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authorAlex Karnovsky <alexk@almtoolbox.com>2017-03-08 11:46:06 +0000
committerAlex Karnovsky <alexk@almtoolbox.com>2017-03-08 11:46:06 +0000
commitf6ba5ba87437c9b30f787797f00ce48a6aec8b06 (patch)
treecec592fe48d1b6ce2e870322d3ad7d997875d486 /doc/ci/quick_start/README.md
parente78a366925553a1268f8dc6e0d57342053a3240a (diff)
downloadgitlab-ce-f6ba5ba87437c9b30f787797f00ce48a6aec8b06.tar.gz
Update README.md
I replaced "merge requests" by "commits". As far as I notice, merge requests per se don't trigger CI; commits and pushes (which are essentially adding commits) do. This is logical: an MR doesn't create anything new, so there is nothing to test.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/ci/quick_start/README.md')
-rw-r--r--doc/ci/quick_start/README.md6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md b/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md
index 2a5401ac13a..76e86f3e3c3 100644
--- a/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md
+++ b/doc/ci/quick_start/README.md
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ projects.
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
+and configure your GitLab project to use a [Runner], then each commit or
push, triggers your CI [pipeline].
The `.gitlab-ci.yml` file tells the GitLab runner what to do. By default it runs
@@ -14,8 +14,8 @@ a pipeline with three [stages]: `build`, `test`, and `deploy`. You don't need to
use all three stages; stages with no jobs are simply ignored.
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 caused any of the tests to fail before
+checkmark associated with the commit. This makes it
+easy to see whether a commit caused any of the tests to fail before
you even look at the code.
Most projects use GitLab's CI service to run the test suite so that