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author | Leandro Camargo <leandroico@gmail.com> | 2016-12-05 02:00:47 -0200 |
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committer | Leandro Camargo <leandroico@gmail.com> | 2017-01-25 01:07:44 -0200 |
commit | 6323cd7203dbf1850e7939e81db4b1a9c6cf6d76 (patch) | |
tree | ca9a9450c85337fcaab7c9ecc83d92903826d06e /doc | |
parent | f1e920ed86133bfea0abfc66ca44282813822073 (diff) | |
download | gitlab-ce-6323cd7203dbf1850e7939e81db4b1a9c6cf6d76.tar.gz |
Comply to more requirements and requests made in the code review
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ci/yaml/README.md | 16 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ci/yaml/README.md b/doc/ci/yaml/README.md index 0a264c0e228..5e2d9788f33 100644 --- a/doc/ci/yaml/README.md +++ b/doc/ci/yaml/README.md @@ -286,11 +286,13 @@ build outputs. Setting this up globally will make all the jobs to use this setting for output filtering and extracting the coverage information from your builds. -Regular expressions are used by default. So using surrounding `/` is optional, given it'll always be read as a regular expression. Don't forget to escape special characters whenever you want to match them in the regular expression. +Regular expressions are used by default. So using surrounding `/` is optional, +given it'll always be read as a regular expression. Don't forget to escape +special characters whenever you want to match them literally. A simple example: ```yaml -coverage: \(\d+\.\d+\) covered\. +coverage: /\(\d+\.\d+\) covered\./ ``` ## Jobs @@ -1014,19 +1016,19 @@ job: This entry is pretty much the same as described in the global context in [`coverage`](#coverage). The only difference is that, by setting it inside the job level, whatever is set in there will take precedence over what has -been defined in the global level. A quick example of one overwritting the +been defined in the global level. A quick example of one overriding the other would be: ```yaml -coverage: \(\d+\.\d+\) covered\. +coverage: /\(\d+\.\d+\) covered\./ job1: - coverage: Code coverage: \d+\.\d+ + coverage: /Code coverage: \d+\.\d+/ ``` In the example above, considering the context of the job `job1`, the coverage -regex that would be used is `Code coverage: \d+\.\d+` instead of -`\(\d+\.\d+\) covered\.`. +regex that would be used is `/Code coverage: \d+\.\d+/` instead of +`/\(\d+\.\d+\) covered\./`. ## Git Strategy |