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authorAchilleas Pipinellis <axilleas@axilleas.me>2016-03-01 10:26:53 +0200
committerAchilleas Pipinellis <axilleas@axilleas.me>2016-03-01 10:29:27 +0200
commitd5f634b32fdd2f47239d3df5b9995d8cd2606df3 (patch)
tree97b15946e096c89f6575aea125c3e3085b727f20
parent581da235bfcf9fbd6442fd746a1e5a7a9901c927 (diff)
downloadgitlab-ce-ci_quickstart.tar.gz
Add a TL;DR version in quick start guideci_quickstart
Borrowed from a user's comment: https://gitlab.com/esr/reposurgeon/merge_requests/27#note_3158109 [ci skip]
-rw-r--r--doc/ci/quick_start/README.md49
1 files changed, 38 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md b/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md
index 5af7be5581e..624d9899c79 100644
--- a/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md
+++ b/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md
@@ -1,25 +1,47 @@
# Quick Start
-Starting from version 8.0, GitLab Continuous Integration (CI) is fully
-integrated into GitLab itself and is enabled by default on all projects.
+>**Note:** Starting from version 8.0, GitLab [Continuous Integration][ci] (CI)
+is fully integrated into GitLab itself and is [enabled] by default on all
+projects.
-This guide assumes that you:
+The TL;DR version of how GitLab CI works is the following.
-- have a working GitLab instance of version 8.0 or higher or are using
- [GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/users/sign_in)
-- have a project in GitLab that you would like to use CI for
+---
+
+GitLab offers a [continuous integration][ci] service. If you
+[add a `.gitlab-ci.yml` file][yaml] to the root directory of your repository,
+and configure your GitLab project to use a [Runner], then each merge request or
+push triggers a build.
+
+The `.gitlab-ci.yml` file tells the GitLab runner what do to. By default it
+runs three [stages]: `build`, `test`, and `deploy`.
+
+If everything runs OK (no non-zero return values), you'll get a nice green
+checkmark associated with the pushed commit or merge request. This makes it
+easy to see whether a merge request will cause any of the tests to fail before
+you even look at the code.
+
+Most projects only use GitLab's CI service to run the test suite so that
+developers get immediate feedback if they broke something.
-In brief, the steps needed to have a working CI can be summed up to:
+So in brief, the steps needed to have a working CI can be summed up to:
-1. Create a new project
-1. Add `.gitlab-ci.yml` to the git repository and push to GitLab
+1. Add `.gitlab-ci.yml` to the root directory of your repository
1. Configure a Runner
-From there on, on every push to your git repository the build will be
+From there on, on every push to your Git repository, the build will be
automagically started by the Runner and will appear under the project's
`/builds` page.
-Now, let's break it down to pieces and work on solving the GitLab CI puzzle.
+---
+
+This guide assumes that you:
+
+- have a working GitLab instance of version 8.0 or higher or are using
+ [GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/users/sign_in)
+- have a project in GitLab that you would like to use CI for
+
+Let's break it down to pieces and work on solving the GitLab CI puzzle.
## Creating a `.gitlab-ci.yml` file
@@ -218,3 +240,8 @@ Visit our various languages examples at <https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-exampl
[runner-install]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ci-multi-runner/tree/master#installation
[blog-ci]: https://about.gitlab.com/2015/05/06/why-were-replacing-gitlab-ci-jobs-with-gitlab-ci-dot-yml/
[examples]: ../examples/README.md
+[ci]: https://about.gitlab.com/gitlab-ci/
+[yaml]: ../yaml/README.md
+[runner]: ../runners/README.md
+[enabled]: ../enable_or_disable_ci.md
+[stages]: ../yaml/README.md#stages