effect on the outcome of the |
| jobs it runs. If project *A* uses project *B* as a library, then Zuul |
| must be told about that relationship so that it knows to serialize |
| changes to A and B together, so that it does not merge a change to B |
| while it is testing a change to A. |
| |
| Zuul could simply assume that all projects are related, or even infer |
| relationships by which projects a job indicates it uses, however, in a |
| large system that would become unwieldy very quickly, and |
| unnecessarily delay changes to unrelated projects. To allow for |
| flexibility in the construction of groups of related projects, the |
| change queues used by dependent pipeline managers are specified |
| manually. To group two or more related projects into a shared queue |
| for a dependent pipeline, set the ``queue`` parameter to the same |
| value for those projects. |
| |
| The `gate` project-pipeline definition above specifies that this |
| project participates in the `integrated` shared queue for that |
| pipeline. |
| |
| In addition to a project-pipeline definition for one or more |
| `Pipelines`, the following attributes may appear in a Project: |
| |
| **name** (required) |
| The name of the project. If Zuul is configured with two or more |
| unique projects with the same name, the canonical hostname for the |
| project should be included (e.g., `git.example.com/foo`). |
| |
| **templates** |
| A list of :ref:`project-template` references; the project-pipeline |
| definitions of each Project Template will be applied to this |
| project. If more than one template includes jobs for a given |
| pipeline, they will be combined, as will any jobs specified in |
| project-pipeline definitions on the project itself. |
| |
| .. _project-template: |
| |
| Project Template |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A Project Template defines one or more project-pipeline definitions |
| which can be re-used by multiple projects. |
| |
| A Project Template uses the same syntax as a :ref:`project` |
| definition, however, in the case of a template, the ``name`` attribute |
| does not refer to the name of a project, but rather names the template |
| so that it can be referenced in a `Project` definition. |
| |
| .. _secret: |
| |
| Secret |
| ~~~~~~ |
| |
| A Secret is a collection of private data for use by one or more jobs. |
| In order to maintain the security of the data, the values are usually |
| encrypted, however, data which are not sensitive may be provided |
| unencrypted as well for convenience. |
| |
| A Secret may only be used by jobs defined within the same project. To |
| use a secret, a :ref:`job` must specify the secret within its `auth` |
| section. To protect against jobs in other repositories declaring a |
| job with a secret as a parent and then exposing that secret, jobs |
| which inherit from a job with secrets will not inherit the secrets |
| themselves. To alter that behavior, see the `inherit` job attribute. |
| Further, jobs which do not permit children to inherit secrets (the |
| default) are also automatically marked `final`, meaning that their |
| execution related attributes may not be changed in a project-pipeline |
| stanza. This is to protect against a job with secrets defined in one |
| project being used by another project in a way which might expose the |
| secrets. If a job with secrets is unsafe to be used by other |
| projects, the `allowed-projects` job attribute can be used to restrict |
| the projects which can invoke that job. Finally, pipelines which are |
| used to execute proposed but unreviewed changes can set the |
| `allow-secrets` attribute to indicate that they should not supply |
| secrets at all in order to protect against someone proposing a change |
| which exposes a secret. |
| |
| The following attributes are required: |
| |
| **name** (required) |
| The name of the secret, used in a :ref:`Job` definition to request |
| the secret. |
| |
| **data** (required) |
| A dictionary which will be added to the Ansible variables available |
| to the job. The values can either be plain text strings, or |
| encrypted values. See :ref:`encryption` for more information. |
| |
| .. _nodeset: |
| |
| Nodeset |
| ~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A Nodeset is a named collection of nodes for use by a job. Jobs may |
| specify what nodes they require individually, however, by defining |
| groups of node types once and referring to them by name, job |
| configuration may be simplified. |
| |
| A Nodeset requires two attributes: |
| |
| **name** (required) |
| The name of the Nodeset, to be referenced by a :ref:`job`. |
| |
| **nodes** (required) |
| A list of node definitions, each of which has the following format: |
| |
| **name** (required) |
| The name of the node. This will appear in the Ansible inventory |
| for the job. |
| |
| **label** (required) |
| The Nodepool label for the node. Zuul will request a node with |
| this label. |
| |
| .. _semaphore: |
| |
| Semaphore |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Semaphores can be used to restrict the number of certain jobs which |
| are running at the same time. This may be useful for jobs which |
| access shared or limited resources. A semaphore has a value which |
| represents the maximum number of jobs which use that semaphore at the |
| same time. |
| |
| Semaphores are never subject to dynamic reconfiguration. If the value |
| of a semaphore is changed, it will take effect only when the change |
| where it is updated is merged. An example follows:: |
| |
| - semaphore: |
| name: semaphore-foo |
| max: 5 |
| - semaphore: |
| name: semaphore-bar |
| max: 3 |
| |
| The following attributes are available: |
| |
| **name** (required) |
| The name of the semaphore, referenced by jobs. |
| |
| **max** |
| The maximum number of running jobs which can use this semaphore. |
| Defaults to 1. |