Use
before_script
with
default
to define a default array of commands that
should run before the
script
commands in all jobs.
Use
after_script
with default to define a default array of commands
that should run after the job completes.
You can overwrite a default by defining a different one in a job. To ignore the default
use
before_script: []
or
after_script: []
:
default:before_script:-echo "Execute this `before_script` in all jobs by default."after_script:-echo "Execute this `after_script` in all jobs by default."job1:script:-echo "These script commands execute after the default `before_script`,"-echo "and before the default `after_script`."job2:before_script:-echo "Execute this script instead of the default `before_script`."script:-echo "This script executes after the job's `before_script`,"-echo "but the job does not use the default `after_script`."after_script:[]
If multiple commands are combined into one command string, only the last command’s
failure or success is reported.
Failures from earlier commands are ignored due to a bug
.
To work around this, run each command as a separate
script
item, or add an
exit 1
command to each command string.
You can use the
|
(literal) YAML multiline block scalar indicator to write
commands over multiple lines in the
script
section of a job description.
Each line is treated as a separate command.
Only the first command is repeated in the job log, but additional
commands are still executed:
$ echo First command line # collapsed multiline command
First command line
Second command line.
Third command line.
The
>
(folded) YAML multiline block scalar indicator treats empty lines between
sections as the start of a new command:
job:script:echo "First command lineis split over two lines."echo "Second command line."
This behaves similarly to multiline commands without the
>
or
|
block
scalar indicators:
job:script:-echo "First command lineis split over two lines."echo "Second command line."
Both examples above render in the job log as:
$ echo First command line is split over two lines. # collapsed multiline command
First command line is split over two lines.
Second command line.
When you omit the
>
or
|
block scalar indicators, GitLab concatenates non-empty
lines to form the command. Make sure the lines can run when concatenated.
Shell here documents
work with the
|
and
>
operators as well. The example below transliterates lower case letters
to upper case:
job:script:tr a-z A-Z << END_TEXTone two threefour five sixEND_TEXT
Results in:
$ tr a-z A-Z <<END_TEXT # collapsed multiline command
ONE TWO THREE
FOUR FIVE SIX
job:script:-echo -e "\e[31mThis text is red,\e[0m but this text isn't\e[31m however this text is red again."
You can define the color codes in Shell environment variables, or even
CI/CD variables
,
which makes the commands easier to read and reusable.
For example, using the same example as above and environment variables defined in a
before_script
:
job:before_script:-TXT_RED="\e[31m" && TXT_CLEAR="\e[0m"script:-echo -e "${TXT_RED}This text is red,${TXT_CLEAR} but this part isn't${TXT_RED} however this part is again."-echo "This text is not colored"
job:before_script:-$esc="$([char]27)"; $TXT_RED="$esc[31m"; $TXT_CLEAR="$esc[0m"script:-Write-Host $TXT_RED"This text is red,"$TXT_CLEAR" but this text isn't"$TXT_RED" however this text is red again."-Write-Host "This text is not colored"
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