Commit 571c8903 authored by Marcel Amirault's avatar Marcel Amirault

Merge branch 'jyavorska-master-patch-94419' into 'master'

Add pipeline architectures overview

See merge request gitlab-org/gitlab!25235
parents e58b7bda 8765d1ad
......@@ -50,6 +50,7 @@ To get started with GitLab CI/CD, we recommend you read through
the following documents:
- [How GitLab CI/CD works](introduction/index.md#how-gitlab-cicd-works).
- [Fundamental pipeline architectures](pipelines/pipeline_architectures.md).
- [GitLab CI/CD basic workflow](introduction/index.md#basic-cicd-workflow).
- [Step-by-step guide for writing `.gitlab-ci.yml` for the first time](../user/project/pages/getting_started_part_four.md).
......
---
type: reference
---
# Pipeline Architecture
Pipelines are the fundamental building blocks for CI/CD in GitLab. This page documents
some of the important concepts related to them.
There are three main ways to structure your pipelines, each with their
own advantages. These methods can be mixed and matched if needed:
- [Basic](#basic-pipelines): Good for straightforward projects where all the configuration is in one easy to find place.
- [Directed Acylic Graph](#directed-acyclic-graph-pipelines): Good for large, complex projects that need efficient execution.
- [Child/Parent Pipelines](#child--parent-pipelines): Good for monorepos and projects with lots of independently defined components.
For more details about
any of the keywords used below, check out our [CI YAML reference](../yaml/) for details.
## Basic Pipelines
This is the simplest pipeline in GitLab. It will run everything in the build stage concurrently,
and once all of those finish, it will run everything in the test stage the same way, and so on.
It's not the most efficient, and if you have lots of steps it can grow quite complex, but it's
easier to maintain:
```mermaid
graph LR
subgraph deploy stage
deploy --> deploy_a
deploy --> deploy_b
end
subgraph test stage
test --> test_a
test --> test_b
end
subgraph build stage
build --> build_a
build --> build_b
end
build_a -.-> test
build_b -.-> test
test_a -.-> deploy
test_b -.-> deploy
```
Example basic `/.gitlab-ci.yml` pipeline configuration matching the diagram:
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test
- deploy
image: alpine
build_a:
stage: build
script:
- echo "This job builds something."
build_b:
stage: build
script:
- echo "This job builds something else."
test_a:
stage: test
script:
- echo "This job tests something. It will only run when all jobs in the"
- echo "build stage are complete."
test_b:
stage: test
script:
- echo "This job tests something else. It will only run when all jobs in the"
- echo "build stage are complete too. It will start at about the same time as test_a."
deploy_a:
stage: deploy
script:
- echo "This job deploys something. It will only run when all jobs in the"
- echo "test stage complete."
deploy_b:
stage: deploy
script:
- echo "This job deploys something else. It will only run when all jobs in the"
- echo "test stage complete. It will start at about the same time as deploy_a."
```
## Directed Acyclic Graph Pipelines
If efficiency is important to you and you want everything to run as quickly as possible,
you can use [Directed Acylic Graphs (DAG)](../directed_acyclic_graph/index.md). Use the
[`needs` keyword](../yaml/README.md#needs) to define dependency relationships between
your jobs. When GitLab knows the relationships between your jobs, it can run everything
as fast as possible, and even skips into subsequent stages when possible.
In the example below, if `build_a` and `test_a` are much faster than `build_b` and
`test_b`, GitLab will start `deploy_a` even if `build_b` is still running.
```mermaid
graph LR
subgraph Pipeline using DAG
build_a --> test_a --> deploy_a
build_b --> test_b --> deploy_b
end
```
Example DAG `/.gitlab-ci.yml` configuration matching the diagram:
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test
- deploy
image: alpine
build_a:
stage: build
script:
- echo "This job builds something quickly."
build_b:
stage: build
script:
- echo "This job builds something else slowly."
test_a:
stage: test
needs: build_a
script:
- echo "This test job will start as soon as build_a finishes."
- echo "It will not wait for build_b, or other jobs in the build stage, to finish."
test_b:
stage: test
needs: build_b
script:
- echo "This test job will start as soon as build_b finishes."
- echo "It will not wait for other jobs in the build stage to finish."
deploy_a:
stage: deploy
needs: test_a
script:
- echo "Since build_a and test_a run quickly, this deploy job can run much earlier."
- echo "It does not need to wait for build_b or test_b."
deploy_b:
stage: deploy
needs: test_b
script:
- echo "Since build_b and test_b run slowly, this deploy job will run much later."
```
## Child / Parent Pipelines
In the examples above, it's clear we've got two types of things that could be built independently.
This is an ideal case for using [Child / Parent Pipelines](../parent_child_pipelines.md)) via
the [`trigger` keyword](../yaml/README.md#trigger). It will separate out the configuration
into multiple files, keeping things very simple. You can also combine this with:
- The [`rules` keyword](../yaml/README.md#rules): For example, have the child pipelines triggered only
when there are changes to that area.
- The [`include` keyword](../yaml/README.md#include): Bring in common behaviors, ensuring
you are not repeating yourself.
- [DAG pipelines](#directed-acyclic-graph-pipelines) inside of child pipelines, achieving the benefits of both.
```mermaid
graph LR
subgraph Parent pipeline
trigger_a -.-> build_a
trigger_b -.-> build_b
subgraph child pipeline B
build_b --> test_b --> deploy_b
end
subgraph child pipeline A
build_a --> test_a --> deploy_a
end
end
```
Example `/.gitlab-ci.yml` configuration for the parent pipeline matching the diagram:
```yaml
stages:
- triggers
trigger_a:
stage: triggers
trigger:
include: a/.gitlab-ci.yml
rules:
- changes:
- a/*
trigger_b:
stage: triggers
trigger:
include: b/.gitlab-ci.yml
rules:
- changes:
- b/*
```
Example child `a` pipeline configuration, located in `/a/.gitlab-ci.yml`, making
use of the DAG `needs:` keyword:
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test
- deploy
image: alpine
build_a:
stage: build
script:
- echo "This job builds something."
test_a:
stage: test
needs: build_a
script:
- echo "This job tests something."
deploy_a:
stage: deploy
needs: test_a
script:
- echo "This job deploys something."
```
Example child `b` pipeline configuration, located in `/b/.gitlab-ci.yml`, making
use of the DAG `needs:` keyword:
```yaml
stages:
- build
- test
- deploy
image: alpine
build_b:
stage: build
script:
- echo "This job builds something else."
test_b:
stage: test
needs: build_b
script:
- echo "This job tests something else."
deploy_b:
stage: deploy
needs: test_b
script:
- echo "This job deploys something else."
```
It's also possible to set jobs to run before or after triggering child pipelines,
for example if you have common setup steps or a unified deployment at the end.
......@@ -17,6 +17,11 @@ NOTE: **Note:**
Coming over to GitLab from Jenkins? Check out our [reference](../jenkins/index.md)
for converting your pre-existing pipelines over to our format.
NOTE: **Note:**
There are a few different [basic pipeline architectures](../pipelines/pipeline_architectures.md)
that you can consider for use in your project. You may want to familiarize
yourself with these prior to getting started.
GitLab offers a [continuous integration](https://about.gitlab.com/stages-devops-lifecycle/continuous-integration/) service. For each commit or push to trigger your CI
[pipeline](../pipelines.md), you must:
......
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