From 9f46488805e86b1bc341ea1620b866016c2ce5ed Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: GitLab Bot Date: Wed, 20 May 2020 14:34:42 +0000 Subject: Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@13-0-stable-ee --- doc/topics/autodevops/index.md | 406 ++++++++++++++++++++++++----------------- 1 file changed, 241 insertions(+), 165 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc/topics/autodevops/index.md') diff --git a/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md b/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md index 7ed6625bea3..e7165136cf0 100644 --- a/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md +++ b/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md @@ -3,17 +3,25 @@ > - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/37115) in GitLab 10.0. > - Generally available on GitLab 11.0. -Auto DevOps provides pre-defined CI/CD configuration which allows you to automatically detect, build, test, -deploy, and monitor your applications. Leveraging CI/CD best practices and tools, Auto DevOps aims -to simplify the setup and execution of a mature & modern software development lifecycle. +Auto DevOps provides pre-defined CI/CD configuration allowing you to automatically +detect, build, test, deploy, and monitor your applications. Leveraging CI/CD +best practices and tools, Auto DevOps aims to simplify the setup and execution +of a mature and modern software development lifecycle. ## Overview -With Auto DevOps, the software development process becomes easier to set up -as every project can have a complete workflow from verification to monitoring -with minimal configuration. Just push your code and GitLab takes -care of everything else. This makes it easier to start new projects and brings -consistency to how applications are set up throughout a company. +You can spend a lot of effort to set up the workflow and processes required to +build, deploy, and monitor your project. It gets worse when your company has +hundreds, if not thousands, of projects to maintain. With new projects +constantly starting up, the entire software development process becomes +impossibly complex to manage. + +Auto DevOps provides you a seamless software development process by +automatically detecting all dependencies and language technologies required to +test, build, package, deploy, and monitor every project with minimal +configuration. Automation enables consistency across your projects, seamless +management of processes, and faster creation of new projects: push your code, +and GitLab does the rest, improving your productivity and efficiency. For an introduction to Auto DevOps, watch [AutoDevOps in GitLab 11.0](https://youtu.be/0Tc0YYBxqi4). @@ -21,14 +29,14 @@ For an introduction to Auto DevOps, watch [AutoDevOps in GitLab 11.0](https://yo > [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/41729) in GitLab 11.3. -Auto DevOps is enabled by default for all projects and will attempt to run on all pipelines -in each project. This default can be enabled or disabled by an instance administrator in the +Auto DevOps is enabled by default for all projects and attempts to run on all pipelines +in each project. An instance administrator can enable or disable this default in the [Auto DevOps settings](../../user/admin_area/settings/continuous_integration.md#auto-devops-core-only). -It will be automatically disabled in individual projects on their first pipeline failure, +Auto DevOps automatically disables in individual projects on their first pipeline failure, if it has not been explicitly enabled for the project. Since [GitLab 12.7](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/issues/26655), Auto DevOps -will run on pipelines automatically only if a [`Dockerfile` or matching buildpack](stages.md#auto-build) +runs on pipelines automatically only if a [`Dockerfile` or matching buildpack](stages.md#auto-build) exists. If a [CI/CD configuration file](../../ci/yaml/README.md) is present in the project, @@ -36,18 +44,21 @@ it will continue to be used, whether or not Auto DevOps is enabled. ## Quick start -If you are using GitLab.com, see the [quick start guide](quick_start_guide.md) -for how to use Auto DevOps with GitLab.com and a Kubernetes cluster on Google Kubernetes +If you're using GitLab.com, see the [quick start guide](quick_start_guide.md) +for setting up Auto DevOps with GitLab.com and a Kubernetes cluster on Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE). -If you are using a self-managed instance of GitLab, you will need to configure the +If you use a self-managed instance of GitLab, you must configure the [Google OAuth2 OmniAuth Provider](../../integration/google.md) before -you can configure a cluster on GKE. Once this is set up, you can follow the steps on the -[quick start guide](quick_start_guide.md) to get started. +configuring a cluster on GKE. After configuring the provider, you can follow +the steps in the [quick start guide](quick_start_guide.md) to get started. + +In [GitLab 13.0](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/208132) and later, it is +possible to leverage Auto DevOps to deploy to [AWS ECS](#aws-ecs). ## Comparison to application platforms and PaaS -Auto DevOps provides functionality that is often included in an application +Auto DevOps provides features often included in an application platform or a Platform as a Service (PaaS). It takes inspiration from the innovative work done by [Heroku](https://www.heroku.com/) and goes beyond it in multiple ways: @@ -60,7 +71,7 @@ in multiple ways: - Auto DevOps has more features including security testing, performance testing, and code quality testing. - Auto DevOps offers an incremental graduation path. If you need advanced customizations, - you can start modifying the templates without having to start over on a + you can start modifying the templates without starting over on a completely different platform. Review the [customizing](customize.md) documentation for more information. ## Features @@ -81,7 +92,7 @@ project in a simple and automatic way: 1. [Auto Browser Performance Testing](stages.md#auto-browser-performance-testing-premium) **(PREMIUM)** 1. [Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring) -As Auto DevOps relies on many different components, it's good to have a basic +As Auto DevOps relies on many different components, you should have a basic knowledge of the following: - [Kubernetes](https://kubernetes.io/docs/home/) @@ -102,101 +113,137 @@ Auto DevOps. ## Requirements -To make full use of Auto DevOps, you will need: +### Kubernetes + +To make full use of Auto DevOps with Kubernetes, you need: -- **Kubernetes** (for Auto Review Apps, Auto Deploy, and Auto Monitoring) +- **Kubernetes** (for [Auto Review Apps](stages.md#auto-review-apps), + [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy), and [Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring)) - To enable deployments, you will need: + To enable deployments, you need: - 1. A [Kubernetes 1.12+ cluster](../../user/project/clusters/index.md) for the project. The easiest - way is to create a [new cluster using the GitLab UI](../../user/project/clusters/add_remove_clusters.md#create-new-cluster). - For Kubernetes 1.16+ clusters, there is some additional configuration for [Auto Deploy for Kubernetes 1.16+](stages.md#kubernetes-116). + 1. A [Kubernetes 1.12+ cluster](../../user/project/clusters/index.md) for your + project. The easiest way is to create a + [new cluster using the GitLab UI](../../user/project/clusters/add_remove_clusters.md#create-new-cluster). + For Kubernetes 1.16+ clusters, you must perform additional configuration for + [Auto Deploy for Kubernetes 1.16+](stages.md#kubernetes-116). 1. NGINX Ingress. You can deploy it to your Kubernetes cluster by installing the [GitLab-managed app for Ingress](../../user/clusters/applications.md#ingress), - once you have configured GitLab's Kubernetes integration in the previous step. + after configuring GitLab's Kubernetes integration in the previous step. Alternatively, you can use the [`nginx-ingress`](https://github.com/helm/charts/tree/master/stable/nginx-ingress) Helm chart to install Ingress manually. NOTE: **Note:** - If you are using your own Ingress instead of the one provided by GitLab's managed - apps, ensure you are running at least version 0.9.0 of NGINX Ingress and + If you use your own Ingress instead of the one provided by GitLab's managed + apps, ensure you're running at least version 0.9.0 of NGINX Ingress and [enable Prometheus metrics](https://github.com/helm/charts/tree/master/stable/nginx-ingress#prometheus-metrics) - in order for the response metrics to appear. You will also have to + for the response metrics to appear. You must also [annotate](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/annotations/) the NGINX Ingress deployment to be scraped by Prometheus using `prometheus.io/scrape: "true"` and `prometheus.io/port: "10254"`. -- **Base domain** (for Auto Review Apps, Auto Deploy, and Auto Monitoring) +- **Base domain** (for [Auto Review Apps](stages.md#auto-review-apps), + [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy), and [Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring)) - You will need a domain configured with wildcard DNS which is going to be used - by all of your Auto DevOps applications. If you're using the + You need a domain configured with wildcard DNS, which all of your Auto DevOps + applications will use. If you're using the [GitLab-managed app for Ingress](../../user/clusters/applications.md#ingress), - the URL endpoint will be automatically configured for you. + the URL endpoint is automatically configured for you. - You will then need to [specify the Auto DevOps base domain](#auto-devops-base-domain). + You must also [specify the Auto DevOps base domain](#auto-devops-base-domain). - **GitLab Runner** (for all stages) - Your Runner needs to be configured to be able to run Docker. Generally this - means using either the [Docker](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/docker.html) + Your Runner must be configured to run Docker, usually with either the + [Docker](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/docker.html) or [Kubernetes](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/kubernetes.html) executors, with [privileged mode enabled](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/executors/docker.html#use-docker-in-docker-with-privileged-mode). - The Runners do not need to be installed in the Kubernetes cluster, but the - Kubernetes executor is easy to use and is automatically autoscaling. - Docker-based Runners can be configured to autoscale as well, using [Docker - Machine](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/install/autoscaling.html). + The Runners don't need to be installed in the Kubernetes cluster, but the + Kubernetes executor is easy to use and automatically autoscales. + You can configure Docker-based Runners to autoscale as well, using + [Docker Machine](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/install/autoscaling.html). - If you have configured GitLab's Kubernetes integration in the first step, you + If you've configured GitLab's Kubernetes integration in the first step, you can deploy it to your cluster by installing the [GitLab-managed app for GitLab Runner](../../user/clusters/applications.md#gitlab-runner). Runners should be registered as [shared Runners](../../ci/runners/README.md#registering-a-shared-runner) for the entire GitLab instance, or [specific Runners](../../ci/runners/README.md#registering-a-specific-runner) - that are assigned to specific projects (the default if you have installed the + that are assigned to specific projects (the default if you've installed the GitLab Runner managed application). -- **Prometheus** (for Auto Monitoring) +- **Prometheus** (for [Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring)) - To enable Auto Monitoring, you will need Prometheus installed somewhere - (inside or outside your cluster) and configured to scrape your Kubernetes cluster. - If you have configured GitLab's Kubernetes integration, you can deploy it to + To enable Auto Monitoring, you need Prometheus installed either inside or + outside your cluster, and configured to scrape your Kubernetes cluster. + If you've configured GitLab's Kubernetes integration, you can deploy it to your cluster by installing the [GitLab-managed app for Prometheus](../../user/clusters/applications.md#prometheus). The [Prometheus service](../../user/project/integrations/prometheus.md) - integration needs to be enabled for the project (or enabled as a + integration must be enabled for the project, or enabled as a [default service template](../../user/project/integrations/services_templates.md) - for the entire GitLab installation). + for the entire GitLab installation. - To get response metrics (in addition to system metrics), you need to + To get response metrics (in addition to system metrics), you must [configure Prometheus to monitor NGINX](../../user/project/integrations/prometheus_library/nginx_ingress.md#configuring-nginx-ingress-monitoring). - **cert-manager** (optional, for TLS/HTTPS) - To enable HTTPS endpoints for your application, you need to install cert-manager, - a native Kubernetes certificate management controller that helps with issuing certificates. - Installing cert-manager on your cluster will issue a certificate by - [Let’s Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) and ensure that certificates are valid and up-to-date. - If you have configured GitLab's Kubernetes integration, you can deploy it to - your cluster by installing the + To enable HTTPS endpoints for your application, you must install cert-manager, + a native Kubernetes certificate management controller that helps with issuing + certificates. Installing cert-manager on your cluster issues a + [Let’s Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) certificate and ensures the + certificates are valid and up-to-date. If you've configured GitLab's Kubernetes + integration, you can deploy it to your cluster by installing the [GitLab-managed app for cert-manager](../../user/clusters/applications.md#cert-manager). -If you do not have Kubernetes or Prometheus installed, then Auto Review Apps, -Auto Deploy, and Auto Monitoring will be silently skipped. +If you don't have Kubernetes or Prometheus installed, then +[Auto Review Apps](stages.md#auto-review-apps), +[Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy), and [Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring) +are skipped. + +After all requirements are met, you can [enable Auto DevOps](#enablingdisabling-auto-devops). + +### AWS ECS + +> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/208132) in GitLab 13.0. + +You can choose to target [AWS ECS](../../ci/cloud_deployment/index.md) as a deployment platform instead of using Kubernetes. + +To get started on Auto DevOps to ECS, you'll have to add a specific Environment +Variable. To do so, follow these steps: -One all requirements are met, you can go ahead and [enable Auto DevOps](#enablingdisabling-auto-devops). +1. In your project, go to **Settings > CI / CD** and expand the **Variables** + section. + +1. Specify which AWS platform to target during the Auto DevOps deployment + by adding the `AUTO_DEVOPS_PLATFORM_TARGET` variable. + +1. Give this variable the value `ECS` before saving it. + +When you trigger a pipeline, if you have AutoDev Ops enabled and if you have correctly +[entered AWS credentials as environment variables](../../ci/cloud_deployment/index.md#deploy-your-application-to-aws-elastic-container-service-ecs), +your application will be deployed to AWS ECS. + +NOTE: **Note:** +If you have both a valid `AUTO_DEVOPS_PLATFORM_TARGET` variable and a Kubernetes cluster tied to your project, +only the deployment to Kubernetes will run. ## Auto DevOps base domain -The Auto DevOps base domain is required if you want to make use of +The Auto DevOps base domain is required to use [Auto Review Apps](stages.md#auto-review-apps), [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy), and -[Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring). It can be defined in any of the following -places: - -- either under the cluster's settings, whether for [projects](../../user/project/clusters/index.md#base-domain) or [groups](../../user/group/clusters/index.md#base-domain) -- or in instance-wide settings in the **Admin Area > Settings** under the "Continuous Integration and Delivery" section +[Auto Monitoring](stages.md#auto-monitoring). You can define the base domain in +any of the following places: + +- either under the cluster's settings, whether for + [projects](../../user/project/clusters/index.md#base-domain) or + [groups](../../user/group/clusters/index.md#base-domain) +- or in instance-wide settings in **{admin}** **Admin Area > Settings** under the + **Continuous Integration and Delivery** section - or at the project level as a variable: `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN` - or at the group level as a variable: `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN`. @@ -204,55 +251,57 @@ The base domain variable `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN` follows the same order of pr as other environment [variables](../../ci/variables/README.md#priority-of-environment-variables). TIP: **Tip:** -If you're using the [GitLab managed app for Ingress](../../user/clusters/applications.md#ingress), -the URL endpoint should be automatically configured for you. All you have to do +If you use the [GitLab managed app for Ingress](../../user/clusters/applications.md#ingress), +the URL endpoint should be automatically configured for you. All you must do is use its value for the `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN` variable. NOTE: **Note:** `AUTO_DEVOPS_DOMAIN` was [deprecated in GitLab 11.8](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/52363) -and replaced with `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN`. It was removed in +and replaced with `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN`, and removed in [GitLab 12.0](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/56959). -A wildcard DNS A record matching the base domain(s) is required, for example, -given a base domain of `example.com`, you'd need a DNS entry like: +Auto DevOps requires a wildcard DNS A record matching the base domain(s). For +a base domain of `example.com`, you'd need a DNS entry like: -```text +```plaintext *.example.com 3600 A 1.2.3.4 ``` -In this case, `example.com` is the domain name under which the deployed apps will be served, -and `1.2.3.4` is the IP address of your load balancer; generally NGINX -([see requirements](#requirements)). How to set up the DNS record is beyond -the scope of this document; you should check with your DNS provider. +In this case, the deployed applications are served from `example.com`, and `1.2.3.4` +is the IP address of your load balancer; generally NGINX ([see requirements](#requirements)). +Setting up the DNS record is beyond the scope of this document; check with your +DNS provider for information. -Alternatively you can use free public services like [nip.io](https://nip.io) -which provide automatic wildcard DNS without any configuration. Just set the -Auto DevOps base domain to `1.2.3.4.nip.io`. +Alternatively, you can use free public services like [nip.io](https://nip.io) +which provide automatic wildcard DNS without any configuration. For [nip.io](https://nip.io), +set the Auto DevOps base domain to `1.2.3.4.nip.io`. -Once set up, all requests will hit the load balancer, which in turn will route -them to the Kubernetes pods that run your application(s). +After completing setup, all requests hit the load balancer, which routes requests +to the Kubernetes pods running your application. ## Enabling/Disabling Auto DevOps -When first using Auto DevOps, review the [requirements](#requirements) to ensure all necessary components to make -full use of Auto DevOps are available. If this is your fist time, we recommend you follow the -[quick start guide](quick_start_guide.md). +When first using Auto DevOps, review the [requirements](#requirements) to ensure +all the necessary components to make full use of Auto DevOps are available. First-time +users should follow the [quick start guide](quick_start_guide.md). -GitLab.com users can enable/disable Auto DevOps at the project-level only. Self-managed users -can enable/disable Auto DevOps at the project-level, group-level or instance-level. +GitLab.com users can enable or disable Auto DevOps only at the project level. +Self-managed users can enable or disable Auto DevOps at the project, group, or +instance level. ### At the project level -If enabling, check that your project doesn't have a `.gitlab-ci.yml`, or if one exists, remove it. +If enabling, check that your project does not have a `.gitlab-ci.yml`, or if one exists, remove it. -1. Go to your project's **Settings > CI/CD > Auto DevOps**. -1. Toggle the **Default to Auto DevOps pipeline** checkbox (checked to enable, unchecked to disable) -1. When enabling, it's optional but recommended to add in the [base domain](#auto-devops-base-domain) - that will be used by Auto DevOps to [deploy your application](stages.md#auto-deploy) +1. Go to your project's **{settings}** **Settings > CI/CD > Auto DevOps**. +1. Select the **Default to Auto DevOps pipeline** checkbox to enable it. +1. (Optional, but recommended) When enabling, you can add in the + [base domain](#auto-devops-base-domain) Auto DevOps uses to + [deploy your application](stages.md#auto-deploy), and choose the [deployment strategy](#deployment-strategy). 1. Click **Save changes** for the changes to take effect. -When the feature has been enabled, an Auto DevOps pipeline is triggered on the default branch. +After enabling the feature, an Auto DevOps pipeline is triggered on the default branch. ### At the group level @@ -260,48 +309,50 @@ When the feature has been enabled, an Auto DevOps pipeline is triggered on the d Only administrators and group owners can enable or disable Auto DevOps at the group level. -To enable or disable Auto DevOps at the group-level: +When enabling or disabling Auto DevOps at group level, group configuration is +implicitly used for the subgroups and projects inside that group, unless Auto DevOps +is specifically enabled or disabled on the subgroup or project. -1. Go to group's **Settings > CI/CD > Auto DevOps** page. -1. Toggle the **Default to Auto DevOps pipeline** checkbox (checked to enable, unchecked to disable). -1. Click **Save changes** button for the changes to take effect. +To enable or disable Auto DevOps at the group level: -When enabling or disabling Auto DevOps at group-level, group configuration will be implicitly used for -the subgroups and projects inside that group, unless Auto DevOps is specifically enabled or disabled on -the subgroup or project. +1. Go to your group's **{settings}** **Settings > CI/CD > Auto DevOps** page. +1. Select the **Default to Auto DevOps pipeline** checkbox to enable it. +1. Click **Save changes** for the changes to take effect. ### At the instance level (Administrators only) Even when disabled at the instance level, group owners and project maintainers can still enable Auto DevOps at the group and project level, respectively. -1. Go to **Admin Area > Settings > Continuous Integration and Deployment**. -1. Toggle the checkbox labeled **Default to Auto DevOps pipeline for all projects**. -1. If enabling, optionally set up the Auto DevOps [base domain](#auto-devops-base-domain) which will be used for Auto Deploy and Auto Review Apps. +1. Go to **{admin}** **Admin Area > Settings > Continuous Integration and Deployment**. +1. Select **Default to Auto DevOps pipeline for all projects** to enable it. +1. (Optional) You can set up the Auto DevOps [base domain](#auto-devops-base-domain), + for Auto Deploy and Auto Review Apps to use. 1. Click **Save changes** for the changes to take effect. ### Enable for a percentage of projects -There is also a feature flag to enable Auto DevOps by default to your chosen percentage of projects. +You can use a feature flag to enable Auto DevOps by default to your desired percentage +of projects. From the console, enter the following command, replacing `10` with +your desired percentage: -This can be enabled from the console with the following, which uses the example of 10%: - -`Feature.get(:force_autodevops_on_by_default).enable_percentage_of_actors(10)` +```ruby +Feature.get(:force_autodevops_on_by_default).enable_percentage_of_actors(10) +``` ### Deployment strategy > [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/issues/38542) in GitLab 11.0. You can change the deployment strategy used by Auto DevOps by going to your -project's **Settings > CI/CD > Auto DevOps**. - -The available options are: +project's **{settings}** **Settings > CI/CD > Auto DevOps**. The following options +are available: - **Continuous deployment to production**: Enables [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy) with `master` branch directly deployed to production. - **Continuous deployment to production using timed incremental rollout**: Sets the [`INCREMENTAL_ROLLOUT_MODE`](customize.md#timed-incremental-rollout-to-production-premium) variable - to `timed`, and production deployment will be executed with a 5 minute delay between + to `timed`. Production deployments execute with a 5 minute delay between each increment in rollout. - **Automatic deployment to staging, manual deployment to production**: Sets the [`STAGING_ENABLED`](customize.md#deploy-policy-for-staging-and-production-environments) and @@ -313,63 +364,61 @@ The available options are: ## Using multiple Kubernetes clusters **(PREMIUM)** -When using Auto DevOps, you may want to deploy different environments to -different Kubernetes clusters. This is possible due to the 1:1 connection that -[exists between them](../../user/project/clusters/index.md#multiple-kubernetes-clusters-premium). +When using Auto DevOps, you can deploy different environments to +different Kubernetes clusters, due to the 1:1 connection +[existing between them](../../user/project/clusters/index.md#multiple-kubernetes-clusters-premium). -In the [Auto DevOps template](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Auto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml) (used behind the scenes by Auto DevOps), there -are currently 3 defined environment names that you need to know: +The [template](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/Auto-DevOps.gitlab-ci.yml) +used by Auto DevOps currently defines 3 environment names: - `review/` (every environment starting with `review/`) - `staging` - `production` -Those environments are tied to jobs that use [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy), so -except for the environment scope, they would also need to have a different -domain they would be deployed to. This is why you need to define a separate -`KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN` variable for all the above -[based on the environment](../../ci/variables/README.md#limiting-environment-scopes-of-environment-variables). +Those environments are tied to jobs using [Auto Deploy](stages.md#auto-deploy), so +except for the environment scope, they must have a different deployment domain. +You must define a separate `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN` variable for each of the above +[based on the environment](../../ci/variables/README.md#limit-the-environment-scopes-of-environment-variables). -The following table is an example of how the three different clusters would -be configured. +The following table is an example of how to configure the three different clusters: | Cluster name | Cluster environment scope | `KUBE_INGRESS_BASE_DOMAIN` variable value | Variable environment scope | Notes | |--------------|---------------------------|-------------------------------------------|----------------------------|---| -| review | `review/*` | `review.example.com` | `review/*` | The review cluster which will run all [Review Apps](../../ci/review_apps/index.md). `*` is a wildcard, which means it will be used by every environment name starting with `review/`. | -| staging | `staging` | `staging.example.com` | `staging` | (Optional) The staging cluster which will run the deployments of the staging environments. You need to [enable it first](customize.md#deploy-policy-for-staging-and-production-environments). | -| production | `production` | `example.com` | `production` | The production cluster which will run the deployments of the production environment. You can use [incremental rollouts](customize.md#incremental-rollout-to-production-premium). | +| review | `review/*` | `review.example.com` | `review/*` | The review cluster which runs all [Review Apps](../../ci/review_apps/index.md). `*` is a wildcard, used by every environment name starting with `review/`. | +| staging | `staging` | `staging.example.com` | `staging` | (Optional) The staging cluster which runs the deployments of the staging environments. You must [enable it first](customize.md#deploy-policy-for-staging-and-production-environments). | +| production | `production` | `example.com` | `production` | The production cluster which runs the production environment deployments. You can use [incremental rollouts](customize.md#incremental-rollout-to-production-premium). | To add a different cluster for each environment: -1. Navigate to your project's **Operations > Kubernetes** and create the Kubernetes clusters - with their respective environment scope as described from the table above. +1. Navigate to your project's **{cloud-gear}** **Operations > Kubernetes**. +1. Create the Kubernetes clusters with their respective environment scope, as + described from the table above. ![Auto DevOps multiple clusters](img/autodevops_multiple_clusters.png) -1. After the clusters are created, navigate to each one and install Helm Tiller +1. After creating the clusters, navigate to each cluster and install Helm Tiller and Ingress. Wait for the Ingress IP address to be assigned. -1. Make sure you have [configured your DNS](#auto-devops-base-domain) with the +1. Make sure you've [configured your DNS](#auto-devops-base-domain) with the specified Auto DevOps domains. -1. Navigate to each cluster's page, through **Operations > Kubernetes**, +1. Navigate to each cluster's page, through **{cloud-gear}** **Operations > Kubernetes**, and add the domain based on its Ingress IP address. -Now that all is configured, you can test your setup by creating a merge request -and verifying that your app is deployed as a review app in the Kubernetes +After completing configuration, you can test your setup by creating a merge request +and verifying your application is deployed as a Review App in the Kubernetes cluster with the `review/*` environment scope. Similarly, you can check the other environments. ## Currently supported languages Note that not all buildpacks support Auto Test yet, as it's a relatively new -enhancement. All of Heroku's [officially supported -languages](https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/heroku-ci#currently-supported-languages) -support it, and some third-party buildpacks as well e.g., Go, Node, Java, PHP, -Python, Ruby, Gradle, Scala, and Elixir all support Auto Test, but notably the -multi-buildpack does not. +enhancement. All of Heroku's +[officially supported languages](https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/heroku-ci#supported-languages) +support Auto Test. The languages supported by Heroku's Herokuish buildpacks all +support Auto Test, but notably the multi-buildpack does not. As of GitLab 10.0, the supported buildpacks are: -```text +```plaintext - heroku-buildpack-multi v1.0.0 - heroku-buildpack-ruby v168 - heroku-buildpack-nodejs v99 @@ -385,24 +434,27 @@ As of GitLab 10.0, the supported buildpacks are: - buildpack-nginx v8 ``` +If your application needs a buildpack that is not in the above list, you +might want to use a [custom buildpack](customize.md#custom-buildpacks). + ## Limitations The following restrictions apply. ### Private registry support -There is no documented way of using private container registry with Auto DevOps. -We strongly advise using GitLab Container Registry with Auto DevOps in order to +No documented way of using private container registry with Auto DevOps exists. +We strongly advise using GitLab Container Registry with Auto DevOps to simplify configuration and prevent any unforeseen issues. ### Installing Helm behind a proxy -GitLab does not yet support installing [Helm as a GitLab-managed App](../../user/clusters/applications.md#helm) when -behind a proxy. Users who wish to do so must inject their proxy settings -into the installation pods at runtime, for example by using a +GitLab does not support installing [Helm as a GitLab-managed App](../../user/clusters/applications.md#helm) when +behind a proxy. Users who want to do so must inject their proxy settings +into the installation pods at runtime, such as by using a [`PodPreset`](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/podpreset/): -```yml +```yaml apiVersion: settings.k8s.io/v1alpha1 kind: PodPreset metadata: @@ -418,28 +470,52 @@ spec: ## Troubleshooting -- Auto Build and Auto Test may fail to detect your language or framework with the - following error: - - ```plaintext - Step 5/11 : RUN /bin/herokuish buildpack build - ---> Running in eb468cd46085 - -----> Unable to select a buildpack - The command '/bin/sh -c /bin/herokuish buildpack build' returned a non-zero code: 1 - ``` - - The following are possible reasons: - - - Your application may be missing the key files the buildpack is looking for. For - example, for Ruby applications you must have a `Gemfile` to be properly detected, - even though it is possible to write a Ruby app without a `Gemfile`. - - There may be no buildpack for your application. Try specifying a - [custom buildpack](customize.md#custom-buildpacks). -- Auto Test may fail because of a mismatch between testing frameworks. In this - case, you may need to customize your `.gitlab-ci.yml` with your test commands. -- Auto Deploy will fail if GitLab can not create a Kubernetes namespace and - service account for your project. For help debugging this issue, see - [Troubleshooting failed deployment jobs](../../user/project/clusters/index.md#troubleshooting). +### Unable to select a buildpack + +Auto Build and Auto Test may fail to detect your language or framework with the +following error: + +```plaintext +Step 5/11 : RUN /bin/herokuish buildpack build + ---> Running in eb468cd46085 + -----> Unable to select a buildpack +The command '/bin/sh -c /bin/herokuish buildpack build' returned a non-zero code: 1 +``` + +The following are possible reasons: + +- Your application may be missing the key files the buildpack is looking for. + Ruby applications require a `Gemfile` to be properly detected, + even though it's possible to write a Ruby app without a `Gemfile`. +- No buildpack may exist for your application. Try specifying a + [custom buildpack](customize.md#custom-buildpacks). + +### Mismatch between testing frameworks + +Auto Test may fail because of a mismatch between testing frameworks. In this +case, you may need to customize your `.gitlab-ci.yml` with your test commands. + +### Pipeline that extends Auto DevOps with only / except fails + +If your pipeline fails with the following message: + +```plaintext +Found errors in your .gitlab-ci.yml: + + jobs:test config key may not be used with `rules`: only +``` + +This error appears when the included job’s rules configuration has been overridden with the `only` or `except` syntax. +To fix this issue, you must either: + +- Transition your `only/except` syntax to rules. +- (Temporarily) Pin your templates to the [GitLab 12.10 based templates](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/auto-devops-v12-10). + +### Failure to create a Kubernetes namespace + +Auto Deploy will fail if GitLab can't create a Kubernetes namespace and +service account for your project. For help debugging this issue, see +[Troubleshooting failed deployment jobs](../../user/project/clusters/index.md#troubleshooting). ## Development guides -- cgit v1.2.1