Commit 662e9cff authored by Achilleas Pipinellis's avatar Achilleas Pipinellis

Add examples for triggers [ci skip]

parent d18fd3f6
......@@ -83,22 +83,93 @@ Using cURL you can trigger a rebuild with minimal effort, for example:
curl -X POST \
-F token=TOKEN \
-F ref=master \
https://gitlab.com/api/v3/projects/9/trigger/builds
https://gitlab.example.com/api/v3/projects/9/trigger/builds
```
In this case, the project with ID `9` will get rebuilt on `master` branch.
You can also use triggers in your `.gitlab-ci.yml`. Let's say that you have
two projects, A and B, and you want to trigger a rebuild on the `master`
branch of project B whenever a tag on project A is created.
### Triggering a build within `.gitlab-ci.yml`
You can also benefit by using triggers in your `.gitlab-ci.yml`. Let's say that
you have two projects, A and B, and you want to trigger a rebuild on the `master`
branch of project B whenever a tag on project A is created. This is the job you
need to add in project's A `.gitlab-ci.yml`:
```yaml
build_docs:
stage: deploy
script:
- "curl -X POST -F token=TOKEN -F ref=master https://gitlab.com/api/v3/projects/9/trigger/builds"
- "curl -X POST -F token=TOKEN -F ref=master https://gitlab.example.com/api/v3/projects/9/trigger/builds"
only:
- tags
```
Now, whenever a new tag is pushed on project A, the build will run and the
`build_docs` job will be executed, triggering a rebuild of project B. The
`stage: deploy` ensures that this job will run only after all jobs with
`stage: test` complete successfully.
_**Note:** If your project is public, passing the token in plain text is
probably not the wiser idea, so you might want to use a
[secure variable](../variables/README.md#user-defined-variables-secure-variables)
for that purpose._
### Making use of trigger variables
Using trigger variables can be proven useful for a variety of reasons.
* Identifiable jobs. Since the variable is exposed in the UI you can know
why the rebuild was triggered if you pass a variable that explains the
purpose.
* Conditional job processing. You can have conditional jobs that run whenever
a certain variable is present.
Consider the following `.gitlab-ci.yml` where we set three
[stages](../yaml/README.md#stages) and the `upload_package` job is run only
when all jobs from the test and build stages pass. When the `UPLOAD_TO_S3`
variable is non-zero, `make upload` is run.
```yaml
stages:
- test
- build
- package
run_tests:
script:
- make test
build_package:
stage: build
script:
- make build
upload_package:
stage: package
script:
- if [ -n "${UPLOAD_TO_S3}" ]; then make upload; fi
```
You can then trigger a rebuild while you pass the `UPLOAD_TO_S3` variable
and the script of the `upload_package` job will run:
```bash
curl -X POST \
-F token=TOKEN \
-F ref=master \
-F "variables[UPLOAD_TO_S3]=true" \
https://gitlab.example.com/api/v3/projects/9/trigger/builds
```
### Using cron to trigger nightly builds
Whether you craft a script or just run cURL directly, you can trigger builds
in conjunction with cron. The example below triggers a build on the `master`
branch of project with ID `9` every night at `00:30`:
```bash
30 0 * * * curl -X POST -F token=TOKEN -F ref=master https://gitlab.example.com/api/v3/projects/9/trigger/builds
```
[ci-229]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ci/merge_requests/229
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