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James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -07001:title: Job Content
2
3Job Content
4===========
5
David Shrewsburyc50cb572017-08-04 11:55:01 -04006Zuul jobs are implemented as Ansible playbooks. Zuul prepares the
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -07007repositories used for a job, installs any required Ansible roles, and
8then executes the job's playbooks. Any setup or artifact collection
9required is the responsibility of the job itself. While this flexible
10arrangement allows for almost any kind of job to be run by Zuul,
11batteries are included. Zuul has a standard library of jobs upon
12which to build.
13
14Working Directory
15-----------------
16
17Before starting each job, the Zuul executor creates a directory to
18hold all of the content related to the job. This includes some
19directories which are used by Zuul to configure and run Ansible and
20may not be accessible, as well as a directory tree, under ``work/``,
21that is readable and writable by the job. The hierarchy is:
22
23**work/**
24 The working directory of the job.
25
26**work/src/**
27 Contains the prepared git repositories for the job.
28
29**work/logs/**
30 Where the Ansible log for the job is written; your job
31 may place other logs here as well.
32
33Git Repositories
34----------------
35
36The git repositories in ``work/src`` contain the repositories for all
37of the projects specified in the ``required-projects`` section of the
38job, plus the project associated with the queue item if it isn't
39already in that list. In the case of a proposed change, that change
40and all of the changes ahead of it in the pipeline queue will already
41be merged into their respective repositories and target branches. The
42change's project will have the change's branch checked out, as will
43all of the other projects, if that branch exists (otherwise, a
44fallback or default branch will be used). If your job needs to
45operate on multiple branches, simply checkout the appropriate branches
46of these git repos to ensure that the job results reflect the proposed
47future state that Zuul is testing, and all dependencies are present.
48Do not use any git remotes; the local repositories are guaranteed to
49be up to date.
50
James E. Blair4d5dd252017-06-23 21:40:56 +010051The repositories will be placed on the filesystem in directories
52corresponding with the canonical hostname of their source connection.
53For example::
54
55 work/src/git.example.com/project1
56 work/src/github.com/project2
57
58Is the layout that would be present for a job which included project1
59from the connection associated to git.example.com and project2 from
60GitHub. This helps avoid collisions between projects with the same
61name, and some language environments, such as Go, expect repositories
62in this format.
63
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -070064Note that these git repositories are located on the executor; in order
65to be useful to most kinds of jobs, they will need to be present on
66the test nodes. The ``base`` job in the standard library contains a
67pre-playbook which copies the repositories to all of the job's nodes.
68It is recommended to always inherit from this base job to ensure that
69behavior.
70
71.. TODO: link to base job documentation and/or document src (and logs?) directory
72
James E. Blair28c8e3b2017-07-17 16:27:50 -070073Variables
74---------
75
Jamie Lennox7655b552017-03-17 12:33:38 +110076There are several sources of variables which are available to Ansible:
77variables defined in jobs, secrets, and site-wide variables. The
78order of precedence is:
79
80* Site-wide variables
81
82* Secrets
83
84* Job variables
85
86Meaning that a site-wide variable with the same name as any other will
87override its value, and similarly, secrets override job variables of
88the same name. Each of the three sources is described below.
89
90
91Job Variables
92~~~~~~~~~~~~~
93
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -070094Any variables specified in the job definition (using the
95:attr:`job.vars` attribute) are available as Ansible host variables.
96They are added to the ``vars`` section of the inventory file under the
97``all`` hosts group, so they are available to all hosts. Simply refer
98to them by the name specified in the job's ``vars`` section.
James E. Blair28c8e3b2017-07-17 16:27:50 -070099
100Secrets
101~~~~~~~
102
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700103:ref:`Secrets <secret>` also appear as variables available to Ansible.
104Unlike job variables, these are not added to the inventory file (so
105that the inventory file may be kept for debugging purposes without
106revealing secrets). But they are still available to Ansible as normal
James E. Blair28c8e3b2017-07-17 16:27:50 -0700107variables. Because secrets are groups of variables, they will appear
108as a dictionary structure in templates, with the dictionary itself
109being the name of the secret, and its members the individual items in
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700110the secret. For example, a secret defined as:
111
112.. code-block:: yaml
James E. Blair28c8e3b2017-07-17 16:27:50 -0700113
114 - secret:
115 name: credentials
116 data:
117 username: foo
118 password: bar
119
120Might be used in a template as::
121
122 {{ credentials.username }} {{ credentials.password }}
123
James E. Blair892cca62017-08-09 11:36:58 -0700124Secrets are only available to playbooks associated with the job
125definition which uses the secret; they are not available to playbooks
126associated with child jobs or job variants.
James E. Blair28c8e3b2017-07-17 16:27:50 -0700127
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700128Zuul Variables
James E. Blair28c8e3b2017-07-17 16:27:50 -0700129~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700130
131Zuul supplies not only the variables specified by the job definition
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700132to Ansible, but also some variables from Zuul itself.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700133
James E. Blairbabefce2017-07-20 17:14:54 -0700134When a pipeline is triggered by an action, it enqueues items which may
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700135vary based on the pipeline's configuration. For example, when a new
136change is created, that change may be enqueued into the pipeline,
137while a tag may be enqueued into the pipeline when it is pushed.
138
139Information about these items is available to jobs. All of the items
140enqueued in a pipeline are git references, and therefore share some
141attributes in common. But other attributes may vary based on the type
142of item.
143
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700144.. var:: zuul
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700145
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700146 All items provide the following information as Ansible variables
147 under the ``zuul`` key:
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700148
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700149 .. var:: build
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700150
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700151 The UUID of the build. A build is a single execution of a job.
152 When an item is enqueued into a pipeline, this usually results
153 in one build of each job configured for that item's project.
154 However, items may be re-enqueued in which case another build
155 may run. In dependent pipelines, the same job may run multiple
156 times for the same item as circumstances change ahead in the
157 queue. Each time a job is run, for whatever reason, it is
158 acompanied with a new unique id.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700159
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700160 .. var:: buildset
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700161
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700162 The build set UUID. When Zuul runs jobs for an item, the
163 collection of those jobs is known as a buildset. If the
164 configuration of items ahead in a dependent pipeline changes,
165 Zuul creates a new buildset and restarts all of the jobs.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700166
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700167 .. var:: ref
James E. Blair2ef29e92017-07-21 15:25:05 -0700168
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700169 The git ref of the item. This will be the full path (e.g.,
170 `refs/heads/master` or `refs/changes/...`).
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700171
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700172 .. var:: pipeline
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700173
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700174 The name of the pipeline in which the job is being run.
Monty Taylor299f94b2017-07-28 17:16:36 -0500175
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700176 .. var:: job
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700177
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700178 The name of the job being run.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700179
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700180 .. var:: voting
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700181
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700182 A boolean indicating whether the job is voting.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700183
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700184 .. var:: project
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700185
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700186 The item's project. This is a data structure with the following
187 fields:
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700188
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700189 .. var:: name
Monty Taylor299f94b2017-07-28 17:16:36 -0500190
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700191 The name of the project, excluding hostname. E.g., `org/project`.
Monty Taylor299f94b2017-07-28 17:16:36 -0500192
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700193 .. var:: short_name
Monty Taylor299f94b2017-07-28 17:16:36 -0500194
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700195 The name of the project, excluding directories or
196 organizations. E.g., `project`.
Monty Taylor299f94b2017-07-28 17:16:36 -0500197
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700198 .. var:: canonical_hostname
Monty Taylor299f94b2017-07-28 17:16:36 -0500199
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700200 The canonical hostname where the project lives. E.g.,
201 `git.example.com`.
Monty Taylor299f94b2017-07-28 17:16:36 -0500202
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700203 .. var:: canonical_name
204
205 The full canonical name of the project including hostname.
206 E.g., `git.example.com/org/project`.
207
Monty Taylor9e67bb72017-08-08 15:32:06 -0500208 .. var:: src_dir
209
210 The path to the source code on the remote host, relative
211 to the home dir of the remote user.
212 E.g., `src/git.example.com/org/project`.
213
214
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700215 .. var:: tenant
216
217 The name of the current Zuul tenant.
218
219 .. var:: jobtags
220
221 A list of tags associated with the job. Not to be confused with
222 git tags, these are simply free-form text fields that can be
223 used by the job for reporting or classification purposes.
224
225 .. var:: items
226 :type: list
227
228 A list of dictionaries, each representing an item being tested
229 with this change with the format:
230
231 .. var:: project
232
233 The item's project. This is a data structure with the
234 following fields:
235
236 .. var:: name
237
238 The name of the project, excluding hostname. E.g.,
239 `org/project`.
240
241 .. var:: short_name
242
243 The name of the project, excluding directories or
244 organizations. E.g., `project`.
245
246 .. var:: canonical_hostname
247
248 The canonical hostname where the project lives. E.g.,
249 `git.example.com`.
250
251 .. var:: canonical_name
252
253 The full canonical name of the project including hostname.
254 E.g., `git.example.com/org/project`.
255
Monty Taylor9e67bb72017-08-08 15:32:06 -0500256 .. var:: src_dir
257
258 The path to the source code on the remote host, relative
259 to the home dir of the remote user.
260 E.g., `src/git.example.com/org/project`.
261
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700262 .. var:: branch
263
264 The target branch of the change (without the `refs/heads/` prefix).
265
266 .. var:: change
267
268 The identifier for the change.
269
270 .. var:: patchset
271
272 The patchset identifier for the change. If a change is
273 revised, this will have a different value.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700274
275Change Items
276++++++++++++
277
278A change to the repository. Most often, this will be a git reference
279which has not yet been merged into the repository (e.g., a gerrit
280change or a GitHub pull request). The following additional variables
281are available:
282
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700283.. var:: zuul
284 :hidden:
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700285
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700286 .. var:: branch
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700287
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700288 The target branch of the change (without the `refs/heads/` prefix).
289
290 .. var:: change
291
292 The identifier for the change.
293
294 .. var:: patchset
295
296 The patchset identifier for the change. If a change is revised,
297 this will have a different value.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700298
299Branch Items
300++++++++++++
301
302This represents a branch tip. This item may have been enqueued
303because the branch was updated (via a change having merged, or a
304direct push). Or it may have been enqueued by a timer for the purpose
305of verifying the current condition of the branch. The following
306additional variables are available:
307
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700308.. var:: zuul
309 :hidden:
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700310
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700311 .. var:: branch
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700312
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700313 The name of the item's branch (without the `refs/heads/`
314 prefix).
315
316 .. var:: oldrev
317
318 If the item was enqueued as the result of a change merging or
319 being pushed to the branch, the git sha of the old revision will
320 be included here. Otherwise, this variable will be undefined.
321
322 .. var:: newrev
323
324 If the item was enqueued as the result of a change merging or
325 being pushed to the branch, the git sha of the new revision will
326 be included here. Otherwise, this variable will be undefined.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700327
328Tag Items
329+++++++++
330
331This represents a git tag. The item may have been enqueued because a
332tag was created or deleted. The following additional variables are
333available:
334
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700335.. var:: zuul
336 :hidden:
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700337
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700338 .. var:: tag
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700339
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700340 The name of the item's tag (without the `refs/tags/` prefix).
341
342 .. var:: oldrev
343
344 If the item was enqueued as the result of a tag being deleted,
345 the previous git sha of the tag will be included here. If the
346 tag was created, this variable will be undefined.
347
348 .. var:: newrev
349
350 If the item was enqueued as the result of a tag being created,
351 the new git sha of the tag will be included here. If the tag
352 was deleted, this variable will be undefined.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700353
354Ref Items
355+++++++++
356
357This represents a git reference that is neither a change, branch, or
358tag. Note that all items include a `ref` attribute which may be used
359to identify the ref. The following additional variables are
360available:
361
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700362.. var:: zuul
363 :hidden:
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700364
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700365 .. var:: oldrev
366
367 If the item was enqueued as the result of a ref being deleted,
368 the previous git sha of the ref will be included here. If the
369 ref was created, this variable will be undefined.
370
371 .. var:: newrev
372
373 If the item was enqueued as the result of a ref being created,
374 the new git sha of the ref will be included here. If the ref
375 was deleted, this variable will be undefined.
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700376
377Working Directory
378+++++++++++++++++
379
380Additionally, some information about the working directory and the
381executor running the job is available:
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700382
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700383.. var:: zuul
384 :hidden:
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700385
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700386 .. var:: executor
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700387
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700388 A number of values related to the executor running the job are
389 available:
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700390
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700391 .. var:: hostname
392
393 The hostname of the executor.
394
395 .. var:: src_root
396
397 The path to the source directory.
398
399 .. var:: log_root
400
401 The path to the logs directory.
402
403 .. var:: work_root
404
405 The path to the working directory.
Jamie Lennox7655b552017-03-17 12:33:38 +1100406
407.. _user_sitewide_variables:
408
409Site-wide Variables
410~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
411
412The Zuul administrator may define variables which will be available to
413all jobs running in the system. These are statically defined and may
414not be altered by jobs. See the :ref:`Administrator's Guide
415<admin_sitewide_variables>` for information on how a site
416administrator may define these variables.
417
418
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700419SSH Keys
420--------
421
422Zuul starts each job with an SSH agent running and the key used to
423access the job's nodes added to that agent. Generally you won't need
424to be aware of this since Ansible will use this when performing any
425tasks on remote nodes. However, under some circumstances you may want
426to interact with the agent. For example, you may wish to add a key
427provided as a secret to the job in order to access a specific host, or
428you may want to, in a pre-playbook, replace the key used to log into
429the assigned nodes in order to further protect it from being abused by
430untrusted job content.
431
432.. TODO: describe standard lib and link to published docs for it.
433
James E. Blair88e79c02017-07-07 13:36:54 -0700434.. _return_values:
435
James E. Blair196f61a2017-06-30 15:42:29 -0700436Return Values
437-------------
438
439The job may return some values to Zuul to affect its behavior. To
440return a value, use the *zuul_return* Ansible module in a job
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700441playbook. For example:
442
443.. code-block:: yaml
James E. Blair196f61a2017-06-30 15:42:29 -0700444
445 tasks:
446 - zuul_return:
447 data:
448 foo: bar
449
450Will return the dictionary "{'foo': 'bar'}" to Zuul.
451
452.. TODO: xref to section describing formatting
453
454Several uses of these values are planned, but the only currently
455implemented use is to set the log URL for a build. To do so, set the
James E. Blaird9f0efb2017-08-02 16:07:44 -0700456**zuul.log_url** value. For example:
457
458.. code-block:: yaml
James E. Blair196f61a2017-06-30 15:42:29 -0700459
460 tasks:
461 - zuul_return:
462 data:
463 zuul:
464 log_url: http://logs.example.com/path/to/build/logs