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nexedi
gitlab-ce
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02cdd6ff
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02cdd6ff
authored
Sep 01, 2020
by
Shinya Maeda
Committed by
Marcel Amirault
Sep 01, 2020
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Document versioning CI templates
This commit documents the versioning flow for CI templates
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@@ -64,6 +64,65 @@ users have to fix their `.gitlab-ci.yml` that could annoy their workflow.
Please read
[
versioning
](
#versioning
)
section for introducing breaking change safely.
## Versioning
Versioning allows you to introduce a new template without modifying the existing
one. This process is useful when we need to introduce a breaking change,
but don't want to affect the existing projects that depends on the current template.
### Stable version
A stable CI/CD template is a template that only introduces breaking changes in major
release milestones. Name the stable version of a template as
`<template-name>.gitlab-ci.yml`
,
for example
`Jobs/Deploy.gitlab-ci.yml`
.
You can make a new stable template by copying
[
the latest template
](
#latest-version
)
available in a major milestone release of GitLab like
`13.0`
. All breaking changes
must be announced in a blog post before the official release, for example
[
GitLab.com is moving to 13.0, with narrow breaking changes
](
https://about.gitlab.com/releases/2020/05/06/gitlab-com-13-0-breaking-changes/
)
You can change a stable template version in a minor GitLab release like
`13.1`
if:
-
The change is not a
[
breaking change
](
#backward-compatibility
)
.
-
The change is ported to
[
the latest template
](
#latest-version
)
, if one exists.
### Latest version
Templates marked as
`latest`
can be updated in any release, even with
[
breaking changes
](
#backward-compatibility
)
. Add
`.latest`
to the template name if
it's considered the latest version, for example
`Jobs/Deploy.latest.gitlab-ci.yml`
.
When you introduce
[
a breaking change
](
#backward-compatibility
)
,
you
**must**
test and document
[
the upgrade path
](
#verify-breaking-changes
)
.
In general, we should not promote the latest template as the best option, as it could surprise users with unexpected problems.
If the
`latest`
template does not exist yet, you can copy
[
the stable template
](
#stable-version
)
.
### How to include an older stable template
Users may want to use an older
[
stable template
](
#stable-version
)
that is not bundled
in the current GitLab package. For example, the stable templates in GitLab v13.0 and
GitLab v14.0 could be so different that a user will want to continue using the v13.0 template even
after upgrading to GitLab 14.0.
You can add a note in the template or in documentation explaining how to use
`include:remote`
to include older template versions:
```
yaml
# To use the v13 stable template, which is not included in v14, fetch the specifc
# template from the remote template repository with the `include:remote:` keyword.
# If you fetch from the GitLab canonical project, use the following URL format:
# https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/raw/<version>/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/<template-name>
include
:
remote
:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/raw/v13.0.1-ee/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Jobs/Deploy.gitlab-ci.yml
```
### Further reading
There is an
[
open issue
](
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/17716
)
about
introducing versioning concepts in GitLab CI Templates. You can check that issue to
follow the progress.
## Testing
Each CI/CD template must be tested in order to make sure that it's safe to be published.
...
...
@@ -95,18 +154,20 @@ You should write an RSpec test to make sure that pipeline jobs will be generated
1.
Add a test file at
`spec/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/<template-category>/<template-name>_spec.rb`
1.
Test that pipeline jobs are properly created via
`Ci::CreatePipelineService`
.
### Verify breaking changes
When you introduce a breaking change to
[
a `latest` template
](
#latest-version
)
,
you must:
1.
Test the upgrade path from
[
the stable template
](
#stable-version
)
.
1.
Verify what kind of errors users will encounter.
1.
Document it as a troubleshooting guide.
This information will be important for users when
[
a stable template
](
#stable-version
)
is updated in a major version GitLab release.
## Security
A template could contain malicious code. For example, a template that contains the
`export`
shell command in a job
might accidentally expose project secret variables in a job log.
If you're unsure if it's secure or not, you need to ask security experts for cross-validation.
## Versioning
Versioning allows you to introduce a new template without modifying the existing
one. This is useful process especially when we need to introduce a breaking change,
but don't want to affect the existing projects that depends on the current template.
There is an
[
open issue
](
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/17716
)
for
introducing versioning concept in GitLab Ci Template. Please follow the issue for
checking the progress.
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