Choose when to run jobs (FREE)
When a new pipeline starts, GitLab checks the pipeline configuration to determine which jobs should run in that pipeline. You can configure jobs to run depending on the status of variables, the pipeline type, and so on.
To configure a job to be included or excluded from certain pipelines, you can use:
Use needs
to configure a job to run as soon as the
earlier jobs it depends on finish running.
rules
Specify when jobs run with Introduced in GitLab 12.3.
Use rules
to include or exclude jobs in pipelines.
Rules are evaluated in order until the first match. When a match is found, the job
is either included or excluded from the pipeline, depending on the configuration.
See the rules
reference for more details.
Future keyword improvements are being discussed in our epic for improving rules
,
where anyone can add suggestions or requests.
rules
examples
The following example uses if
to define that the job runs in only two specific cases:
job:
script: echo "Hello, Rules!"
rules:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"'
when: manual
allow_failure: true
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "schedule"'
- If the pipeline is for a merge request, the first rule matches, and the job
is added to the merge request pipeline
with attributes of:
-
when: manual
(manual job) -
allow_failure: true
(the pipeline continues running even if the manual job is not run)
-
- If the pipeline is not for a merge request, the first rule doesn't match, and the second rule is evaluated.
- If the pipeline is a scheduled pipeline, the second rule matches, and the job
is added to the scheduled pipeline. No attributes were defined, so it is added
with:
-
when: on_success
(default) -
allow_failure: false
(default)
-
- In all other cases, no rules match, so the job is not added to any other pipeline.
Alternatively, you can define a set of rules to exclude jobs in a few cases, but run them in all other cases:
job:
script: echo "Hello, Rules!"
rules:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"'
when: never
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "schedule"'
when: never
- when: on_success
- If the pipeline is for a merge request, the job is not added to the pipeline.
- If the pipeline is a scheduled pipeline, the job is not added to the pipeline.
- In all other cases, the job is added to the pipeline, with
when: on_success
.
WARNING:
If you use a when
clause as the final rule (not including when: never
), two
simultaneous pipelines may start. Both push pipelines and merge request pipelines can
be triggered by the same event (a push to the source branch for an open merge request).
See how to prevent duplicate pipelines
for more details.
Complex rules
You can use all rules
keywords, like if
, changes
, and exists
, in the same
rule. The rule evaluates to true only when all included keywords evaluate to true.
For example:
docker build:
script: docker build -t my-image:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG .
rules:
- if: '$VAR == "string value"'
changes: # Include the job and set to when:manual if any of the follow paths match a modified file.
- Dockerfile
- docker/scripts/*
when: manual
allow_failure: true
If the Dockerfile
file or any file in /docker/scripts
has changed and $VAR
== "string value",
then the job runs manually and is allowed to fail.
You can use parentheses with &&
and ||
to build more complicated variable expressions.
Introduced in GitLab 13.3:
job1:
script:
- echo This rule uses parentheses.
rules:
if: ($CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH || $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "develop") && $MY_VARIABLE
WARNING:
Before GitLab 13.3,
rules that use both ||
and &&
may evaluate with an unexpected order of operations.
Avoid duplicate pipelines
If a job uses rules
, a single action, like pushing a commit to a branch, can trigger
multiple pipelines. You don't have to explicitly configure rules for multiple types
of pipeline to trigger them accidentally.
Some configurations that have the potential to cause duplicate pipelines cause a pipeline warning to be displayed. Introduced in GitLab 13.3.
For example:
job:
script: echo "This job creates double pipelines!"
rules:
- if: '$CUSTOM_VARIABLE == "false"'
when: never
- when: always
This job does not run when $CUSTOM_VARIABLE
is false, but it does run in all
other pipelines, including both push (branch) and merge request pipelines. With
this configuration, every push to an open merge request's source branch
causes duplicated pipelines.
To avoid duplicate pipelines, you can:
-
Use
workflow
to specify which types of pipelines can run. -
Rewrite the rules to run the job only in very specific cases, and avoid a final
when
rule:job: script: echo "This job does NOT create double pipelines!" rules: - if: '$CUSTOM_VARIABLE == "true" && $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"'
You can also avoid duplicate pipelines by changing the job rules to avoid either push (branch)
pipelines or merge request pipelines. However, if you use a - when: always
rule without
workflow: rules
, GitLab still displays a pipeline warning.
For example, the following does not trigger double pipelines, but is not recommended
without workflow: rules
:
job:
script: echo "This job does NOT create double pipelines!"
rules:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "push"'
when: never
- when: always
You should not include both push and merge request pipelines in the same job without
workflow:rules
that prevent duplicate pipelines:
job:
script: echo "This job creates double pipelines!"
rules:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "push"'
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"'
Also, do not mix only/except
jobs with rules
jobs in the same pipeline.
It may not cause YAML errors, but the different default behaviors of only/except
and rules
can cause issues that are difficult to troubleshoot:
job-with-no-rules:
script: echo "This job runs in branch pipelines."
job-with-rules:
script: echo "This job runs in merge request pipelines."
rules:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"'
For every change pushed to the branch, duplicate pipelines run. One
branch pipeline runs a single job (job-with-no-rules
), and one merge request pipeline
runs the other job (job-with-rules
). Jobs with no rules default
to except: merge_requests
, so job-with-no-rules
runs in all cases except merge requests.
if
clauses for rules
Common For behavior similar to the only
/except
keywords, you can
check the value of the $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE
variable:
Value | Description |
---|---|
api |
For pipelines triggered by the pipelines API. |
chat |
For pipelines created by using a GitLab ChatOps command. |
external |
When you use CI services other than GitLab. |
external_pull_request_event |
When an external pull request on GitHub is created or updated. See Pipelines for external pull requests. |
merge_request_event |
For pipelines created when a merge request is created or updated. Required to enable merge request pipelines, merged results pipelines, and merge trains. |
parent_pipeline |
For pipelines triggered by a parent/child pipeline with rules . Use this pipeline source in the child pipeline configuration so that it can be triggered by the parent pipeline. |
pipeline |
For multi-project pipelines created by using the API with CI_JOB_TOKEN , or the trigger keyword. |
push |
For pipelines triggered by a git push event, including for branches and tags. |
schedule |
For scheduled pipelines. |
trigger |
For pipelines created by using a trigger token. |
web |
For pipelines created by using Run pipeline button in the GitLab UI, from the project's CI/CD > Pipelines section. |
webide |
For pipelines created by using the WebIDE. |
The following example runs the job as a manual job in scheduled pipelines or in push
pipelines (to branches or tags), with when: on_success
(default). It does not
add the job to any other pipeline type.
job:
script: echo "Hello, Rules!"
rules:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "schedule"'
when: manual
allow_failure: true
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "push"'
The following example runs the job as a when: on_success
job in merge request pipelines
and scheduled pipelines. It does not run in any other pipeline type.
job:
script: echo "Hello, Rules!"
rules:
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"'
- if: '$CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "schedule"'
Other commonly used variables for if
clauses:
-
if: $CI_COMMIT_TAG
: If changes are pushed for a tag. -
if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH
: If changes are pushed to any branch. -
if: '$CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "main"'
: If changes are pushed tomain
. -
if: '$CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH'
: If changes are pushed to the default branch. Use when you want to have the same configuration in multiple projects with different default branches. -
if: '$CI_COMMIT_BRANCH =~ /regex-expression/'
: If the commit branch matches a regular expression. -
if: '$CUSTOM_VARIABLE !~ /regex-expression/'
: If the custom variableCUSTOM_VARIABLE
does not match a regular expression. -
if: '$CUSTOM_VARIABLE == "value1"'
: If the custom variableCUSTOM_VARIABLE
is exactlyvalue1
.
rules:changes
Variables in
- Introduced in GitLab 13.6.
- Feature flag removed in GitLab 13.7.
You can use CI/CD variables in rules:changes
expressions to determine when
to add jobs to a pipeline:
docker build:
variables:
DOCKERFILES_DIR: 'path/to/files/'
script: docker build -t my-image:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG .
rules:
- changes:
- $DOCKERFILES_DIR/*
You can use the $
character for both variables and paths. For example, if the
$DOCKERFILES_DIR
variable exists, its value is used. If it does not exist, the
$
is interpreted as being part of a path.
Reuse rules in different jobs
Introduced in GitLab 14.3.
Use !reference
tags to reuse rules in different
jobs. You can combine !reference
rules with regular job-defined rules:
.default_rules:
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "schedule"
when: never
- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH
job1:
rules:
- !reference [.default_rules, rules]
script:
- echo "This job runs for the default branch, but not schedules."
job2:
rules:
- !reference [.default_rules, rules]
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
script:
- echo "This job runs for the default branch, but not schedules."
- echo "It also runs for merge requests."
only
and except
Specify when jobs run with You can use only
and except
to control when to add jobs to pipelines.
- Use
only
to define when a job runs. - Use
except
to define when a job does not run.
only:refs
/ except:refs
examples
only
or except
used without refs
is the same as
only:refs
/ except/refs
In the following example, job
runs only for:
- Git tags
- Triggers
- Scheduled pipelines
job:
# use special keywords
only:
- tags
- triggers
- schedules
To execute jobs only for the parent repository and not forks:
job:
only:
- branches@gitlab-org/gitlab
except:
- main@gitlab-org/gitlab
- /^release/.*$/@gitlab-org/gitlab
This example runs job
for all branches on gitlab-org/gitlab
,
except main
and branches that start with release/
.
only: variables
/ except: variables
examples
You can use except:variables
to exclude jobs based on a commit message:
end-to-end:
script: rake test:end-to-end
except:
variables:
- $CI_COMMIT_MESSAGE =~ /skip-end-to-end-tests/
You can use parentheses with &&
and ||
to build more complicated variable expressions:
job1:
script:
- echo This rule uses parentheses.
only:
variables:
- ($CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "main" || $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "develop") && $MY_VARIABLE
When multiple entries are specified in only:variables
, the job runs when at least one of them evaluates to true
.
You can use &&
in a single entry when multiple conditions must be satisfied at the same time.
only:changes
/ except:changes
examples
You can skip a job if a change is detected in any file with a
.md
extension in the root directory of the repository:
build:
script: npm run build
except:
changes:
- "*.md"
If you change multiple files, but only one file ends in .md
,
the build
job is still skipped. The job does not run for any of the files.
Read more about how to use only:changes
and except:changes
:
only:changes
with pipelines for merge requests
Use With pipelines for merge requests, it's possible to define a job to be created based on files modified in a merge request.
Use this keyword with only: [merge_requests]
so GitLab can find the correct base
SHA of the source branch. File differences are correctly calculated from any further
commits, and all changes in the merge requests are properly tested in pipelines.
For example:
docker build service one:
script: docker build -t my-service-one-image:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG .
only:
refs:
- merge_requests
changes:
- Dockerfile
- service-one/**/*
In this scenario, if a merge request changes
files in the service-one
directory or the Dockerfile
, GitLab creates
the docker build service one
job.
For example:
docker build service one:
script: docker build -t my-service-one-image:$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG .
only:
changes:
- Dockerfile
- service-one/**/*
In this example, the pipeline might fail because of changes to a file in service-one/**/*
.
A later commit that doesn't have changes in service-one/**/*
but does have changes to the Dockerfile
can pass. The job
only tests the changes to the Dockerfile
.
GitLab checks the most recent pipeline that passed. If the merge request is mergeable, it doesn't matter that an earlier pipeline failed because of a change that has not been corrected.
When you use this configuration, ensure that the most recent pipeline properly corrects any failures from previous pipelines.
only:changes
without pipelines for merge requests
Use Without pipelines for merge requests, pipelines
run on branches or tags that don't have an explicit association with a merge request.
In this case, a previous SHA is used to calculate the diff, which is equivalent to git diff HEAD~
.
This can result in some unexpected behavior, including:
- When pushing a new branch or a new tag to GitLab, the policy always evaluates to true.
- When pushing a new commit, the changed files are calculated by using the previous commit as the base SHA.
only:changes
with scheduled pipelines
Use only:changes
always evaluates as true in Scheduled pipelines.
All files are considered to have changed when a scheduled pipeline runs.
only
or except
Combine multiple keywords with If you use multiple keywords with only
or except
, the keywords are evaluated
as a single conjoined expression. That is:
-
only
includes the job if all of the keys have at least one condition that matches. -
except
excludes the job if any of the keys have at least one condition that matches.
With only
, individual keys are logically joined by an AND
. A job is added to
the pipeline if the following is true:
(any listed refs are true) AND (any listed variables are true) AND (any listed changes are true) AND (any chosen Kubernetes status matches)
In the following example, the test
job is only created when all of the following are true:
- The pipeline is scheduled or runs for
main
. - The
variables
keyword matches. - The
kubernetes
service is active on the project.
test:
script: npm run test
only:
refs:
- main
- schedules
variables:
- $CI_COMMIT_MESSAGE =~ /run-end-to-end-tests/
kubernetes: active
With except
, individual keys are logically joined by an OR
. A job is not
added if the following is true:
(any listed refs are true) OR (any listed variables are true) OR (any listed changes are true) OR (a chosen Kubernetes status matches)
In the following example, the test
job is not created when any of the following are true:
- The pipeline runs for the
main
branch. - There are changes to the
README.md
file in the root directory of the repository.
test:
script: npm run test
except:
refs:
- main
changes:
- "README.md"
Create a job that must be run manually
You can require that a job doesn't run unless a user starts it. This is called a manual job. You might want to use a manual job for something like deploying to production.
To specify a job as manual, add when: manual
to the job
in the .gitlab-ci.yml
file.
By default, manual jobs display as skipped when the pipeline starts.
You can use protected branches to more strictly protect manual deployments from being run by unauthorized users.
Types of manual jobs
Manual jobs can be either optional or blocking:
-
Optional: The default setting for manual jobs.
- They have
allow_failure: true
by default. - The status does not contribute to the overall pipeline status. A pipeline can succeed even if all of its manual jobs fail.
- They have
-
Blocking: An optional setting for manual jobs.
- Add
allow_failure: false
to the job configuration. - The pipeline stops at the stage where the job is defined. To let the pipeline continue running, run the manual job.
- Merge requests in projects with merge when pipeline succeeds enabled can't be merged with a blocked pipeline. Blocked pipelines show a status of blocked.
- Add
Run a manual job
To run a manual job, you must have permission to merge to the assigned branch.
To run a manual job:
- Go to the pipeline, job, environment, or deployment view.
- Next to the manual job, select Play ({play}).
Protect manual jobs (PREMIUM)
Use protected environments to define a list of users authorized to run a manual job. You can authorize only the users associated with a protected environment to trigger manual jobs, which can:
- More precisely limit who can deploy to an environment.
- Block a pipeline until an approved user "approves" it.
To protect a manual job:
-
Add an
environment
to the job. For example:deploy_prod: stage: deploy script: - echo "Deploy to production server" environment: name: production url: https://example.com when: manual rules: - if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH
-
In the protected environments settings, select the environment (
production
in this example) and add the users, roles or groups that are authorized to trigger the manual job to the Allowed to Deploy list. Only those in this list can trigger this manual job, as well as GitLab administrators who are always able to use protected environments.
You can use protected environments with blocking manual jobs to have a list of users
allowed to approve later pipeline stages. Add allow_failure: false
to the protected
manual job and the pipeline's next stages only run after the manual job is triggered
by authorized users.
Run a job after a delay
Introduced in GitLab 11.4.
Use when: delayed
to execute scripts after a waiting period, or if you want to avoid
jobs immediately entering the pending
state.
You can set the period with start_in
keyword. The value of start_in
is an elapsed time in seconds, unless a unit is
provided. start_in
must be less than or equal to one week. Examples of valid values include:
-
'5'
(a value with no unit must be surrounded by single quotes) 5 seconds
30 minutes
1 day
1 week
When a stage includes a delayed job, the pipeline doesn't progress until the delayed job finishes. You can use this keyword to insert delays between different stages.
The timer of a delayed job starts immediately after the previous stage completes. Similar to other types of jobs, a delayed job's timer doesn't start unless the previous stage passes.
The following example creates a job named timed rollout 10%
that is executed 30 minutes after the previous stage completes:
timed rollout 10%:
stage: deploy
script: echo 'Rolling out 10% ...'
when: delayed
start_in: 30 minutes
To stop the active timer of a delayed job, select Unschedule ({time-out}). This job can no longer be scheduled to run automatically. You can, however, execute the job manually.
To start a delayed job immediately, select Play ({play}). Soon GitLab Runner starts the job.
Parallelize large jobs
To split a large job into multiple smaller jobs that run in parallel, use the
parallel
keyword in your .gitlab-ci.yml
file.
Different languages and test suites have different methods to enable parallelization. For example, use Semaphore Test Boosters and RSpec to run Ruby tests in parallel:
# Gemfile
source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'rspec'
gem 'semaphore_test_boosters'
test:
parallel: 3
script:
- bundle
- bundle exec rspec_booster --job $CI_NODE_INDEX/$CI_NODE_TOTAL
You can then navigate to the Jobs tab of a new pipeline build and see your RSpec job split into three separate jobs.
WARNING: Test Boosters reports usage statistics to the author.
Run a one-dimensional matrix of parallel jobs
Introduced in GitLab 13.5.
You can create a one-dimensional matrix of parallel jobs:
deploystacks:
stage: deploy
script:
- bin/deploy
parallel:
matrix:
- PROVIDER: [aws, ovh, gcp, vultr]
You can also create a multi-dimensional matrix.
Run a matrix of parallel trigger jobs
Introduced in GitLab 13.10.
You can run a trigger job multiple times in parallel in a single pipeline, but with different variable values for each instance of the job.
deploystacks:
stage: deploy
trigger:
include: path/to/child-pipeline.yml
parallel:
matrix:
- PROVIDER: aws
STACK: [monitoring, app1]
- PROVIDER: ovh
STACK: [monitoring, backup]
- PROVIDER: [gcp, vultr]
STACK: [data]
This example generates 6 parallel deploystacks
trigger jobs, each with different values
for PROVIDER
and STACK
, and they create 6 different child pipelines with those variables.
deploystacks: [aws, monitoring]
deploystacks: [aws, app1]
deploystacks: [ovh, monitoring]
deploystacks: [ovh, backup]
deploystacks: [gcp, data]
deploystacks: [vultr, data]
In GitLab 14.1 and later, you can
use the variables defined in parallel: matrix
with the tags
keyword for
dynamic runner selection.
deploystacks:
stage: deploy
parallel:
matrix:
- PROVIDER: aws
STACK: [monitoring, app1]
- PROVIDER: gcp
STACK: [data]
tags:
- ${PROVIDER}-${STACK}
Use predefined CI/CD variables to run jobs only in specific pipeline types
You can use predefined CI/CD variables to choose which pipeline types jobs run in, with:
The following table lists some of the variables that you can use, and the pipeline types the variables can control for:
- Branch pipelines that run for Git
push
events to a branch, like new commits or tags. - Tag pipelines that run only when a new Git tag is pushed to a branch.
- Merge request pipelines that run for changes to a merge request, like new commits or selecting the Run pipeline button in a merge request's pipelines tab.
- Scheduled pipelines.
Variables | Branch | Tag | Merge request | Scheduled |
---|---|---|---|---|
CI_COMMIT_BRANCH |
Yes | Yes | ||
CI_COMMIT_TAG |
Yes | Yes, if the scheduled pipeline is configured to run on a tag. | ||
CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE = push |
Yes | Yes | ||
CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE = scheduled |
Yes | |||
CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE = merge_request_event |
Yes | |||
CI_MERGE_REQUEST_IID |
Yes |
For example, to configure a job to run for merge request pipelines and scheduled pipelines, but not branch or tag pipelines:
job1:
script:
- echo
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "scheduled"
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "push"
when: never
Regular expressions
The @
symbol denotes the beginning of a ref's repository path.
To match a ref name that contains the @
character in a regular expression,
you must use the hex character code match \x40
.
Only the tag or branch name can be matched by a regular expression. The repository path, if given, is always matched literally.
To match the tag or branch name,
the entire ref name part of the pattern must be a regular expression surrounded by /
.
For example, you can't use issue-/.*/
to match all tag names or branch names
that begin with issue-
, but you can use /issue-.*/
.
Regular expression flags must be appended after the closing /
. Pattern matching
is case-sensitive by default. Use the i
flag modifier, like /pattern/i
, to make
a pattern case-insensitive:
job:
# use regexp
only:
- /^issue-.*$/i
# use special keyword
except:
- branches
Use anchors ^
and $
to avoid the regular expression
matching only a substring of the tag name or branch name.
For example, /^issue-.*$/
is equivalent to /^issue-/
,
while just /issue/
would also match a branch called severe-issues
.
only
/ except
regex syntax
In GitLab 11.9.4, GitLab began internally converting the regexp used
in only
and except
keywords to RE2.
RE2 limits the set of available features due to computational complexity, and some features, like negative lookaheads, became unavailable. Only a subset of features provided by Ruby Regexp are now supported.
From GitLab 11.9.7 to GitLab 12.0, GitLab provided a feature flag to let you use unsafe regexp syntax. After migrating to safe syntax, you should disable this feature flag again:
Feature.enable(:allow_unsafe_ruby_regexp)
CI/CD variable expressions
- Introduced in GitLab 10.7 for the
only
andexcept
CI keywords- Expanded in GitLab 12.3 with the
rules
keyword
Use variable expressions to control which jobs are created in a pipeline after changes are pushed to GitLab. You can use variable expressions with:
For example, with rules:if
:
job1:
variables:
VAR1: "variable1"
script:
- echo "Test variable comparison
rules:
- if: $VAR1 == "variable1"
Compare a variable to a string
You can use the equality operators ==
and !=
to compare a variable with a
string. Both single quotes and double quotes are valid. The order doesn't matter,
so the variable can be first, or the string can be first. For example:
if: $VARIABLE == "some value"
if: $VARIABLE != "some value"
if: "some value" == $VARIABLE
Compare two variables
You can compare the values of two variables. For example:
if: $VARIABLE_1 == $VARIABLE_2
if: $VARIABLE_1 != $VARIABLE_2
Check if a variable is undefined
You can compare a variable to the null
keyword to see if it is defined. For example:
if: $VARIABLE == null
if: $VARIABLE != null
Check if a variable is empty
You can check if a variable is defined but empty. For example:
if: $VARIABLE == ""
if: $VARIABLE != ""
Check if a variable exists
You can check for the existence of a variable by using just the variable name in the expression. The variable must not be empty. For example:
if: $VARIABLE
Compare a variable to a regex pattern
You can do regex pattern matching on variable values with the =~
and !~
operators.
Variable pattern matching with regular expressions uses the
RE2 regular expression syntax.
Expressions evaluate as true
if:
- Matches are found when using
=~
. - Matches are not found when using
!~
.
For example:
$VARIABLE =~ /^content.*/
$VARIABLE_1 !~ /^content.*/
Pattern matching is case-sensitive by default. Use the i
flag modifier to make a
pattern case-insensitive. For example: /pattern/i
.
&&
or ||
Join variable expressions together with Introduced in GitLab 12.0
You can join multiple expressions using &&
(and) or ||
(or), for example:
$VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ && $VARIABLE2 == "something"
$VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ && $VARIABLE2 =~ /thing$/ && $VARIABLE3
$VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ || $VARIABLE2 =~ /thing$/ && $VARIABLE3
The precedence of operators follows the Ruby 2.5 standard,
so &&
is evaluated before ||
.
Group variable expressions together with parentheses
- Introduced in GitLab 13.3.
- Feature flag removed in GitLab 13.5.
You can use parentheses to group expressions together. Parentheses take precedence over
&&
and ||
, so expressions enclosed in parentheses are evaluated first, and the
result is used for the rest of the expression.
You can nest parentheses to create complex conditions, and the inner-most expressions in parentheses are evaluated first.
For example:
($VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ || $VARIABLE2) && ($VARIABLE3 =~ /thing$/ || $VARIABLE4)
($VARIABLE1 =~ /^content.*/ || $VARIABLE2 =~ /thing$/) && $VARIABLE3
$CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "my-branch" || (($VARIABLE1 == "thing" || $VARIABLE2 == "thing") && $VARIABLE3)