info:To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ The source of truth for these workflow rules is defined in [`.gitlab-ci.yml`](ht
In general, pipelines for an MR fall into one or more of the following types,
depending on the changes made in the MR:
-[Docs-only MR pipeline](#docs-only-mr-pipeline): This is typically created for an MR that only changes documentation.
-[Documentation only MR pipeline](#documentation-only-mr-pipeline): This is typically created for an MR that only changes documentation.
-[Code-only MR pipeline](#code-only-mr-pipeline): This is typically created for an MR that only changes code, either backend or frontend.
-[Frontend-only MR pipeline](#frontend-only-mr-pipeline): This is typically created for an MR that only changes frontend code.
-[QA-only MR pipeline](#qa-only-mr-pipeline): This is typically created for an MR that only changes end to end tests related code.
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@@ -53,18 +53,22 @@ We use the [`rules:`](../ci/yaml/README.md#rules) and [`needs:`](../ci/yaml/READ
to determine the jobs that need to be run in a pipeline. Note that an MR that includes multiple types of changes would
have a pipelines that include jobs from multiple types (e.g. a combination of docs-only and code-only pipelines).