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author | drew cimino <dcimino@gitlab.com> | 2019-04-26 11:37:20 -0400 |
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committer | drew cimino <dcimino@gitlab.com> | 2019-06-04 19:03:24 -0500 |
commit | cfaac7532210ef1ce03f335a3198bb7d2ad3979a (patch) | |
tree | d544f21c63cc98acb03bd39ca2cd6bde44c135d5 /doc | |
parent | 54cc3b64929dfe2eea562089b5fd6656a50ed2ae (diff) | |
download | gitlab-ce-cfaac7532210ef1ce03f335a3198bb7d2ad3979a.tar.gz |
&& and || operators for CI Pipeline expressions.
Refactored regex pattern matching to eagerly return tokens
Packaged behind a default-enabled feature flag and added operator documentation.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ci/variables/README.md | 18 |
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ci/variables/README.md b/doc/ci/variables/README.md index 2157a6dc097..ac3066dbb2a 100644 --- a/doc/ci/variables/README.md +++ b/doc/ci/variables/README.md @@ -490,6 +490,7 @@ Below you can find supported syntax reference: 1. Equality matching using a string > Example: `$VARIABLE == "some value"` + > Example: `$VARIABLE != "some value"` _(added in 11.11)_ You can use equality operator `==` or `!=` to compare a variable content to a @@ -500,6 +501,7 @@ Below you can find supported syntax reference: 1. Checking for an undefined value > Example: `$VARIABLE == null` + > Example: `$VARIABLE != null` _(added in 11.11)_ It sometimes happens that you want to check whether a variable is defined @@ -510,6 +512,7 @@ Below you can find supported syntax reference: 1. Checking for an empty variable > Example: `$VARIABLE == ""` + > Example: `$VARIABLE != ""` _(added in 11.11)_ If you want to check whether a variable is defined, but is empty, you can @@ -519,6 +522,7 @@ Below you can find supported syntax reference: 1. Comparing two variables > Example: `$VARIABLE_1 == $VARIABLE_2` + > Example: `$VARIABLE_1 != $VARIABLE_2` _(added in 11.11)_ It is possible to compare two variables. This is going to compare values @@ -538,6 +542,7 @@ Below you can find supported syntax reference: 1. Pattern matching _(added in 11.0)_ > Example: `$VARIABLE =~ /^content.*/` + > Example: `$VARIABLE_1 !~ /^content.*/` _(added in 11.11)_ It is possible perform pattern matching against a variable and regular @@ -547,6 +552,19 @@ Below you can find supported syntax reference: Pattern matching is case-sensitive by default. Use `i` flag modifier, like `/pattern/i` to make a pattern case-insensitive. +1. Conjunction / Disjunction + + > Example: `$VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ && $VARIABLE2 == "something"` + + > Example: `$VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ && $VARIABLE2 =~ /thing$/ && $VARIABLE3` + + > Example: `$VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ || $VARIABLE2 =~ /thing$/ && $VARIABLE3` + + It is possible to join multiple conditions using `&&` or `||`. Any of the otherwise + supported syntax may be used in a conjunctive or disjunctive statement. + Precedence of operators follows standard Ruby 2.5 operation + [precedence](https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.5.0/doc/syntax/precedence_rdoc.html). + ## Debug tracing > Introduced in GitLab Runner 1.7. |