Project
A project corresponds to a source code repository with which Zuul is configured to interact. The main responsibility of the project configuration item is to specify which jobs should run in which pipelines for a given project. Within each project definition, a section for each pipeline may appear. This project-pipeline definition is what determines how a project participates in a pipeline.
Multiple project definitions may appear for the same project (for
example, in a central config projects as well
as in a repo’s own .zuul.yaml
). In this case, all of the project
definitions for the relevant branch are combined (the jobs listed in
all of the matching definitions will be run). If a project definition
appears in a config-project, it will apply to all branches of
the project. If it appears in a branch of an
untrusted-project it will only apply to changes on that
branch. In the case of an item which does not have a branch (for
example, a tag), all of the project definitions will be combined.
Consider the following project definition:
- project:
name: yoyodyne
queue: integrated
check:
jobs:
- check-syntax
- unit-tests
gate:
jobs:
- unit-tests
- integration-tests
The project has two project-pipeline stanzas, one for the check
pipeline, and one for gate
. Each specifies which jobs should run
when a change for that project enters the respective pipeline – when
a change enters check
, the check-syntax
and unit-test
jobs
are run.
Pipelines which use the dependent pipeline manager (e.g., the gate
example shown earlier) maintain separate queues for groups of
projects. When Zuul serializes a set of changes which represent
future potential project states, it must know about all of the
projects within Zuul which may have an effect on the outcome of the
jobs it runs. If project A uses project B as a library, then Zuul
must be told about that relationship so that it knows to serialize
changes to A and B together, so that it does not merge a change to B
while it is testing a change to A.
Zuul could simply assume that all projects are related, or even infer
relationships by which projects a job indicates it uses, however, in a
large system that would become unwieldy very quickly, and
unnecessarily delay changes to unrelated projects. To allow for
flexibility in the construction of groups of related projects, the
change queues used by dependent pipeline managers are specified
manually. To group two or more related projects into a shared queue
for a dependent pipeline, set the queue
parameter to the same
value for those projects.
The gate
project-pipeline definition above specifies that this
project participates in the integrated
shared queue for that
pipeline.
-
project
The following attributes may appear in a project:
-
project.name
The name of the project. If Zuul is configured with two or more unique projects with the same name, the canonical hostname for the project should be included (e.g., git.example.com/foo). This can also be a regex. In this case the regex must start with
^
and match the full project name following the same rule as name without regex. If not given it is implicitly derived from the project where this is defined.
-
project.templates
A list of Project Template references; the project-pipeline definitions of each Project Template will be applied to this project. If more than one template includes jobs for a given pipeline, they will be combined, as will any jobs specified in project-pipeline definitions on the project itself.
-
project.default-branch
Default:master
The name of a branch that Zuul should check out in jobs if no better match is found. Typically Zuul will check out the branch which matches the change under test, or if a job has specified an job.override-checkout, it will check that out. However, if there is no matching or override branch, then Zuul will checkout the default branch.
Each project may only have one
default-branch
therefore Zuul will use the first value that it encounters for a given project (regardless of in which branch the definition appears). It may not appear in a Project Template definition.
-
project.merge-mode
Default:merge-resolve
The merge mode which is used by Git for this project. Be sure this matches what the remote system which performs merges (i.e., Gerrit). The requested merge mode will be used by the Github driver when performing merges.
Each project may only have one
merge-mode
therefore Zuul will use the first value that it encounters for a given project (regardless of in which branch the definition appears). It may not appear in a Project Template definition.It must be one of the following values:
- merge
Uses the default git merge strategy (recursive). This maps to the merge mode
merge
in Github and Gitlab.
- merge-resolve
Uses the resolve git merge strategy. This is a very conservative merge strategy which most closely matches the behavior of Gerrit. This maps to the merge mode
merge
in Github and Gitlab.
- cherry-pick
Cherry-picks each change onto the branch rather than performing any merges. This is not supported by Github and Gitlab.
- squash-merge
Squash merges each change onto the branch. This maps to the merge mode
squash
in Github and Gitlab.
-
project.vars
Default:None
A dictionary of variables to be made available for all jobs in all pipelines of this project. For more information see variable inheritance.
-
project.queue
This specifies the name of the shared queue this project is in. Any projects which interact with each other in tests should be part of the same shared queue in order to ensure that they don’t merge changes which break the others. This is a free-form string; just set the same value for each group of projects.
The name can refer to the name of a queue which allows further configuration of the queue.
Each pipeline for a project can only belong to one queue, therefore Zuul will use the first value that it encounters. It need not appear in the first instance of a project stanza; it may appear in secondary instances or even in a Project Template definition.
Note
This attribute is not evaluated speculatively and its setting shall be merged to be effective.
-
project.<pipeline>
Each pipeline that the project participates in should have an entry in the project. The value for this key should be a dictionary with the following format:
-
project.<pipeline>.jobs (required)
A list of jobs that should be run when items for this project are enqueued into the pipeline. Each item of this list may be a string, in which case it is treated as a job name, or it may be a dictionary, in which case it is treated as a job variant local to this project and pipeline. In that case, the format of the dictionary is the same as the top level job definition. Any attributes set on the job here will override previous versions of the job.
-
project.<pipeline>.queue
This is the same as project.queue but on per pipeline level for backwards compatibility reasons. If project.queue is defined this setting is ignored.
Note
It is deprecated to define the queue in the pipeline configuration. Configure it on project.queue instead.
-
project.<pipeline>.debug
If this is set to true, Zuul will include debugging information in reports it makes about items in the pipeline. This should not normally be set, but in situations were it is difficult to determine why Zuul did or did not run a certain job, the additional information this provides may help.
-
project.<pipeline>.fail-fast
Default:false
If this is set to true, Zuul will report a build failure immediately and abort all still running builds. This can be used to save resources in resource constrained environments at the cost of potentially requiring multiple attempts if more than one problem is present.
Once this is defined it cannot be overridden afterwards. So this can be forced to a specific value by e.g. defining it in a config repo.
-
project.<pipeline>.jobs (required)
-
project.name
Project Template
A Project Template defines one or more project-pipeline definitions which can be re-used by multiple projects.
A Project Template uses the same syntax as a Project definition, however, in the case of a template, the project.name attribute does not refer to the name of a project, but rather names the template so that it can be referenced in a Project definition.
Because Project Templates may be used outside of the projects where they are defined, they honor the implied branch pragmas (unlike Projects). The same heuristics described in job.branches that determine what implied branches a Job will receive apply to Project Templates (with the exception that it is not possible to explicity set a branch matcher on a Project Template).