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authorScott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com>2020-07-30 20:50:29 -0600
committerScott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com>2020-09-14 10:37:42 -0600
commitbf90cdd6c7f6309226a2a0e79f7b0ce5b02a5477 (patch)
tree1e2bde57ecddd90f4721c4db3aaa1565d13b655f /lib
parentd9e0718c9de3d0afd747f16c1609d2f4e3a07190 (diff)
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Document pipeline keys which can be global but overridden
Update pipelines documentation to describe how 'tags', 'variables', 'image', 'before_script', 'script', and 'after_script' can be supplied at the top level, to be used by any of the runner mappings, and also overridden by any of the runner mappings. Also show an example of capturing the custom spack SHA at pipeline generation time, so all jobs are sure to run with the same version of spack, as a means to illustrate the $env:VARIABLE_NAME syntax.
Diffstat (limited to 'lib')
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/pipelines.rst114
1 files changed, 108 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/pipelines.rst b/lib/spack/docs/pipelines.rst
index 8559702b6a..42595dc2ab 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/pipelines.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/pipelines.rst
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ for setting up a build pipeline are as follows:
tags:
- <custom-tag>
script:
- - spack env activate .
+ - spack env activate --without-view .
- spack ci generate
--output-file "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir/pipeline.yml"
artifacts:
@@ -197,15 +197,37 @@ corresponds to a known gitlab runner, where the ``match`` section is used
in assigning a release spec to one of the runners, and the ``runner-attributes``
section is used to configure the spec/job for that particular runner.
+Both the top-level ``gitlab-ci`` section as well as each ``runner-attributes``
+section can also contain the following keys: ``image``, ``tags``, ``variables``,
+``before_script``, ``script``, and ``after_script``. If any of these keys are
+provided at the ``gitlab-ci`` level, they will be used as the defaults for any
+``runner-attributes``, unless they are overridden in those sections. Specifying
+any of these keys at the ``runner-attributes`` level generally overrides the
+keys specified at the higher level, with a couple exceptions. Any ``variables``
+specified at both levels result in those dictionaries getting merged in the
+resulting generated job, and any duplicate variable names get assigned the value
+provided in the specific ``runner-attributes``. If ``tags`` are specified both
+at the ``gitlab-ci`` level as well as the ``runner-attributes`` level, then the
+lists of tags are combined, and any duplicates are removed.
+
+See the section below on using a custom spack for an example of how these keys
+could be used.
+
There are other pipeline options you can configure within the ``gitlab-ci`` section
-as well. The ``bootstrap`` section allows you to specify lists of specs from
+as well.
+
+The ``bootstrap`` section allows you to specify lists of specs from
your ``definitions`` that should be staged ahead of the environment's ``specs`` (this
section is described in more detail below). The ``enable-artifacts-buildcache`` key
takes a boolean and determines whether the pipeline uses artifacts to store and
pass along the buildcaches from one stage to the next (the default if you don't
-provide this option is ``False``). The ``enable-debug-messages`` key takes a boolean
+provide this option is ``False``).
+
+The ``enable-debug-messages`` key takes a boolean
and allows you to choose whether the pipeline build jobs are run as ``spack -d ci rebuild``
-or just ``spack ci rebuild`` (the default is not to enable debug messages). The
+or just ``spack ci rebuild`` (the default is not to enable debug messages).
+
+The
``final-stage-rebuild-index`` section controls whether an extra job is added to the
end of your pipeline (in a stage by itself) which will regenerate the mirror's
buildcache index. Under normal operation, each pipeline job that rebuilds a package
@@ -228,6 +250,11 @@ progresses, this build group may have jobs added or removed. The url, project,
and site are used to specify the CDash instance to which build results should
be reported.
+Take a look at the
+`schema <https://github.com/spack/spack/blob/develop/lib/spack/spack/schema/gitlab_ci.py>`_
+for the gitlab-ci section of the spack environment file, to see precisely what
+syntax is allowed there.
+
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Assignment of specs to runners
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
@@ -393,7 +420,7 @@ other reason you want to use a custom version of spack to run your pipelines,
this section provides an example of how you could take advantage of
user-provided pipeline scripts to accomplish this fairly simply. First, you
could use the GitLab user interface to create CI environment variables
-containing the url and branch/tag/SHA you want to clone (calling them, for
+containing the url and branch or tag you want to clone (calling them, for
example, ``SPACK_REPO`` and ``SPACK_REF``), then use those in a custom shell
script invoked both from your pipeline generation job, as well in your rebuild
jobs. Here's the ``generate-pipeline`` job from the top of this document,
@@ -408,7 +435,7 @@ spack:
before_script:
- ./cloneSpack.sh
script:
- - spack env activate .
+ - spack env activate --without-view .
- spack ci generate
--output-file "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir/pipeline.yml"
after_script:
@@ -450,6 +477,7 @@ of spack, so you would update your ``spack.yaml`` from above as follows:
before_script:
- ./cloneSpack.sh
script:
+ - spack env activate --without-view .
- spack -d ci rebuild
after_script:
- rm -rf ./spack
@@ -459,6 +487,80 @@ spack before running their actual workload. Here we have also provided a
custom ``script`` because we want to run ``spack ci rebuild`` in debug mode
to get more information when builds fail.
+Now imagine you have long pipelines with many specs to be built, and you
+are worried about the branch of spack you're testing changing somewhere
+in the middle of the pipeline, resulting in half the jobs getting run
+with a different version of spack. In this situation, you can take
+advantage of "generation-time variable interpolation" to avoid this issue.
+
+The basic idea is that before you run ``spack ci generate`` to generate
+your pipeline, you first capture the SHA of spack on the branch you want
+to test. Then in your ``spack.yaml`` you use the ``variables`` section
+of your ``runner-attributes`` to set the SHA as a variable (interpolated
+at pipeline generation time) which will be available to your generated child
+jobs when they run. Below we show a ``.gitlab-ci.yml`` for your environment
+repo, similar to the one above, but with the script elements right inline:
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ generate-pipeline:
+ tags:
+ - <some-other-tag>
+ before_script:
+ - git clone ${SPACK_REPO} --branch ${SPACK_REF}
+ - pushd ./spack && export CURRENT_SPACK_SHA=$(git rev-parse HEAD) && popd
+ - . "./spack/share/spack/setup-env.sh"
+ - spack --version
+ script:
+ - spack env activate --without-view .
+ - spack ci generate
+ --output-file "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir/pipeline.yml"
+ after_script:
+ - rm -rf ./spack
+ artifacts:
+ paths:
+ - "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir/pipeline.yml"
+
+Above we have just set an environment variable, ``CURRENT_SPACK_SHA``, which
+will be available when the pipeline generation job is running, but otherwise
+would not be available when the child jobs run. To make this available to
+those jobs, we can do something like this in our ``spack.yaml``:
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ spack:
+ ...
+ gitlab-ci:
+ mappings:
+ - match:
+ - os=ubuntu18.04
+ runner-attributes:
+ tags:
+ - spack-kube
+ image: spack/ubuntu-bionic
+ variables:
+ CAPTURED_SPACK_SHA: $env:CURRENT_SPACK_SHA
+ before_script:
+ - git clone ${SPACK_REPO}
+ - pushd ./spack && git checkout ${CAPTURED_SPACK_SHA} && popd
+ - . "./spack/share/spack/setup-env.sh"
+ - spack --version
+ script:
+ - spack env activate --without-view .
+ - spack -d ci rebuild
+ after_script:
+ - rm -rf ./spack
+
+The behavior of pipeline generation is just to copy your ``script`` elements
+verbatim into the job, leaving shell variable interopolation until the time
+jobs run. In this case, we have just used the ``$env:CURRENT_SPACK_SHA``
+syntax to interpolate that variable at job generation time, and put it in
+the generated yaml of the job as a variable we can get when the child job
+runs (``CAPTURED_SPACK_SHA``). Those variables can actually have the same name,
+but to avoid confusion, we've made them distinct here. Now all your child
+jobs will clone the same SHA of spack used to generate the pipeline, no matter
+whether more commits are pushed to the branch during that time.
+
.. _ci_environment_variables:
--------------------------------------------------