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James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -07001:title: Job Content
2
3Job Content
4===========
5
6Zuul jobs are implemneted as Ansible playbooks. Zuul prepares the
7repositories 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
76Any variables specified in the job definition are available as Ansible
77host variables. They are added to the `vars` section of the inventory
78file under the `all` hosts group, so they are available to all hosts.
79Simply refer to them by the name specified in the job's `vars`
80section.
81
82Secrets
83~~~~~~~
84
85Secrets also appear as variables available to Ansible. Unlike job
86variables, these are not added to the inventory file (so that the
87inventory file may be kept for debugging purposes without revealing
88secrets). But they are still available to Ansible as normal
89variables. Because secrets are groups of variables, they will appear
90as a dictionary structure in templates, with the dictionary itself
91being the name of the secret, and its members the individual items in
92the secret. For example, a secret defined as::
93
94 - secret:
95 name: credentials
96 data:
97 username: foo
98 password: bar
99
100Might be used in a template as::
101
102 {{ credentials.username }} {{ credentials.password }}
103
104.. TODO: xref job vars
105
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700106Zuul Variables
James E. Blair28c8e3b2017-07-17 16:27:50 -0700107~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700108
109Zuul supplies not only the variables specified by the job definition
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700110to Ansible, but also some variables from the Zuul itself.
111
112When a pipeline is triggered an action, it enqueues items which may
113vary based on the pipeline's configuration. For example, when a new
114change is created, that change may be enqueued into the pipeline,
115while a tag may be enqueued into the pipeline when it is pushed.
116
117Information about these items is available to jobs. All of the items
118enqueued in a pipeline are git references, and therefore share some
119attributes in common. But other attributes may vary based on the type
120of item.
121
122All items provide the following information as Ansible variables:
123
124**zuul.uuid**
125 The UUID of the build. A build is a single execution of a job.
126 When an item is enqueued into a pipeline, this usually results in
127 one build of each job configured for that item's project. However,
128 items may be re-enqueued in which case another build may run. In
129 dependent pipelines, the same job may run multiple times for the
130 same item as circumstances change ahead in the queue. Each time a
131 job is run, for whatever reason, it is acompanied with a new
132 unique id.
133
134.. TODO: rename build
135
136**zuul.buildset**
137 The build set UUID. When Zuul runs jobs for an item, the collection
138 of those jobs is known as a buildset. If the configuration of items
139 ahead in a dependent pipeline changes, Zuul creates a new buildset
140 and restarts all of the jobs.
141
142**zuul.ref**
143 The git ref of the item. This will be the full path (e.g.,
144 'refs/heads/master' or 'refs/changes/...').
145
146**zuul.pipeline**
147 The name of the pipeline in which the job is being run.
148
149**zuul.job**
150 The name of the job being run.
151
152**zuul.project**
153 The item's project. This is a data structure with the following
154 fields:
155
156**zuul.project.name**
157 The name of the project, excluding hostname. E.g., `org/project`.
158
159**zuul.project.canonical_hostname**
160 The canonical hostname where the project lives. E.g.,
161 `git.example.com`.
162
163**zuul.project.canonical_name**
164 The full canonical name of the project including hostname. E.g.,
165 `git.example.com/org/project`.
166
167**zuul.tenant**
168 The name of the current Zuul tenant.
169
James E. Blair9d46f092017-07-20 16:06:20 -0700170**zuul.jobtags**
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700171 A list of tags associated with the job. Not to be confused with git
172 tags, these are simply free-form text fields that can be used by the
173 job for reporting or classification purposes.
174
James E. Blair21037782017-07-19 11:56:55 -0700175**zuul.items**
176 A data structure representing the items being tested with this
177 change.
178
179.. TODO: implement and document items
180
181
182Change Items
183++++++++++++
184
185A change to the repository. Most often, this will be a git reference
186which has not yet been merged into the repository (e.g., a gerrit
187change or a GitHub pull request). The following additional variables
188are available:
189
190**zuul.branch**
191 The target branch of the change (without the `refs/heads/` prefix).
192
193**zuul.change**
194 The identifier for the change.
195
196**zuul.patchset**
197 The patchset identifier for the change. If a change is revised,
198 this will have a different value.
199
200Branch Items
201++++++++++++
202
203This represents a branch tip. This item may have been enqueued
204because the branch was updated (via a change having merged, or a
205direct push). Or it may have been enqueued by a timer for the purpose
206of verifying the current condition of the branch. The following
207additional variables are available:
208
209**zuul.branch**
210 The name of the item's branch (without the `refs/heads/` prefix).
211
212**zuul.oldrev**
213 If the item was enqueued as the result of a change merging or being
214 pushed to the branch, the git sha of the old revision will be
215 included here. Otherwise, this value will not be present.
216
217**zuul.newrev**
218 If the item was enqueued as the result of a change merging or being
219 pushed to the branch, the git sha of the new revision will be
220 included here. Otherwise, this value will not be present.
221
222Tag Items
223+++++++++
224
225This represents a git tag. The item may have been enqueued because a
226tag was created or deleted. The following additional variables are
227available:
228
229**zuul.tag**
230 The name of the item's tag (without the `refs/tags/` prefix).
231
232**zuul.oldrev**
233 If the item was enqueued as the result of a tag being created or
234 deleted the git sha of the old revision will be included here.
235 Otherwise, this value will not be present.
236
237**zuul.newrev**
238 If the item was enqueued as the result of a tag being created or
239 deleted the git sha of the new revision will be included here.
240 Otherwise, this value will not be present.
241
242Ref Items
243+++++++++
244
245This represents a git reference that is neither a change, branch, or
246tag. Note that all items include a `ref` attribute which may be used
247to identify the ref. The following additional variables are
248available:
249
250**zuul.oldrev**
251 If the item was enqueued as the result of a ref being created,
252 deleted, or changed the git sha of the old revision will be included
253 here. Otherwise, this value will not be present.
254
255**zuul.newrev**
256 If the item was enqueued as the result of a ref being created,
257 deleted, or changed the git sha of the new revision will be included
258 here. Otherwise, this value will not be present.
259
260Working Directory
261+++++++++++++++++
262
263Additionally, some information about the working directory and the
264executor running the job is available:
James E. Blaireff5a9d2017-06-20 00:00:37 -0700265
266**zuul.executor.hostname**
267 The hostname of the executor.
268
269**zuul.executor.src_root**
270 The path to the source directory.
271
272**zuul.executor.log_root**
273 The path to the logs directory.
274
275SSH Keys
276--------
277
278Zuul starts each job with an SSH agent running and the key used to
279access the job's nodes added to that agent. Generally you won't need
280to be aware of this since Ansible will use this when performing any
281tasks on remote nodes. However, under some circumstances you may want
282to interact with the agent. For example, you may wish to add a key
283provided as a secret to the job in order to access a specific host, or
284you may want to, in a pre-playbook, replace the key used to log into
285the assigned nodes in order to further protect it from being abused by
286untrusted job content.
287
288.. TODO: describe standard lib and link to published docs for it.
289
James E. Blair88e79c02017-07-07 13:36:54 -0700290.. _return_values:
291
James E. Blair196f61a2017-06-30 15:42:29 -0700292Return Values
293-------------
294
295The job may return some values to Zuul to affect its behavior. To
296return a value, use the *zuul_return* Ansible module in a job
297playbook. For example::
298
299 tasks:
300 - zuul_return:
301 data:
302 foo: bar
303
304Will return the dictionary "{'foo': 'bar'}" to Zuul.
305
306.. TODO: xref to section describing formatting
307
308Several uses of these values are planned, but the only currently
309implemented use is to set the log URL for a build. To do so, set the
310**zuul.log_url** value. For example::
311
312 tasks:
313 - zuul_return:
314 data:
315 zuul:
316 log_url: http://logs.example.com/path/to/build/logs