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glci 🦊

Ease GitLab CI Pipelines set-up by running your jobs locally in Docker containers.

Why ? Because I did not want to commit, push, and wait for my jobs to run on the GitLab UI to figure I forgot to install make before running make build.

📣 Disclaimer: this is a helper tool aiming to facilite the process of setting up GitLab CI Pipelines. glci does NOT aim to replace any other tool.

Installation

You need to have Docker installed and running to use glci.

yarn global add glci

Usage

At the root of your project (where your .gitlab-ci.yml is):

glci

⚠️ You might want to add .glci to your .gitignore file to prevent committing it.

Options

--only-jobs [jobs]

Limiting the jobs to run to the comma-separated list of jobs name given. Handy when setting up that stage-three job depending on that first-stage job artifacts.

Example:

glci --only-jobs=install,test:e2e

# "build" and "test:unit" won't be ran here
#
# -----------     ---------     -------------
# | install | --- | build | --- | test:unit |
# -----------     ---------  |  -------------
#                            |
#                            |   ------------
#                            --- | test:e2e |
#                                ------------

--yml <yml_file_path>

Setting the file to use in place of .gitlab-ci.yml (default to .gitlab-ci.yml). Useful when testing parent-child pipelines.

--dir <directory_name>

Changing the directory where glci keeps cache and artifacts between jobs. Defaults to .glci.

--clean

Removing the directory given to --dir (default to .glci) before running glci.

--no-draw

Not drawing the representation of the pipeline before running jobs.

Cool stuff

  • If a .env file exists next to your .gitlab-ci.yml, variables inside it get automatically parsed and added to the containers
  • Most of the pre-defined environment variables normally set by GitLab CI are also set here: see pre-defined.js

Pulling images from private registries / repositories

To be able to pull images from private registries / repositories, glci copies a GitLab CI mechanism: the DOCKER_AUTH_CONFIG env variable (see https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/docker/using_docker_images.html#configuring-a-job).

As glci automatically reads the .env file at the root of your project, you can set a DOCKER_AUTH_CONFIG inside it as you would do it in GitLab CI/CD variables configurations and you should be able to pull images from your private registries.

Don't forget to add this .env file to your .gitignore.

How does it work ?

It's pretty straightforward:

  • it parses your .gitlab-ci.yml file (and its "includes")
  • it runs each job of each stage (serially) in a Docker container created on the fly using the right image
  • it logs the results in the console
  • it shares the cache and the artifacts between jobs using Docker volumes
  • it automatically stops and removes the containers and the volumes created

Roadmap

  • Handle glob in cache:paths and artifacts:paths
  • Handle artifacts:exclude (supports globs too)
  • Add --env to allow defining / overriding env variables
  • Add --in-vagrant to run docker in Vagrant (not faster even on Mac for what I've tried)
  • Prevent sharing artifacts between same-stage jobs