Commit a5797676 authored by Marcel Amirault's avatar Marcel Amirault Committed by Suzanne Selhorn

Clean up workflow: rules docs

parent 67978578
......@@ -234,23 +234,23 @@ There are also two edge cases worth mentioning:
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/29654) in GitLab 12.5
The top-level `workflow:` key applies to the entirety of a pipeline, and
determines whether or not a pipeline is created. It accepts a single
`rules:` key that operates similarly to [`rules:` defined within jobs](#rules),
enabling dynamic configuration of the pipeline.
The top-level `workflow:` keyword determines whether or not a pipeline is created.
It accepts a single `rules:` keyword that is similar to [`rules:` defined within jobs](#rules).
Use it to define what can trigger a new pipeline.
If you are new to GitLab CI/CD and `workflow: rules`, you may find the [`workflow:rules` templates](#workflowrules-templates) useful.
You can use the [`workflow:rules` templates](#workflowrules-templates) to import
a preconfigured `workflow: rules` entry.
To define your own `workflow: rules`, the available configuration options are:
`workflow: rules` accepts these keywords:
- [`if`](#rulesif): Define a rule.
- [`when`](#when): May be set to `always` or `never` only. If not provided, the default value is `always`​.
- [`if`](#rulesif): Check this rule to determine when to run a pipeline.
- [`when`](#when): Specify what to do when the `if` rule evaluates to true.
- To run a pipeline, set to `always`.
- To prevent pipelines from running, set to `never`.
If a pipeline attempts to run but matches no rule, it's dropped and doesn't run.
When no rules evaluate to true, the pipeline does not run.
Use the example rules below exactly as written to allow pipelines that match the rule
to run. Add `when: never` to prevent pipelines that match the rule from running. See
the [common `if` clauses for `rules`](#common-if-clauses-for-rules) for more examples.
Some example `if` clauses for `workflow: rules`:
| Example rules | Details |
|------------------------------------------------------|-----------------------------------------------------------|
......@@ -259,9 +259,12 @@ the [common `if` clauses for `rules`](#common-if-clauses-for-rules) for more exa
| `if: $CI_COMMIT_TAG` | Control when tag pipelines run. |
| `if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH` | Control when branch pipelines run. |
See the [common `if` clauses for `rules`](#common-if-clauses-for-rules) for more examples.
For example, in the following configuration, pipelines run for all `push` events (changes to
branches and new tags). Only push events with `-wip` in the commit message are excluded. Scheduled
pipelines and merge request pipelines don't run, as there's no rule allowing them.
branches and new tags). Pipelines for push events with `-wip` in the commit message
don't run, because they are set to `when: never`. Pipelines for schedules or merge requests
don't run either, because no rules evaluate to true for them:
```yaml
workflow:
......@@ -271,11 +274,11 @@ workflow:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "push"'
```
This example has strict rules, and no other pipelines can run.
This example has strict rules, and pipelines do **not** run in any other case.
Alternatively, you can have loose rules by using only `when: never` rules, followed
by a final `when: always` rule. This allows all types of pipelines, except for any
that match the `when: never` rules:
Alternatively, all of the rules can be `when: never`, with a final
`when: always` rule. Pipelines that match the `when: never` rules do not run.
All other pipeline types run:
```yaml
workflow:
......@@ -287,12 +290,13 @@ workflow:
- when: always
```
This example never allows pipelines for schedules or `push` (branches and tags) pipelines,
but does allow pipelines in **all** other cases, *including* merge request pipelines.
This example prevents pipelines for schedules or `push` (branches and tags) pipelines.
The final `when: always` rule lets all other pipeline types run, **including** merge
request pipelines.
Be careful not to use a configuration that might run
merge request pipelines and branch pipelines at the same time. As with `rules` defined in jobs,
it can cause [duplicate pipelines](#prevent-duplicate-pipelines).
Be careful not to have rules that match both branch pipelines
and merge request pipelines. Similar to `rules` defined in jobs, this can cause
[duplicate pipelines](#prevent-duplicate-pipelines).
#### `workflow:rules` templates
......
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