Create dynamic GitLab CI pipelines in JavaScript or TypeScript for each project. Reuse and inherit instructions and avoid duplicate code!
Continuous Integration (CI) and Continuous Deployment (CD) are fantastic concepts for process automation in software development. We love GitLab CI because it implements the concept in an integrated solution with powerful configuration capabilities. However, pipeline configurations are stored in a static .gitlab-ci.yml
file.
node-gitlab-ci allows you to develop pipeline configurations dynamically in TypeScript and avoid duplicates in the statements with programming concepts like inheritance or functions. This way you can perfectly integrate e.g. monorepos with many similiar projects into the CI/CD.
Navigate to your repository and install the package via yarn
or npm
:
# Yarn
yarn add -D node-gitlab-ci
# NPM
npm install --save-dev node-gitlab-ci
Afterwards, create a .gitlab-ci.yml
file with the following content:
# CI pipeline is dynamically created through `node-gitlab-ci`, please checkout `.gitlab-ci.ts`!
ts config:
image: devowliode/node-gitlab-ci:latest
stage: build
script: node-gitlab-ci create-yml
artifacts:
paths:
- .gitlab-ci.ts.yml
trigger pipeline:
stage: test
trigger:
strategy: depend
include:
- artifact: .gitlab-ci.ts.yml
job: ts config
What does this statement do? The first job creates the .gitlab-ci.ts.yml
file dynamically and the second job triggers the child pipeline. Learn more about this in the GitLab documentation for child pipelines. It is recommended to add the .gitlab-ci.ts.yml
file to your .gitignore
file.
It is a good practice to create a .gitlab-ci.ts
in the root directory of your repository:
import { Config, CreateConfigFunction } from "node-gitlab-ci";
const createConfig: CreateConfigFunction = async () => {
const config = new Config();
config.stages("build", "test");
config.defaults({
image: "alpine:latest",
});
// Setting variables globally or per job
config.variable("DOCKER_DRIVER", "overlay2");
// Run a job only in production branch
config.job(
"only production",
{
only: {
refs: ["master"],
},
},
true // Creates a hidden job (prefixed with a dot)
);
// Allows you to include further configurations by glob patterns
await config.include(__dirname, ["devops/.gitlab/*.ts"]);
await config.include(__dirname, ["packages/*/devops/.gitlab/.gitlab-ci.ts"]);
return config;
};
export { createConfig };
The complete GitLab CI pipeline configuration is typed. Give it a try within your IDE and autocomplete!
Note: You can not import
(ES6) or require
(ES5) all your installed modules. At the time of creating the dynamic pipeline, it is executed within devowliode/node-gitlab-ci
docker container and there are only the node
modules like fs
, path
, ... available. Please read more about it below "Use installed modules".
If you have successfully created the above file open a terminal session, navigate to your repository and:
# Yarn
yarn node-gitlab-ci create-yml
# NPM
npx node-gitlab-ci create-yml
A file .gitlab-ci.ts.yml
will be created.
The most interesting part of node-gitlab-ci
is how include
works (for example you are using yarn workspaces
or lerna
). With Config#include
you can dynamically include files by a glob pattern:
// Do not forget the await!
await config.include(__dirname, ["packages/*/devops/.gitlab/.gitlab-ci.ts"]);
The extension file packages/test/devops/.gitlab/.gitlab-ci.ts
must look like this:
import { ExtendConfigFunction } from "node-gitlab-ci";
const extendConfig: ExtendConfigFunction = async (config) => {
// Create a job
config.job(/* [...] */);
// You can include further files
await config.include(__dirname, ["./stage-*.ts"]);
};
export { extendConfig };
node-gitlab-ci
resolves automatically the extends
keyword for you so you can fully profit from nested jobs without limitations (e. g. nested extends
with same keys like only
are no covered by GitLab CI). This is done a deep merge mechanism:
config.job(
"only production",
{
only: {
refs: ["master"],
},
},
true
);
config.extends(".only production", "my-job", {
script: ["echo This job runs only in production!"],
});
You can also extend from multiple jobs:
config.job(
"common files changed",
{
only: {
changes: ["common/**/*"],
},
},
true
);
config.extends([".only production", ".common files changed"], "my-job", {
script: ["echo This job runs only in production and when common files got changed!"],
});
With macros you can define callbacks and consume them with a set of parameters so you can dynamically create jobs with "hard coded" variables. The most excited use case is only
in a monorepo:
type EsLintMacroArgs = MacroArgs & {
prefix: string;
};
config.macro<EsLintMacroArgs>("lint eslint", (self, { prefix }) => {
config.extends([`.common files changed`, `.lint eslint`], `${prefix} lint eslint`, {
only: {
changes: [`packages/${packageName}/{lib,scripts,test}/**/*.{js,jsx,tsx,ts}`],
},
});
});
And in your package you can use this macro as follow:
config.from<EsLintMacroArgs>("lint eslint", { prefix: "utils" });
This package comes with @gitbeaker/node
bundled, so you can directly communicate with the GitLab REST API. The API handler is brought to you with the following functionality:
// List last 500 jobs in your project
config.api.Jobs.all(1 /* your project id */, {
maxPages: 5,
perPage: 100,
});
If you need to detect changed file while child pipeline generation, you can use the following:
const changed = config.hasChanged(); // returns string[]
const specificFileHasChanged = config.hasChanged(/^packages\/my-package\//gm);
As mentioned previously you can not import
or require
any module. If you want to do so, you need to consider the following:
- Open a Pull Request or Issue here and ask to install the module globally in the image
- Create your own
Dockerfile
with the modules installed globally (e. g.npm install --global fs-extra
), extended from this dockerfile - Modify the
ts config
job and install the modules globally or locally
This repository is still in beta phase and the following things should be done:
- Use
debug
package instead ofconsole.log
- Create GitLab CI with
semantic-release
to automatically publish the package to npmjs.org - Create and push docker image through CI instead of hub.docker.com
- Write Tests
MIT