Commit 052072ff authored by Piotr Wosiek's avatar Piotr Wosiek

Update .NET Core YAML template - improve indent

Improve indent and remove empty lines
parent ab9aa821
......@@ -13,19 +13,17 @@
# and the Docker itself: https://opensource.com/resources/what-docker
image: microsoft/dotnet:latest
# ### Define variables
#
variables:
# 1) Name of directory where restore and build objects are stored.
# 1) Name of directory where restore and build objects are stored.
OBJECTS_DIRECTORY: 'obj'
# 2) Name of directory used for keeping restored dependencies.
# 2) Name of directory used for keeping restored dependencies.
NUGET_PACKAGES_DIRECTORY: '.nuget'
# 3) A relative path to the source code from project repository root.
# NOTE: Please edit this path so it matches the structure of your project!
# 3) A relative path to the source code from project repository root.
# NOTE: Please edit this path so it matches the structure of your project!
SOURCE_CODE_PATH: '*/*/'
# ### Define stage list
#
# In this example there are only two stages.
......@@ -34,7 +32,6 @@ stages:
- build
- test
# ### Define global cache rule
#
# Before building the project, all dependencies (e.g. third-party NuGet packages)
......@@ -52,28 +49,26 @@ cache:
# Per-stage and per-branch caching.
key: "$CI_JOB_STAGE-$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG"
paths:
# Specify three paths that should be cached:
#
# 1) Main JSON file holding information about package dependency tree, packages versions,
# frameworks etc. It also holds information where to the dependencies were restored.
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/project.assets.json'
# 2) Other NuGet and MSBuild related files. Also needed.
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/*.csproj.nuget.*'
# 3) Path to the directory where restored dependencies are kept.
- '$NUGET_PACKAGES_DIRECTORY'
#
# 'pull-push' policy means that latest cache will be downloaded (if exists)
# before executing the job, and a newer version will be uploaded afterwards.
# Such setting saves time when there are no changes in referenced third-party
# packages. For example if you run a pipeline with changes in your code,
# but with no changes within third-party packages which your project is using,
# then project restore will happen in next to no time as all required dependencies
# will already be there — unzipped from cache. 'pull-push' policy is a default
# cache policy, you do not have to specify it explicitly.
# Specify three paths that should be cached:
#
# 1) Main JSON file holding information about package dependency tree, packages versions,
# frameworks etc. It also holds information where to the dependencies were restored.
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/project.assets.json'
# 2) Other NuGet and MSBuild related files. Also needed.
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/*.csproj.nuget.*'
# 3) Path to the directory where restored dependencies are kept.
- '$NUGET_PACKAGES_DIRECTORY'
#
# 'pull-push' policy means that latest cache will be downloaded (if exists)
# before executing the job, and a newer version will be uploaded afterwards.
# Such setting saves time when there are no changes in referenced third-party
# packages. For example if you run a pipeline with changes in your code,
# but with no changes within third-party packages which your project is using,
# then project restore will happen in next to no time as all required dependencies
# will already be there — unzipped from cache. 'pull-push' policy is a default
# cache policy, you do not have to specify it explicitly.
policy: pull-push
#
# ### Restore project dependencies
#
# NuGet packages by default are restored to '.nuget/packages' directory
......@@ -85,33 +80,29 @@ cache:
# Learn more about GitLab cache: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/caching/index.html
before_script:
- 'dotnet restore --packages $NUGET_PACKAGES_DIRECTORY'
build:
stage: build
#
# ### Build all projects discovered from solution file.
#
# Note: this will fail if you have any projects in your solution that are not
# .NET Core based projects e.g. WCF service, which is based on .NET Framework,
# not .NET Core. In such scenario you will need to build every .NET Core based
# project by explicitly specifying a relative path to the directory
# where it is located e.g. 'dotnet build ./src/ConsoleApp'.
# Only one project path can be passed as a parameter to 'dotnet build' command.
# ### Build all projects discovered from solution file.
#
# Note: this will fail if you have any projects in your solution that are not
# .NET Core based projects e.g. WCF service, which is based on .NET Framework,
# not .NET Core. In such scenario you will need to build every .NET Core based
# project by explicitly specifying a relative path to the directory
# where it is located e.g. 'dotnet build ./src/ConsoleApp'.
# Only one project path can be passed as a parameter to 'dotnet build' command.
script:
- 'dotnet build --no-restore'
tests:
stage: test
#
# ### Run the tests
#
# You can either run tests for all test projects that are defined in your solution
# with 'dotnet test' or run tests only for specific project by specifying
# a relative path to the directory where it is located e.g. 'dotnet test ./test/UnitTests'.
#
# You may want to define separate testing jobs for different types of testing
# e.g. integration tests, unit tests etc.
# ### Run the tests
#
# You can either run tests for all test projects that are defined in your solution
# with 'dotnet test' or run tests only for specific project by specifying
# a relative path to the directory where it is located e.g. 'dotnet test ./test/UnitTests'.
#
# You may want to define separate testing jobs for different types of testing
# e.g. integration tests, unit tests etc.
script:
- 'dotnet test --no-restore'
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment