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gocd-yaml-config-plugin

GoCD plugin to keep pipelines and environments configuration in source-control in YAML. See this document to find out what are GoCD configuration repositories.

This is the second GoCD configuration plugin, which enhances some of shortcomings of JSON configuration plugin

  • Format is concise. Unlike JSON, there are no unnecessary quotations ", brackets {} and commas ,
  • Tries to enforce correctness where possible. By using maps instead of lists and shorter object graphs.
  • Allows to have multiple pipelines and environments in single file. But doesn't force it.
  • Comments in configuration files - YAML supports comments, so you can explain why pipeline/environment it is configured like this.

Table of contents

  1. Setup
  2. Example configuration
  3. File pattern
  4. Validation
  5. Format reference
  6. Format version
  7. Issues and questions
  8. Development
  9. License

Setup

Step 1: GoCD versions newer than 17.8.0 already have the plugin bundled. You don't need to install anything.

If you're using GoCD version older than 17.8.0, you need to install the plugin in the GoCD server. Download it from the releases page and place it on the GoCD server in plugins/external directory.

Step 2: Follow the GoCD documentation to add a new configuration repository.

You can use the example repository at: https://github.com/tomzo/gocd-yaml-config-example.git.

In your config repo (tomzo/gocd-yaml-config-example.git in this case), ensure that your GoCD yaml config is suffixed with .gocd.yaml. Any file ending in .gocd.yaml is picked up by the plugin. Give it a minute or so for the polling to happen. Once that happens, you should see your pipeline(s) on your dashboard.

Example

More examples are in test resources.

#ci.gocd.yaml
format_version: 9
environments:
  testing:
    environment_variables:
      DEPLOYMENT: testing
    secure_variables:
      ENV_PASSWORD: "s&Du#@$xsSa"
    pipelines:
      - example-deploy-testing
      - build-testing
pipelines:
  mypipe1: # definition of mypipe1 pipeline
    group: mygroup # note that the group name can contain only of alphanumeric & underscore characters
    display_order: 10
    label_template: "${mygit[:8]}"
    lock_behavior: none
    parameters: # list of parameters that can be configured for a pipeline
      param1: value1
    materials:
      mygit: # this is the name of material, the name can contain only of alphanumeric & underscore characters
        # keyword git says about type of material and url at once
        git: https://my.example.org/mygit.git
        branch: ci
      myupstream: # this name does not matter, but there should be no 2 materials with the same name
        # type is optional here, material type is implied based on presence of pipeline and stage fields
        # type: dependency
        pipeline: pipe2
        stage: test
    stages: # list of stages in order
      - build: # name of stage
          clean_workspace: true
          jobs:
            csharp: # name of the job
              resources:
               - net45
              artifacts:
               - build:
                   source: bin/
                   destination: build
               - test:
                   source: tests/
                   destination: test-reports/
               - test:
                   source: coverage.xml
              tabs:
                report: test-reports/index.html
              tasks: # ordered list of tasks to execute in job csharp
               - fetch:
                   pipeline: pipe2
                   stage: build
                   job: test
                   source: test-bin/
                   destination: bin/
               - exec: # indicates type of task
                   command: make
                   arguments:
                    - "VERBOSE=true"
               # shorthand for script-executor plugin
               - script: ./build.sh ci

File pattern

The default pattern is **/*.gocd.yaml,**/*.gocd.yml, which will recursively search the entire repository for all files ending with .gocd.yaml or .gocd.yml.

You can set a custom file pattern per configuration repository using the GoCD configuration UI: yaml pattern config

Or in the config XML using <configuration>:

<config-repos>
  <config-repo pluginId="yaml.config.plugin" id="repo1">
    <git url="https://github.com/tomzo/gocd-yaml-config-example.git" />
    <configuration>
      <property>
        <key>file_pattern</key>
        <!-- comma-separate multiple patterns -->
        <value>pipelines/build/*.yml,pipelines/lint/*.yml</value>
      </property>
    </configuration>
  </config-repo>
</config-repos>

Validation

You can validate if proposed GoCD YAML changes will be accepted by the server. Currently, 2 options are available:

Validation using CLI

You may find this introductory blog post useful.

There is an ongoing effort to allow in-depth validation of configuration before pushing configuration to the source control. This is provided by GoCD's preflight API and gocd-cli.

You have several options to configure validation tools on your workstation:

Either way you'll have gocd binary in your PATH or inside the docker container.

Syntax validation

This will check general validity of the yaml file, without talking to the GoCD server:

gocd configrepo syntax --yaml pipeline.gocd.yaml

Preflight validation

This command will parse and submit your yaml file to the configured GoCD server.

gocd configrepo preflight --yaml -r dotnet-dojo pipeline.gocd.yaml

Where -r is the configuration repository id, which you have earlier configured on GoCD server. You can check it on config repos page of your GoCD server, at /go/admin/config_repos. It is in the upper left corner of each config repo. config repo id

For new repositories, when you haven't added config repo to the server yet, you can also check if it is correct, just skip the -r argument.

gocd configrepo preflight --yaml pipeline.gocd.yaml

Format reference

See official GoCD XML configuration reference for details about each element. Below is a reference of format supported by this plugin. Feel free to improve it!

  1. Format version
  2. Environment
  3. Environment variables
  4. Parameters
  5. Pipeline
  6. Stage
  7. Job
  8. Tasks
  9. Materials
  10. Secure variables
  11. Retrieving secrets from Secrets Management plugins in values
  12. YAML Aliases

Format version

Please note that it is now recommended to declare format_version in each gocd.yaml file, consistent across all your files.

GoCD server version from 20.8.0 and beyond

Supports format_version value of 10. This version removes usage of blacklist/whitelist keywords in favour of includes/ignore. This is done in a backwards compatible way - you can upgrade the server and plugin first, and update the format_version to 10 after. Just replace whitelist by includes, and blacklist by ignore.

Additionally, plugin is also "forwards compatible" since version 0.13.0. If you can't upgrade GoCD to 20.8.0, but want to migrate from blacklist/whitelist to includes/ignore, you can upgrade the plugin and keep the format_version that you are using. Plugin will migrate keywords under the hood, while your YAML can use includes/ignore.

Using a newer format_version includes all the behavior of the previous versions too.

format_version: 10
pipelines:
  ...
environments:

GoCD server version from 19.10.0 and beyond

Supports format_version value of 9. In this version, support of ignore_for_scheduling for dependency materials has been added. Setting this attribute will skip scheduling the pipeline when the dependency material has changed.

Using a newer format_version includes all the behavior of the previous versions too.

GoCD server version from 19.9.0 and beyond

Supports format_version value of 7 and 8. In version 7, support for properties has been removed. In version 8, support for mingle as a tracking tool has been removed.

Using a newer format_version includes all the behavior of the previous versions too.

GoCD server version from 19.8.0 and beyond

Supports format_version value of 6. In this version, support of allow_only_on_success attribute for approval in stage has been added. Setting this attribute to true will allow the stage to be manually triggered only if the previous stage has passed successfully.

Using a newer format_version includes all the behavior of the previous versions too.

GoCD server version from 19.4.0 to 19.7.0

Supports format_version value of 5. In this version, support of username and encrypted_password for git and hg material has been added. In addition to that, hg will also support branch attribute.

Using a newer format_version includes all the behavior of the previous versions too.

GoCD server version 19.3.0

Supports format_version value of 4. In this version, support has been added to control the display order of pipelines.

This server version also supports format_version of 3 and 2. Using a newer format_version includes all the behavior of the previous versions too.

GoCD server version from 18.7.0 to 19.2.0

Supports format_version value of 3. In this version fetch artifact format was changed to include artifact_origin.

This server version also supports format_version of 2. Using a newer format_version includes all the behavior of the previous versions too.

GoCD server version from 17.12.0 to 18.6.0

Supports format_version value of 2. In this version pipeline locking behavior was changed.

GoCD server version up to 17.11.0

Supports format_version value of 1. This is the initial version.

Pipeline

A minimal pipeline configuration must contain:

  • pipeline name - as a key in hash
  • materials - a hash
  • stages - a list or a template - as a key in hash
mypipe:
  group: mygroup
  materials:
    mygit:
      git: http://example.com/mygit.git
  stages:
    - build:
        jobs:
          build:
            tasks:
             - exec:
                 command: make

All elements available on a pipeline object are:

pipe2:
  group: group1
  label_template: "foo-1.0-${COUNT}"
  lock_behavior: none
  tracking_tool:
    link: "http://your-trackingtool/yourproject/${ID}"
    regex: "evo-(\\d+)"
  timer:
    spec: "0 15 10 * * ? *"
  environment_variables:
    DEPLOYMENT: testing
  secure_variables:
    ENV_PASSWORD: "s&Du#@$xsSa"
  materials:
    ...
  stages:
    ...

Referencing an existing template in a pipeline:

mypipe:
  group: group1
  label_template: "foo-1.0-${COUNT}"
  lock_behavior: none
  parameters:
    param1: value
  materials:
    mygit:
      git: http://example.com/mygit.git
  template: template1

Please note:

  • Pipeline declares a group to which it belongs

When format_version is 4 (see above), the order of display of pipelines on the GoCD dashboard can be influenced by setting the display_order property.

  • This is an integer property and the pipelines in a pipeline group will be ordered by this value.
  • The default value for this property is -1.
  • Pipelines defined in GoCD's config XML will also default to -1.
  • If multiple pipelines have the same display_order value, their order relative to each other will be indeterminate.
mypipeline1:
  group: group1
  display_order: 10

mypipeline2:
  group: group1
  display_order: -10

In the above example, since both pipelines are in the same group, pipeline2 will be shown ahead of pipeline1. If any pipelines are defined in the GoCD config XML, then they will appear in between these two pipelines.

Tracking tool

tracking_tool:
  link: "http://your-trackingtool/yourproject/${ID}"
  regex: "evo-(\\d+)"

Timer

timer:
  spec: "0 15 10 * * ? *"
  only_on_changes: yes

See Quartz about writing cron-like schedules.

Pipeline locking

For GoCD >= 17.12 and format_version: 2 and above:

lock_behavior: none

Where lock_behavior is defined as in GoCD documentation can be one of:

  • lockOnFailure - same as locking: true
  • unlockWhenFinished
  • none - same locking: false

For GoCD < 17.12 and format_version: 1:

locking: on

Where locking is a boolean.

Stage

A minimal stage must contain jobs: element or tasks: in single-job stage case.

build:
  jobs:
    firstJob:
      ...
    secondJob:
      ...

A custom stage:

test:
  fetch_materials: yes
  keep_artifacts: yes
  clean_workspace: yes
  approval:
    type: manual
    roles:
      - manager
    users:
      - john
  environment_variables:
    TEST_NUM: 1
  secure_variables:
    PASSWORD: "!@ESsdD323#sdu"
  jobs:
    one:
      ...
    two:
      ...
  • When keep_artifacts is set to true GoCD will never delete artifacts in this stage. This is equivalent of XML's artifactCleanupProhibited. By default this is false.

Approval

Stage can have approval, which is success by default. There are 2 ways to declare approval:

approval: manual

If you need to set associated users or roles:

approval:
  type: manual
  allow_only_on_success: true
  roles:
    - manager
  users:
    - john

You can set allow_only_on_success to allow manual trigger only if the previous stage run is successful. The default value is false.

Job

Job is a hash starting with jobs name:

test:
  timeout: 5
  run_instances: 7
  environment_variables:
    LD_LIBRARY_PATH: .
  tabs:
    test: results.xml
  resources:
    - linux
  artifacts:
    - test:
        source: src
        destination: dest
    - build:
        source: bin
    - external:
        id: docker-release-candidate
        store_id: dockerhub
        configuration:
          options:
            Image: gocd/gocd-demo
            Tag: v${GO_PIPELINE_LABEL}
          secure_options:
            some_secure_property: "!@ESsdD323#sdu"
  tasks:
    ...

Note: timeout is added since 0.2.0 version of yaml plugin

Elastic agent profile id

Job configuration may define elastic agents profile id, as such:

elastic_profile_id: "docker.unit-test"

It MUST NOT be specified along with resources. Available in GoCD server since v16.12.0, yaml plugin 0.4.0.

Artifacts

There are 3 types of artifacts recognized by GoCD. Build and Test artifacts are stored on the GoCD server. The source and the destination of the artifact that should be stored on the GoCD server must be specified.

Build

- build:
    source: bin
    destination: binaries

Test

- test:
    source: reports
    destination: test-reports

External

Artifacts of type external are stored in an artifact store outside of GoCD. The external artifact store's configuration must be created in the main GoCD config. Support for external artifact store config to be checked in as yaml is not available. The external artifact store is referenced by the store_id. The build specific artifact details that the artifact plugin needs to publish the artifact is provided as configuration.

- external:
    id: docker-release-candidate
    store_id: dockerhub
    configuration:
      options:
        Image: gocd/gocd-demo
        Tag: v${GO_PIPELINE_LABEL}
      secure_options:
        some_secure_property: "!@ESsdD323#sdu"

S3 plugin 2.x example usage:

- external:
    id: pkg
    store_id: s3-eu-west-1
    configuration:
      options:
        Source: installers/target/
        Destination: ${GO_ARTIFACT_LOCATOR}

Run many instances

Part of job object can be number of job to runs:

run_instances: 7

Or to run on all agents:

run_instances: all

Tabs

Tabs are a hash with <tab-name>: <path> pairs. Path should exist in GoCD servers artifacts.

tabs:
  tests: test-reports/index.html
  gauge: functional-reports/index.html

Property

DEPRECATION NOTICE: Since GoCD version 19.9 and format_version 7, properties are no longer supported

Job can have properties, declared as a hash:

properties:
  cov1: # this is the name of property
    source: test.xml
    xpath: "substring-before(//report/data/all/coverage[starts-with(@type,\u0027class\u0027)]/@value, \u0027%\u0027)"
  performance.ind1.mbps:
    source: PerfTestReport.xml
    xpath: "//PerformanceSuiteReport/WriteOnly/MBps"

Single job stage

A common use case is that stage has only one job. This plugin provides a shorthand to declared such stages - just omit the jobs: and job name from configuration tree. You can then declare job and stage options on the same (stage) level:

stages:
  - build:
      approval: manual
      resources:
        - cpp
      tasks:
       - exec:
           command: make

Above configuration declares build stage with build job which executes make task.

Materials

Git

Minimal configuration of a git pipeline material:

  • material name is mygit
  • git repository url is http://example.com/mygit.git
mygit:
  git: http://example.com/mygit.git

Above can be also written more explicitly:

mygit:
  type: git
  url: http://example.com/mygit.git

More customized git material is possible:

gitMaterial1:
  git: "https://my.git.repository.com"
  branch: feature12
  ignore:
    - externals/**/*.*
    - tools/**/*.*
# For GoCD < 20.8.0 or plugin version < 0.13.0, you need to use blacklist instead of ignore:
  blacklist:
    - externals/**/*.*
    - tools/**/*.*
  destination: dir1
  auto_update: false
  shallow_clone: true

Since GoCD >= 16.7.0 includes is also supported, you can specify includes instead of ignore, as such

gitMaterial1:
  git: "[email protected]"
  branch: "feature12"
  includes:
    - src/**/*.*
# For GoCD < 20.8.0 or plugin version < 0.13.0, you need to use whitelist instead:
  whitelist:
    - src/**/*.*

For GoCD >= 19.4.0 and format_version: 5 and above:

You are advised to utilize username and encrypted_password for passing in material credentials as:

gitMaterial1:
  git: "https://my.git.repository.com"
  branch: feature12
  username: my_username
  encrypted_password: encrypted_value
  • Instead of encrypted_password you may specify password but encrypted_password makes more sense considering that the value is stored in SCM.
  • Specifying credentials both in attributes and url will result in a validation error e.g.
      INVALID MERGED CONFIGURATION
      Number of errors: 1+
      1. Ambiguous credentials, must be provided either in URL or as attributes.;;
      - For Config Repo: https://your.config.repo.url at cbb047d78c239ab23b9565099e800c6fe4cc0anc
    

For details about each option, see GoCD XML reference

svnMaterial1:
  svn: "http://svn"
  username: "user1"
  encrypted_password: "encrypted_value"
  check_externals: true
  ignore:
    - tools
    - lib
# For GoCD < 20.8.0 or plugin version < 0.13.0, you need to use blacklist instead of ignore:
  blacklist:
    - tools
    - lib
  destination: destDir1
  auto_update: false

Instead of encrypted_password you can specify password.

Hg

hgMaterial1:
  hg: repos/myhg
  ignore:
    - externals
    - tools
# For GoCD < 20.8.0 or plugin version < 0.13.0, you need to use blacklist instead of ignore:
  blacklist:
    - externals
    - tools
  destination: dir1
  auto_update: false
  username: my_username
  encrypted_password: encrypted_value
  branch: feature

For GoCD >= 19.4.0 and format_version: 5 and above:

You are advised to utilize username and encrypted_password for passing in material credentials as:

hgMaterial1:
  hg: repos/myhg
  username: my_username
  encrypted_password: encrypted_value
  • Instead of encrypted_password you may specify password but encrypted_password makes more sense considering that the value is stored in SCM.
  • Specifying credentials both in attributes and url will result in a validation error e.g.
      INVALID MERGED CONFIGURATION
      Number of errors: 1+
      1. Ambiguous credentials, must be provided either in URL or as attributes.;;
      - For Config Repo: https://your.config.repo.url at cbb047d78c239ab23b9565099e800c6fe4cc0anc
    

In addition to that, you can also leverage branch attribute to specify the branch for material

hgMaterial1:
  hg: repos/myhg
  branch: feature
p4Material1:
  p4: "host.domain.com:12345"
  username: johndoe
  encrypted_password: encrypted_value
  use_tickets: false
  view: |
    //depot/external... //ws/external...
    //depot/tools... //ws/external...
  ignore:
    - externals
    - tools
# For GoCD < 20.8.0 or plugin version < 0.13.0, you need to use blacklist instead of ignore:
  blacklist:
    - externals
    - tools
  auto_update: false

Instead of encrypted_password you can specify password.

Tfs

TODO: - not supported by yaml plugin yet

Pluggable

myPluggableGit:
  scm: someScmGitRepositoryId
  destination: destinationDir
  ignore:
    - dir1
    - dir2
# For GoCD < 20.8.0 or plugin version < 0.13.0, you need to use blacklist instead of ignore:
  blacklist:
    - dir1
    - dir2

Since GoCD >= 19.2.0 defining new pluggable materials that are not defined in the GoCD server is supported.

myPluggableGit:
  plugin_configuration:
    id: plugin_Id
    version: 1 #plugin version
  options:
    url: [email protected]:tomzo/gocd-yaml-config-plugin.git
  secure_options:
    password: "encrypted_value"
  destination: destinationDir
  ignore:
    - dir1
    - dir2
# For GoCD < 20.8.0 or plugin version < 0.13.0, you need to use blacklist instead of ignore:
  blacklist:
    - dir1
    - dir2

Configrepo

This is a convenience for shorter and more consistent material declaration. When configuration repository is the same as one of pipeline materials, then you usually need to repeat definitions in XML and in JSON, for example:

materials:
  foo:
    git: "https://github.com/tomzo/gocd-json-config-example.git",
    branch: ci

And in server XML:

<config-repos>
   <config-repo pluginId="yaml.config.plugin" id="repo1">
     <git url="https://github.com/tomzo/gocd-json-config-example.git" branch="ci" />
   </config-repo>
</config-repos>

Notice that url and branch is repeated. This is inconvenient in case when you move repository, because it requires 2 updates, in code and in server XML.

Using configrepo material type, above repetition can be avoided, last example can be refactored into:

materials:
  foo:
    type: configrepo

Server interprets configrepo material in this way:

Clone the material configuration of the repository we are parsing as is in XML and replace name, destination and filters (includes/ignore), then use the modified clone in place of configrepo material.

Dependency

To add a dependency on another pipeline stage:

mydependency:
  pipeline: upstream-pipeline-1
  stage: test
  ignore_for_scheduling: false

Note: mydependency is the name of material - it must be unique

Package

myapt:
  package: apt-repo-id

Tasks

Every task is a hash starting with its type. Type can be exec, ant, nant, rake, fetch, plugin or script.

<type>:
  <task-prop1>: <prop1-value>

Optionally any task can have run_if and on_cancel.

  • run_if is a string. Valid values are passed, failed, any
  • on_cancel is a task object. Same rules apply as to tasks described on this page. See rake example.

Exec

exec:
  run_if: any
  working_directory: dir
  command: make
  arguments:
   - -j3
   - docs
   - install

Ant

ant:
  build_file: mybuild.xml
  target: compile
  run_if: passed

Nant

nant:
  run_if: passed
  working_directory: "script/build/123"
  build_file: FilePath
  target: Build
  nant_path: NantExe

Rake

A minimal rake task with default values is very short

rake:

A complete rake example:

rake:
  run_if: passed
  working_directory: sample-project
  build_file: SomeRakefile
  target: build
  on_cancel:
    rake:
      working_directory: sample-project
      build_file: CancelRakefile
      target: cancel

Fetch

Fetch artifact from the GoCD server

fetch:
  run_if: any
  artifact_origin: gocd # default value
  pipeline: pipe2
  stage: upstream_stage
  job: upstream_job
  is_file: yes
  source: result
  destination: test
  • artifact_origin if not specified then, defaults to gocd, which is consistent with previous format_version 1 and 2.
  • pipeline if not specified, then defaults to current pipeline.

Fetch artifact from an external artifact store

fetch:
  run_if: any
  artifact_origin: external
  pipeline: pipe2
  stage: upstream_stage
  job: upstream_job
  artifact_id: upstream_artifact_id
  configuration:
    options:
      DestOnAgent: foo
    secure_options:
      some_secure_property: "!@ESsdD323#sdu"

S3 plugin 2.x example usage:

- fetch:
    artifact_origin: external
    stage: plan
    job: plan
    artifact_id: plan
    configuration:
      options:
        IsFile: true
        Destination: terraform
        Source: deployment.tfplan

Plugin

plugin:
  options:
    ConverterType: jsunit
  secure_options:
    password: "ssd#%fFS*!Esx"
  run_if: failed
  configuration:
    id: xunit.converter.task.plugin
    version: 1

Script

Because script-executor plugin requires quite a lot of boiler-plate configuration there is a shorthand for defining tasks with it:

script: ./build.sh compile

Above is equivalent of

plugin:
  options:
    script: ./build.sh compile
  configuration:
    id: script-executor
    version: 1

You can declare multi-line scripts too:

script: |
  ./build.sh compile
  make test

Above executes a 2-line script:

./build.sh compile
make test

If you want to execute a single long line script, but break it into multiple lines in YAML, you can do this with > as such:

script: >
  ./build.sh compile &&
  make test

Above executes a single line script:

./build.sh compile && make test

Environment

NOTE: The agents should be a guid, which is currently impossible to get for user

testing:
  environment_variables:
    DEPLOYMENT: testing
  secure_variables:
    ENV_PASSWORD: "s&Du#@$xsSa"
  pipelines:
    - example-deploy-testing
    - build-testing
  agents:
    - 123

Environment variables

Environment variables can be declared in Environments, Pipelines, Stages and Jobs.

In YAML you have 2 keywords for secure (encrypted) variables and standard variables.

environment_variables:
  DEPLOYMENT: testing
  FOO: bar
secure_variables:
  # this value is encrypted by Go's private key (Note in 16.7.0 there is no easy way to obtain such value yet)
  MY_PASSWORD: "s&Du#@$xsSa"

Parameters

Parameters can be declared at the pipeline level.

parameters:
  param1: value1
  production: no

To generate an encrypted value

For versions of GoCD >= 17.1:

See the encryption API.

For versions of GoCD <= 16.12:

There is no easy way to generate obtain encrypted value from GoServer, alternatively you can login into go-server and execute the following command to generate encrypted value

sudo -u go bash -c 'echo -n 'YOUR-INPUT' | openssl enc -des-cbc -a -iv 0 -K $(cat /etc/go/cipher)'

Retrieving secrets from Secrets Management plugins in values

Rather than using secure variables encrypted in values and source controlled, you can use Secrets Management plugins to store secrets within various backends and have them dynamically retrieved at runtime.

With any of the corresponding YAML fields documented here you can use the special syntax to denote a secret to be looked up.

Note that quoting the values is important since braces ({, }) are important in YAML, as a superset of JSON.

environment_variables:
  DEPLOYMENT: testing
  FOO: bar
  # this value retrieves the `testing_password` secret from the `sample_secret`
  # configuration of whichever secrets plugin is appropriate
  MY_PASSWORD: "{{SECRET:[sample_secret][testing_password]"

Boolean values

Among all configuration elements there are boolean values, which can be defined using any of the keywords below (as in yaml specs):

  • true - y|Y|yes|Yes|YES|true|True|TRUE|on|On|ON
  • false - n|N|no|No|NO|false|False|FALSE|off|Off|OFF

YAML Aliases

YAML Aliases (specification) are supported and provide a way to avoid duplication.

Aliases can be defined anywhere in the configuration as long as they are valid configuration elements.

- exec:
  command: make
  arguments:
   - clean
   - &verbose_arg "VERBOSE=true" # define the alias
- exec:
  command: make
  arguments:
   - world
   - *verbose_arg # use the alias

There is also a dedicated top-level common section which allows you to have all aliases in one place and where you don't need to worry about correct placement within the configuration.

format_version: 4
common:
  verbose_arg: &verbose_arg "VERBOSE=true"
  build_tasks: &build_tasks
    - exec:
        command: make
        arguments:
         - clean
    - exec:
        command: make
        arguments:
         - world
pipelines:
  pipe1:
    stages:
      - build:
          jobs:
            build:
              tasks: *build_tasks
            test:
              tasks:
               - *build_tasks # task list aliases can also be mixed with additional tasks in the same job
               - exec:
                   command: make
                   arguments:
                    - test

Similarly stages can be re-used:

format_version: 4
common:
  build_stages: &build_stages
    - stage1:
        jobs:
          # ...
    - stage2:
        jobs:
          # ...

pipelines:
  pipeline_one:
    stages: *build_stages

  pipeline_two:
    stages:
      - *build_stages
      - stage3:
        jobs:
          # ...

Issues and questions

  • If you have questions on usage, please ask them on the GoCD Google Groups forum or GitHub Discussions.
  • If you think there is a bug, or you have an idea for a feature and you are not sure if it's plugin's or GoCD fault/responsibity, please ask on the chat first too.

Please note this brief overview of what is done by the plugin:

  • parsing yaml into json when GoCD server asks for it.

And this is done by the GoCD server:

  • complex logic merging multiple config repo sources and XML
  • validation of pipelines/stages/jobs/tasks domain
  • any UI rendering

Development

Environment setup

To build and test this plugin, you'll need java jdk >= 11.

If you have local java environment, then you may run all tests and create a ready to use jar with:

./gradlew test jar

Building with docker and dojo

You don't need to setup java on your host, if you are fine with using docker and Dojo. This is actually how our GoCD builds the plugin:

dojo "gradle test jar"

Assuming you already have a working docker, On OSX, you can install with homebrew:

brew install kudulab/homebrew-dojo-osx/dojo

A manual install is another option:

version="0.9.0"
# on Linux:
wget -O /tmp/dojo https://github.com/kudulab/dojo/releases/download/${version}/dojo_linux_amd64
# or on Darwin:
# wget -O /tmp/dojo https://github.com/kudulab/dojo/releases/download/${version}/dojo_darwin_amd64
chmod +x /tmp/dojo
mv /tmp/dojo /usr/bin/dojo

Then enter a docker container with java and gradle pre-installed, by running following command at the root of the project:

dojo

Versioning

We use semantic versioning.

If you are submitting a new feature or patch, please bump the version in build.gradle.

Tests structure

There are examples of yaml partials and their resulting json to be sent to GoCD server. If something is not working right we can always add a new case covering exact yaml that user has and json that we expect on server side.

License

Copyright 2020 Tomasz Sętkowski

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.