Pipelines
- Pipelines
- Overview
- Configuring a
Pipeline
- Specifying
Workspaces
- Specifying
Parameters
- Adding
Tasks
to thePipeline
- Specifying Display Name
- Specifying Remote Tasks
- Specifying
Pipelines
inPipelineTasks
- Specifying
Parameters
inPipelineTasks
- Specifying
Matrix
inPipelineTasks
- Specifying
Workspaces
inPipelineTasks
- Tekton Bundles
- Using the
runAfter
field - Using the
retries
field - Using the
onError
field - Produce results with
OnError
- Guard
Task
execution usingwhen
expressions - Configuring the failure timeout
- Using variable substitution
- Using
Results
- Configuring the
Task
execution order - Adding a description
- Adding
Finally
to thePipeline
- Specifying Display Name
- Specifying
Workspaces
infinally
tasks - Specifying
Parameters
infinally
tasks - Specifying
matrix
infinally
tasks - Consuming
Task
execution results infinally
- Consuming
Pipeline
result withfinally
PipelineRun
Status withfinally
- Using Execution
Status
ofpipelineTask
- Using Aggregate Execution
Status
of AllTasks
- Guard
finally
Task
execution usingwhen
expressions - Known Limitations
- Using Custom Tasks
- Code examples
Overview
A Pipeline
is a collection of Tasks
that you define and arrange in a specific order
of execution as part of your continuous integration flow. Each Task
in a Pipeline
executes as a Pod
on your Kubernetes cluster. You can configure various execution
conditions to fit your business needs.
Configuring a Pipeline
A Pipeline
definition supports the following fields:
- Required:
apiVersion
- Specifies the API version, for exampletekton.dev/v1beta1
.kind
- Identifies this resource object as aPipeline
object.metadata
- Specifies metadata that uniquely identifies thePipeline
object. For example, aname
.spec
- Specifies the configuration information for thisPipeline
object. This must include:tasks
- Specifies theTasks
that comprise thePipeline
and the details of their execution.
- Optional:
params
- Specifies theParameters
that thePipeline
requires.workspaces
- Specifies a set of Workspaces that thePipeline
requires.tasks
:name
- the name of thisTask
within the context of thisPipeline
.displayName
- a user-facing name of thisTask
within the context of thisPipeline
.description
- a description of thisTask
within the context of thisPipeline
.taskRef
- a reference to aTask
definition.taskSpec
- a specification of aTask
.runAfter
- Indicates that aTask
should execute after one or more otherTasks
without output linking.retries
- Specifies the number of times to retry the execution of aTask
after a failure. Does not apply to execution cancellations.when
- Specifieswhen
expressions that guard the execution of aTask
; allow execution only when allwhen
expressions evaluate to true.timeout
- Specifies the timeout before aTask
fails.params
- Specifies theParameters
that aTask
requires.workspaces
- Specifies theWorkspaces
that aTask
requires.matrix
- Specifies theParameters
used to fan out aTask
into multipleTaskRuns
orRuns
.
results
- Specifies the location to which thePipeline
emits its execution results.displayName
- is a user-facing name of the pipeline that may be used to populate a UI.description
- Holds an informative description of thePipeline
object.finally
- Specifies one or moreTasks
to be executed in parallel after all other tasks have completed.name
- the name of thisTask
within the context of thisPipeline
.displayName
- a user-facing name of thisTask
within the context of thisPipeline
.description
- a description of thisTask
within the context of thisPipeline
.taskRef
- a reference to aTask
definition.taskSpec
- a specification of aTask
.retries
- Specifies the number of times to retry the execution of aTask
after a failure. Does not apply to execution cancellations.when
- Specifieswhen
expressions that guard the execution of aTask
; allow execution only when allwhen
expressions evaluate to true.timeout
- Specifies the timeout before aTask
fails.params
- Specifies theParameters
that aTask
requires.workspaces
- Specifies theWorkspaces
that aTask
requires.matrix
- Specifies theParameters
used to fan out aTask
into multipleTaskRuns
orRuns
.
Specifying Workspaces
Workspaces
allow you to specify one or more volumes that each Task
in the Pipeline
requires during execution. You specify one or more Workspaces
in the workspaces
field.
For example:
spec:
workspaces:
- name: pipeline-ws1 # The name of the workspace in the Pipeline
tasks:
- name: use-ws-from-pipeline
taskRef:
name: gen-code # gen-code expects a workspace with name "output"
workspaces:
- name: output
workspace: pipeline-ws1
- name: use-ws-again
taskRef:
name: commit # commit expects a workspace with name "src"
runAfter:
- use-ws-from-pipeline # important: use-ws-from-pipeline writes to the workspace first
workspaces:
- name: src
workspace: pipeline-ws1
For simplicity you can also map the name of the Workspace
in PipelineTask
to match with
the Workspace
from the Pipeline
.
For example:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1 # or tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: pipeline
spec:
workspaces:
- name: source
tasks:
- name: gen-code
taskRef:
name: gen-code # gen-code expects a Workspace named "source"
workspaces:
- name: source # <- mapping workspace name
- name: commit
taskRef:
name: commit # commit expects a Workspace named "source"
workspaces:
- name: source # <- mapping workspace name
runAfter:
- gen-code
For more information, see:
- Using
Workspaces
inPipelines
- The
Workspaces
in aPipelineRun
code example - The variables available in a
PipelineRun
, includingworkspaces.<name>.bound
. - Mapping
Workspaces
Specifying Parameters
(See also Specifying Parameters in Tasks)
You can specify global parameters, such as compilation flags or artifact names, that you want to supply
to the Pipeline
at execution time. Parameters
are passed to the Pipeline
from its corresponding
PipelineRun
and can replace template values specified within each Task
in the Pipeline
.
Parameter names:
- Must only contain alphanumeric characters, hyphens (
-
), and underscores (_
). - Must begin with a letter or an underscore (
_
).
For example, fooIs-Bar_
is a valid parameter name, but barIsBa$
or 0banana
are not.
Each declared parameter has a type
field, which can be set to either array
or string
.
array
is useful in cases where the number of compilation flags being supplied to the Pipeline
varies throughout its execution. If no value is specified, the type
field defaults to string
.
When the actual parameter value is supplied, its parsed type is validated against the type
field.
The description
and default
fields for a Parameter
are optional.
The following example illustrates the use of Parameters
in a Pipeline
.
The following Pipeline
declares two input parameters :
context
which passes its value (a string) to theTask
to set the value of thepathToContext
parameter within theTask
.flags
which passes its value (an array) to theTask
to set the value of theflags
parameter within theTask
. Theflags
parameter within theTask
must also be an array. If you specify a value for thedefault
field and invoke thisPipeline
in aPipelineRun
without specifying a value forcontext
, that value will be used.
Note: Input parameter values can be used as variables throughout the Pipeline
by using variable substitution.
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1 # or tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: pipeline-with-parameters
spec:
params:
- name: context
type: string
description: Path to context
default: /some/where/or/other
- name: flags
type: array
description: List of flags
tasks:
- name: build-skaffold-web
taskRef:
name: build-push
params:
- name: pathToDockerFile
value: Dockerfile
- name: pathToContext
value: "$(params.context)"
- name: flags
value: ["$(params.flags[*])"]
The following PipelineRun
supplies a value for context
:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1 # or tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: PipelineRun
metadata:
name: pipelinerun-with-parameters
spec:
pipelineRef:
name: pipeline-with-parameters
params:
- name: "context"
value: "/workspace/examples/microservices/leeroy-web"
- name: "flags"
value:
- "foo"
- "bar"
Param enum
🌱
enum
is an alpha feature. Theenable-param-enum
feature flag must be set to"true"
to enable this feature.
Parameter declarations can include enum
which is a predefine set of valid values that can be accepted by the Pipeline
Param
. If a Param
has both enum
and default value, the default value must be in the enum
set. For example, the valid/allowed values for Param
“message” is bounded to v1
and v2
:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: pipeline-param-enum
spec:
params:
- name: message
enum: ["v1", "v2"]
default: "v1"
tasks:
- name: task1
params:
- name: message
value: $(params.message)
steps:
- name: build
image: bash:3.2
script: |
echo "$(params.message)"
If the Param
value passed in by PipelineRun
is NOT in the predefined enum
list, the PipelineRun
will fail with reason InvalidParamValue
.
If a PipelineTask
references a Task
with enum
, the enums
specified in the Pipeline spec.params
(pipeline-level enum
) must be
a subset of the enums
specified in the referenced Task
(task-level enum
). An empty pipeline-level enum
is invalid
in this scenario since an empty enum
set indicates a “universal set” which allows all possible values. The same rules apply to Pipelines
with embbeded Tasks
.
In the below example, the referenced Task
accepts v1
and v2
as valid values, the Pipeline
further restricts the valid value to v1
.
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1
kind: Task
metadata:
name: param-enum-demo
spec:
params:
- name: message
type: string
enum: ["v1", "v2"]
steps:
- name: build
image: bash:latest
script: |
echo "$(params.message)"
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: pipeline-param-enum
spec:
params:
- name: message
enum: ["v1"] # note that an empty enum set is invalid
tasks:
- name: task1
params:
- name: message
value: $(params.message)
taskRef:
name: param-enum-demo
Note that this subset restriction only applies to the task-level params
with a direct single reference to pipeline-level params
. If a task-level param
references multiple pipeline-level params
, the subset validation is not applied.
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1
kind: Pipeline
...
spec:
params:
- name: message1
enum: ["v1"]
- name: message2
enum: ["v2"]
tasks:
- name: task1
params:
- name: message
value: "$(params.message1) and $(params.message2)"
taskSpec:
params: message
enum: [...] # the message enum is not required to be a subset of message1 or message2
...
Tekton validates user-provided values in a PipelineRun
against the enum
specified in the PipelineSpec.params
. Tekton also validates
any resolved param
value against the enum
specified in each PipelineTask
before creating the TaskRun
.
See usage in this example
Propagated Params
Like with embedded pipelineruns, you can propagate params
declared in the pipeline
down to the inlined pipelineTasks
and its inlined Steps
. Wherever a resource (e.g. a pipelineTask
) or a StepAction
is referenced, the parameters need to be passed explicitly.
For example, the following is a valid yaml.
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1 # or tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: pipelien-propagated-params
spec:
params:
- name: HELLO
default: "Hello World!"
- name: BYE
default: "Bye World!"
tasks:
- name: echo-hello
taskSpec:
steps:
- name: echo
image: ubuntu
script: |
#!/usr/bin/env bash
echo "$(params.HELLO)"
- name: echo-bye
taskSpec:
steps:
- name: echo-action
ref:
name: step-action-echo
params:
- name: msg
value: "$(params.BYE)"
The same rules defined in pipelineruns apply here.
Adding Tasks
to the Pipeline
Your Pipeline
definition must reference at least one Task
.
Each Task
within a Pipeline
must have a valid
name
and a taskRef
or a taskSpec
. For example:
tasks:
- name: build-the-image
taskRef:
name: build-push
Note: Using both apiVersion
and kind
will create CustomRun, don’t set apiVersion
if only referring to Task
.
or
tasks:
- name: say-hello
taskSpec:
steps:
- image: ubuntu
script: echo 'hello there'
Note that any task
specified in taskSpec
will be the same version as the Pipeline
.
Specifying displayName
in PipelineTasks
The displayName
field is an optional field that allows you to add a user-facing name of the PipelineTask
that can be
used to populate and distinguish in the dashboard. For example:
spec:
tasks:
- name: scan
displayName: "Code Scan"
taskRef:
name: sonar-scan
The displayName
also allows you to parameterize the human-readable name of your choice based on the
params, the task results,
and the context variables. For example:
spec:
params:
- name: application
tasks:
- name: scan
displayName: "Code Scan for $(params.application)"
taskRef:
name: sonar-scan
- name: upload-scan-report
displayName: "Upload Scan Report $(tasks.scan.results.report)"
taskRef:
name: upload
Specifying task results in the displayName
does not introduce an inherent resource dependency among tasks
. The
pipeline author is responsible for specifying dependency explicitly either using runAfter
or rely on whenExpressions or task results in params.
Fully resolved displayName
is also available in the status as part of the pipelineRun.status.childReferences
. The
clients such as the dashboard, CLI, etc. can retrieve the displayName
from the childReferences
. The displayName
mainly
drives a better user experience and at the same time it is not validated for the content or length by the controller.
Specifying Remote Tasks
A taskRef
field may specify a Task in a remote location such as git.
Support for specific types of remote will depend on the Resolvers your
cluster’s operator has installed. For more information including a tutorial, please check resolution docs. The below example demonstrates referencing a Task in git:
tasks:
- name: "go-build"
taskRef:
resolver: git
params:
- name: url
value: https://github.com/tektoncd/catalog.git
- name: revision
# value can use params declared at the pipeline level or a static value like main
value: $(params.gitRevision)
- name: pathInRepo
value: task/golang-build/0.3/golang-build.yaml
Specifying Pipelines
in PipelineTasks
🌱 Specifying
pipelines
inPipelineTasks
is an alpha feature. Theenable-api-fields
feature flag must be set to"alpha"
to specifyPipelineRef
orPipelineSpec
in aPipelineTask
. This feature is in Preview Only mode and not yet supported/implemented.
Apart from taskRef
and taskSpec
, pipelineRef
and pipelineSpec
allows you to specify a pipeline
in pipelineTask
.
This allows you to generate a child pipelineRun
which is inherited by the parent pipelineRun
.
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: security-scans
spec:
tasks:
- name: scorecards
taskSpec:
steps:
- image: alpine
name: step-1
script: |
echo "Generating scorecard report ..."
- name: codeql
taskSpec:
steps:
- image: alpine
name: step-1
script: |
echo "Generating codeql report ..."
---
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: clone-scan-notify
spec:
tasks:
- name: git-clone
taskSpec:
steps:
- image: alpine
name: step-1
script: |
echo "Cloning a repo to run security scans ..."
- name: security-scans
runAfter:
- git-clone
pipelineRef:
name: security-scans
---
For further information read Pipelines in Pipelines
Specifying Parameters
in PipelineTasks
You can also provide Parameters
:
spec:
tasks:
- name: build-skaffold-web
taskRef:
name: build-push
params:
- name: pathToDockerFile
value: Dockerfile
- name: pathToContext
value: /workspace/examples/microservices/leeroy-web
Specifying Matrix
in PipelineTasks
🌱
Matrix
is an beta feature. Theenable-api-fields
feature flag can be set to"beta"
to specifyMatrix
in aPipelineTask
.
You can also provide Parameters
through the matrix
field:
spec:
tasks:
- name: browser-test
taskRef:
name: browser-test
matrix:
params:
- name: browser
value:
- chrome
- safari
- firefox
include:
- name: build-1
params:
- name: browser
value: chrome
- name: url
value: some-url
For further information, read Matrix
.
Specifying Workspaces
in PipelineTasks
You can also provide Workspaces
:
spec:
tasks:
- name: use-workspace
taskRef:
name: gen-code # gen-code expects a workspace with name "output"
workspaces:
- name: output
workspace: shared-ws
Tekton Bundles
A Tekton Bundle
is an OCI artifact that contains Tekton resources like Tasks
which can be referenced within a taskRef
.
There is currently a hard limit of 20 objects in a bundle.
You can reference a Tekton bundle
in a TaskRef
in both v1
and v1beta1
using remote resolution. The example syntax shown below for v1
uses remote resolution and requires enabling beta features.
spec:
tasks:
- name: hello-world
taskRef:
resolver: bundles
params:
- name: bundle
value: docker.io/myrepo/mycatalog
- name: name
value: echo-task
- name: kind
value: Task
You may also specify a tag
as you would with a Docker image which will give you a fixed,
repeatable reference to a Task
.
spec:
taskRef:
resolver: bundles
params:
- name: bundle
value: docker.io/myrepo/mycatalog:v1.0.1
- name: name
value: echo-task
- name: kind
value: Task
You may also specify a fixed digest instead of a tag.
spec:
taskRef:
resolver: bundles
params:
- name: bundle
value: docker.io/myrepo/mycatalog@sha256:abc123
- name: name
value: echo-task
- name: kind
value: Task
Any of the above options will fetch the image using the ImagePullSecrets
attached to the
ServiceAccount
specified in the PipelineRun
.
See the Service Account section
for details on how to configure a ServiceAccount
on a PipelineRun
. The PipelineRun
will then
run that Task
without registering it in the cluster allowing multiple versions of the same named
Task
to be run at once.
Tekton Bundles
may be constructed with any toolsets that produce valid OCI image artifacts
so long as the artifact adheres to the contract.
Using the runAfter
field
If you need your Tasks
to execute in a specific order within the Pipeline
,
use the runAfter
field to indicate that a Task
must execute after
one or more other Tasks
.
In the example below, we want to test the code before we build it. Since there
is no output from the test-app
Task
, the build-app
Task
uses runAfter
to indicate that test-app
must run before it, regardless of the order in which
they are referenced in the Pipeline
definition.
workspaces:
- name: source
tasks:
- name: test-app
taskRef:
name: make-test
workspaces:
- name: source
workspace: source
- name: build-app
taskRef:
name: kaniko-build
runAfter:
- test-app
workspaces:
- name: source
workspace: source
Using the retries
field
For each Task
in the Pipeline
, you can specify the number of times Tekton
should retry its execution when it fails. When a Task
fails, the corresponding
TaskRun
sets its Succeeded
Condition
to False
. The retries
field
instructs Tekton to retry executing the Task
when this happens. retries
are executed
even when other Task
s in the Pipeline
have failed, unless the PipelineRun
has
been cancelled or
gracefully cancelled.
If you expect a Task
to encounter problems during execution (for example,
you know that there will be issues with network connectivity or missing
dependencies), set its retries
field to a suitable value greater than 0.
If you don’t explicitly specify a value, Tekton does not attempt to execute
the failed Task
again.
In the example below, the execution of the build-the-image
Task
will be
retried once after a failure; if the retried execution fails, too, the Task
execution fails as a whole.
tasks:
- name: build-the-image
retries: 1
taskRef:
name: build-push
Using the onError
field
When a PipelineTask
fails, the rest of the PipelineTasks
are skipped and the PipelineRun
is declared a failure. If you would like to
ignore such PipelineTask
failure and continue executing the rest of the PipelineTasks
, you can specify onError
for such a PipelineTask
.
OnError
can be set to stopAndFail
(default) and continue
. The failure of a PipelineTask
with stopAndFail
would stop and fail the whole PipelineRun
. A PipelineTask
fails with continue
does not fail the whole PipelineRun
, and the rest of the PipelineTask
will continue to execute.
To ignore a PipelineTask
failure, set onError
to continue
:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1
kind: Pipeline
metadata:
name: demo
spec:
tasks:
- name: task1
onError: continue
taskSpec:
steps:
- name: step1
image: alpine
script: |
exit 1
At runtime, the failure is ignored to determine the PipelineRun
status. The PipelineRun
message
contains the ignored failure info:
status:
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2023-09-28T19:08:30Z"
message: 'Tasks Completed: 1 (Failed: 1 (Ignored: 1), Cancelled 0), Skipped: 0'
reason: Succeeded
status: "True"
type: Succeeded
...
Note that the TaskRun
status remains as it is irrelevant to OnError
. Failed but ignored TaskRuns
result in a failed
status with reason
FailureIgnored
.
For example, the TaskRun
created by the above PipelineRun
has the following status:
$ kubectl get tr demo-run-task1
NAME SUCCEEDED REASON STARTTIME COMPLETIONTIME
demo-run-task1 False FailureIgnored 12m 12m
To specify onError
for a step
, please see specifying onError for a step.
Note: Setting Retry
and OnError:continue
at the same time is NOT allowed.
Produce results with OnError
When a PipelineTask
is set to ignore error and the PipelineTask
is able to initialize a result before failing, the result is made available to the consumer PipelineTasks
.
tasks:
- name: task1
onError: continue
taskSpec:
results:
- name: result1
steps:
- name: step1
image: alpine
script: |
echo -n 123 | tee $(results.result1.path)
exit 1
The consumer PipelineTasks
can access the result by referencing $(tasks.task1.results.result1)
.
If the result is NOT initialized before failing, and there is a PipelineTask
consuming it:
tasks:
- name: task1
onError: continue
taskSpec:
results:
- name: result1
steps:
- name: step1
image: alpine
script: |
exit 1
echo -n 123 | tee $(results.result1.path)
- If the consuming
PipelineTask
hasOnError:stopAndFail
, thePipelineRun
will fail withInvalidTaskResultReference
. - If the consuming
PipelineTask
hasOnError:continue
, the consumingPipelineTask
will be skipped with reasonResults were missing
, and thePipelineRun
will continue to execute.
Guard Task
execution using when
expressions
To run a Task
only when certain conditions are met, it is possible to guard task execution using the when
field. The when
field allows you to list a series of references to when
expressions.
The components of when
expressions are input
, operator
and values
:
Component | Description | Syntax |
---|---|---|
input |
Input for the when expression, defaults to an empty string if not provided. |
* Static values e.g. "ubuntu" * Variables (parameters or results) e.g. "$(params.image)" or "$(tasks.task1.results.image)" or "$(tasks.task1.results.array-results[1])" |
operator |
operator represents an input ’s relationship to a set of values , a valid operator must be provided. |
in or notin |
values |
An array of string values, the values array must be provided and has to be non-empty. |
* An array param e.g. ["$(params.images[*])"] * An array result of a task ["$(tasks.task1.results.array-results[*])"] * values can contain static values e.g. "ubuntu" * values can contain variables (parameters or results) or a Workspaces’s bound state e.g. ["$(params.image)"] or ["$(tasks.task1.results.image)"] or ["$(tasks.task1.results.array-results[1])"] |
The Parameters
are read from the Pipeline
and Results
are read directly from previous Tasks
. Using Results
in a when
expression in a guarded Task
introduces a resource dependency on the previous Task
that produced the Result
.
The declared when
expressions are evaluated before the Task
is run. If all the when
expressions evaluate to True
, the Task
is run. If any of the when
expressions evaluate to False
, the Task
is not run and the Task
is listed in the Skipped Tasks
section of the PipelineRunStatus
.
In these examples, first-create-file
task will only be executed if the path
parameter is README.md
, echo-file-exists
task will only be executed if the exists
result from check-file
task is yes
and run-lint
task will only be executed if the lint-config
optional workspace has been provided by a PipelineRun.
tasks:
- name: first-create-file
when:
- input: "$(params.path)"
operator: in
values: ["README.md"]
taskRef:
name: first-create-file
---
tasks:
- name: echo-file-exists
when:
- input: "$(tasks.check-file.results.exists)"
operator: in
values: ["yes"]
taskRef:
name: echo-file-exists
---
tasks:
- name: run-lint
when:
- input: "$(workspaces.lint-config.bound)"
operator: in
values: ["true"]
taskRef:
name: lint-source
---
tasks:
- name: deploy-in-blue
when:
- input: "blue"
operator: in
values: ["$(params.deployments[*])"]
taskRef:
name: deployment
For an end-to-end example, see PipelineRun with when
expressions.
There are a lot of scenarios where when
expressions can be really useful. Some of these are:
- Checking if the name of a git branch matches
- Checking if the
Result
of a previousTask
is as expected - Checking if a git file has changed in the previous commits
- Checking if an image exists in the registry
- Checking if the name of a CI job matches
- Checking if an optional Workspace has been provided
Use CEL expression in WhenExpression
🌱
CEL in WhenExpression
is an alpha feature. Theenable-cel-in-whenexpression
feature flag must be set to"true"
to enable the use ofCEL
inWhenExpression
.
CEL (Common Expression Language) is a declarative language designed for simplicity, speed, safety, and portability which can be used to express a wide variety of conditions and computations.
You can define a CEL expression in WhenExpression
to guard the execution of a Task
. The CEL expression must evaluate to either true
or false
. You can use a single line of CEL string to replace current WhenExpressions
’s input
+operator
+values
. For example:
# current WhenExpressions
when:
- input: "foo"
operator: "in"
values: ["foo", "bar"]
- input: "duh"
operator: "notin"
values: ["foo", "bar"]
# with cel
when:
- cel: "'foo' in ['foo', 'bar']"
- cel: "!('duh' in ['foo', 'bar'])"
CEL can offer more conditional functions, such as numeric comparisons (e.g. >
, <=
, etc), logic operators (e.g. OR
, AND
), Regex Pattern Matching. For example:
when:
# test coverage result is larger than 90%
- cel: "'$(tasks.unit-test.results.test-coverage)' > 0.9"
# params is not empty, or params2 is 8.5 or 8.6
- cel: "'$(params.param1)' != '' || '$(params.param2)' == '8.5' || '$(params.param2)' == '8.6'"
# param branch matches pattern `release/.*`
- cel: "'$(params.branch)'.matches('release/.*')"
Variable substitution in CEL
CEL
supports string substitutions, you can reference string, array indexing or object value of a param/result. For example:
when:
# string result
- cel: "$(tasks.unit-test.results.test-coverage) > 0.9"
# array indexing result
- cel: "$(tasks.unit-test.results.test-coverage[0]) > 0.9"
# object result key
- cel: "'$(tasks.objectTask.results.repo.url)'.matches('github.com/tektoncd/.*')"
# string param
- cel: "'$(params.foo)' == 'foo'"
# array indexing
- cel: "'$(params.branch[0])' == 'foo'"
# object param key
- cel: "'$(params.repo.url)'.matches('github.com/tektoncd/.*')"
Note: the reference needs to be wrapped with single quotes.
Whole Array
and Object
replacements are not supported yet. The following usage is not supported:
when:
- cel: "'foo' in '$(params.array_params[*])'"
- cel: "'foo' in '$(params.object_params[*])'"
In addition to the cases listed above, you can craft any valid CEL expression as defined by the cel-spec language definition
CEL
expression is validated at admission webhook and a validation error will be returned if the expression is invalid.
Note: To use Tekton’s variable substitution, you need to wrap the reference with single quotes. This also means that if you pass another CEL expression via params
or results
, it won’t be executed. Therefore CEL injection is disallowed.
For example:
This is valid: '$(params.foo)' == 'foo'
This is invalid: $(params.foo) == 'foo'
CEL's variable substitution is not supported yet and thus invalid: params.foo == 'foo'
Guarding a Task
and its dependent Tasks
To guard a Task
and its dependent Tasks:
- cascade the
when
expressions to the specific dependentTasks
to be guarded as well - compose the
Task
and its dependentTasks
as a unit to be guarded and executed together usingPipelines
inPipelines
Cascade when
expressions to the specific dependent Tasks
Pick and choose which specific dependent Tasks
to guard as well, and cascade the when
expressions to those Tasks
.
Taking the use case below, a user who wants to guard manual-approval
and its dependent Tasks
:
tests
|
v
manual-approval
| |
v (approver)
build-image |
| v
v slack-msg
deploy-image
The user can design the Pipeline
to solve their use case as such:
tasks:
#...
- name: manual-approval
runAfter:
- tests
when:
- input: $(params.git-action)
operator: in
values:
- merge
taskRef:
name: manual-approval
- name: build-image
when:
- input: $(params.git-action)
operator: in
values:
- merge
runAfter:
- manual-approval
taskRef:
name: build-image
- name: deploy-image
when:
- input: $(params.git-action)
operator: in
values:
- merge
runAfter:
- build-image
taskRef:
name: deploy-image
- name: slack-msg
params:
- name: approver
value: $(tasks.manual-approval.results.approver)
taskRef:
name: slack-msg
Compose using Pipelines in Pipelines
Compose a set of Tasks
as a unit of execution using Pipelines
in Pipelines
, which allows for guarding a Task
and
its dependent Tasks
(as a sub-Pipeline
) using when
expressions.
Note: Pipelines
in Pipelines
is an experimental feature
Taking the use case below, a user who wants to guard manual-approval
and its dependent Tasks
:
tests
|
v
manual-approval
| |
v (approver)
build-image |
| v
v slack-msg
deploy-image
The user can design the Pipelines
to solve their use case as such:
## sub pipeline (approve-build-deploy-slack)
tasks:
- name: manual-approval
runAfter:
- integration-tests
taskRef:
name: manual-approval
- name: build-image
runAfter:
- manual-approval
taskRef:
name: build-image
- name: deploy-image
runAfter:
- build-image
taskRef:
name: deploy-image
- name: slack-msg
params:
- name: approver
value: $(tasks.manual-approval.results.approver)
taskRef:
name: slack-msg
---
## main pipeline
tasks:
#...
- name: approve-build-deploy-slack
runAfter:
- tests
when:
- input: $(params.git-action)
operator: in
values:
- merge
taskRef:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: Pipeline
name: approve-build-deploy-slack
Guarding a Task
only
When when
expressions evaluate to False
, the Task
will be skipped and:
- The ordering-dependent
Tasks
will be executed - The resource-dependent
Tasks
(and their dependencies) will be skipped because of missingResults
from the skipped parentTask
. When we add support for defaultResults
, then the resource-dependentTasks
may be executed if the defaultResults
from the skipped parentTask
are specified. In addition, if a resource-dependentTask
needs a file from a guarded parentTask
in a sharedWorkspace
, make sure to handle the execution of the childTask
in case the expected file is missing from theWorkspace
because the guarded parentTask
is skipped.
On the other hand, the rest of the Pipeline
will continue executing.
tests
|
v
manual-approval
| |
v (approver)
build-image |
| v
v slack-msg
deploy-image
Taking the use case above, a user who wants to guard manual-approval
only can design the Pipeline
as such:
tasks:
#...
- name: manual-approval
runAfter:
- tests
when:
- input: $(params.git-action)
operator: in
values:
- merge
taskRef:
name: manual-approval
- name: build-image
runAfter:
- manual-approval
taskRef:
name: build-image
- name: deploy-image
runAfter:
- build-image
taskRef:
name: deploy-image
- name: slack-msg
params:
- name: approver
value: $(tasks.manual-approval.results.approver)
taskRef:
name: slack-msg
If manual-approval
is skipped, execution of its dependent Tasks
(slack-msg
, build-image
and deploy-image
)
would be unblocked regardless:
build-image
anddeploy-image
should be executed successfullyslack-msg
will be skipped because it is missing theapprover
Result
frommanual-approval
- dependents of
slack-msg
would have been skipped too if it had any of them - if
manual-approval
specifies a defaultapprover
Result
, such as “None”, thenslack-msg
would be executed (supporting defaultResults
is in progress)
- dependents of
Configuring the failure timeout
You can use the Timeout
field in the Task
spec within the Pipeline
to set the timeout
of the TaskRun
that executes that Task
within the PipelineRun
that executes your Pipeline.
The Timeout
value is a duration
conforming to Go’s ParseDuration
format. For example, valid values are 1h30m
, 1h
, 1m
, and 60s
.
Note: If you do not specify a Timeout
value, Tekton instead honors the timeout for the PipelineRun
.
In the example below, the build-the-image
Task
is configured to time out after 90 seconds:
spec:
tasks:
- name: build-the-image
taskRef:
name: build-push
timeout: "0h1m30s"
Using variable substitution
Tekton provides variables to inject values into the contents of certain fields. The values you can inject come from a range of sources including other fields in the Pipeline, context-sensitive information that Tekton provides, and runtime information received from a PipelineRun.
The mechanism of variable substitution is quite simple - string replacement is performed by the Tekton Controller when a PipelineRun is executed.
See the complete list of variable substitutions for Pipelines and the list of fields that accept substitutions.
For an end-to-end example, see using context variables.
Using the retries
and retry-count
variable substitutions
Tekton supports variable substitution for the retries
parameter of PipelineTask
. Variables like context.pipelineTask.retries
and
context.task.retry-count
can be added to the parameters of a PipelineTask
.
context.pipelineTask.retries
will be replaced by retries
of the PipelineTask
, while
context.task.retry-count
will be replaced by current retry number of the PipelineTask
.
params:
- name: pipelineTask-retries
value: "$(context.pipelineTask.retries)"
taskSpec:
params:
- name: pipelineTask-retries
steps:
- image: ubuntu
name: print-if-retries-exhausted
script: |
if [ "$(context.task.retry-count)" == "$(params.pipelineTask-retries)" ]
then
echo "This is the last retry."
fi
exit 1
Note: Every PipelineTask
can only access its own retries
and retry-count
. These
values aren’t accessible for other PipelineTask
s.
Using Results
Tasks can emit Results
when they execute. A Pipeline can use these
Results
for two different purposes:
- A Pipeline can pass the
Result
of aTask
into theParameters
orwhen
expressions of another. - A Pipeline can itself emit
Results
and include data from theResults
of its Tasks.
Note Tekton does not enforce that results are produced at Task level. If a pipeline attempts to consume a result that was declared by a Task, but not produced, it will fail. TEP-0048 propopses introducing default values for results to help Pipeline authors manage this case.
Passing one Task’s Results
into the Parameters
or when
expressions of another
Sharing Results
between Tasks
in a Pipeline
happens via
variable substitution - one Task
emits
a Result
and another receives it as a Parameter
with a variable such as
$(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>)
. Pipeline support two new types of
results and parameters: array []string
and object map[string]string
.
Array result is a beta feature and can be enabled by setting enable-api-fields
to alpha
or beta
.
Result Type | Parameter Type | Specification | enable-api-fields |
---|---|---|---|
string | string | $(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>) |
stable |
array | array | $(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>[*]) |
alpha or beta |
array | string | $(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>[i]) |
alpha or beta |
object | object | $(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>[*]) |
alpha or beta |
object | string | $(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>.key) |
alpha or beta |
Note: Whole Array and Object Results
(using star notation) cannot be referred in script
.
When one Task
receives the Results
of another, there is a dependency created between those
two Tasks
. In order for the receiving Task
to get data from another Task's
Result
,
the Task
producing the Result
must run first. Tekton enforces this Task
ordering
by ensuring that the Task
emitting the Result
executes before any Task
that uses it.
In the snippet below, a param is provided its value from the commit
Result
emitted by the
checkout-source
Task
. Tekton will make sure that the checkout-source
Task
runs
before this one.
params:
- name: foo
value: "$(tasks.checkout-source.results.commit)"
- name: array-params
value: "$(tasks.checkout-source.results.array-results[*])"
- name: array-indexing-params
value: "$(tasks.checkout-source.results.array-results[1])"
- name: object-params
value: "$(tasks.checkout-source.results.object-results[*])"
- name: object-element-params
value: "$(tasks.checkout-source.results.object-results.objectkey)"
Note: If checkout-source
exits successfully without initializing commit
Result
,
the receiving Task
fails and causes the Pipeline
to fail with InvalidTaskResultReference
:
unable to find result referenced by param 'foo' in 'task';: Could not find result with name 'commit' for task run 'checkout-source'
In the snippet below, a when
expression is provided its value from the exists
Result
emitted by the
check-file
Task
. Tekton will make sure that the check-file
Task
runs before this one.
when:
- input: "$(tasks.check-file.results.exists)"
operator: in
values: ["yes"]
For an end-to-end example, see Task
Results
in a PipelineRun
.
Note that when
expressions are whitespace-sensitive. In particular, when producing results intended for inputs to when
expressions that may include newlines at their close (e.g. cat
, jq
), you may wish to truncate them.
taskSpec:
params:
- name: jsonQuery-check
steps:
- image: ubuntu
name: store-name-in-results
script: |
curl -s https://my-json-server.typicode.com/typicode/demo/profile | jq -r .name | tr -d '\n' | tee $(results.name.path)
Emitting Results
from a Pipeline
A Pipeline
can emit Results
of its own for a variety of reasons - an external
system may need to read them when the Pipeline
is complete, they might summarise
the most important Results
from the Pipeline's
Tasks
, or they might simply
be used to expose non-critical messages generated during the execution of the Pipeline
.
A Pipeline's
Results
can be composed of one or many Task
Results
emitted during
the course of the Pipeline's
execution. A Pipeline
Result
can refer to its Tasks'
Results
using a variable of the form $(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>)
.
After a Pipeline
has executed the PipelineRun
will be populated with the Results
emitted by the Pipeline
. These will be written to the PipelineRun's
status.pipelineResults
field.
In the example below, the Pipeline
specifies a results
entry with the name sum
that
references the outputValue
Result
emitted by the calculate-sum
Task
.
results:
- name: sum
description: the sum of all three operands
value: $(tasks.calculate-sum.results.outputValue)
For an end-to-end example, see Results
in a PipelineRun
.
In the example below, the Pipeline
collects array and object results from Tasks
.
results:
- name: array-results
type: array
description: whole array
value: $(tasks.task1.results.array-results[*])
- name: array-indexing-results
type: string
description: array element
value: $(tasks.task1.results.array-results[1])
- name: object-results
type: object
description: whole object
value: $(tasks.task2.results.object-results[*])
- name: object-element
type: string
description: object element
value: $(tasks.task2.results.object-results.foo)
For an end-to-end example see Array and Object Results
in a PipelineRun
.
A Pipeline Result
is not emitted if any of the following are true:
- A
PipelineTask
referenced by thePipeline Result
failed. ThePipelineRun
will also have failed. - A
PipelineTask
referenced by thePipeline Result
was skipped. - A
PipelineTask
referenced by thePipeline Result
didn’t emit the referencedTask Result
. This should be considered a bug in theTask
and may fail aPipelineTask
in future. - The
Pipeline Result
uses a variable that doesn’t point to an actualPipelineTask
. This will result in anInvalidTaskResultReference
validation error duringPipelineRun
execution. - The
Pipeline Result
uses a variable that doesn’t point to an actual result in aPipelineTask
. This will cause anInvalidTaskResultReference
validation error duringPipelineRun
execution.
Note: Since a Pipeline Result
can contain references to multiple Task Results
, if any of those
Task Result
references are invalid the entire Pipeline Result
is not emitted.
Note: If a PipelineTask
referenced by the Pipeline Result
was skipped, the Pipeline Result
will not be emitted and the PipelineRun
will not fail due to a missing result.
Configuring the Task
execution order
You can connect Tasks
in a Pipeline
so that they execute in a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG).
Each Task
in the Pipeline
becomes a node on the graph that can be connected with an edge
so that one will run before another and the execution of the Pipeline
progresses to completion
without getting stuck in an infinite loop.
This is done using:
-
resource dependencies:
results
of oneTask
being passed intoparams
orwhen
expressions of another
-
ordering dependencies:
runAfter
clauses on the correspondingTasks
For example, the Pipeline
defined as follows
tasks:
- name: lint-repo
taskRef:
name: pylint
- name: test-app
taskRef:
name: make-test
- name: build-app
taskRef:
name: kaniko-build-app
runAfter:
- test-app
- name: build-frontend
taskRef:
name: kaniko-build-frontend
runAfter:
- test-app
- name: deploy-all
taskRef:
name: deploy-kubectl
runAfter:
- build-app
- build-frontend
executes according to the following graph:
| |
v v
test-app lint-repo
/ \
v v
build-app build-frontend
\ /
v v
deploy-all
In particular:
- The
lint-repo
andtest-app
Tasks
have norunAfter
clauses and start executing simultaneously. - Once
test-app
completes, bothbuild-app
andbuild-frontend
start executing simultaneously since they bothrunAfter
thetest-app
Task
. - The
deploy-all
Task
executes once bothbuild-app
andbuild-frontend
complete, since it is supposed torunAfter
them both. - The entire
Pipeline
completes execution once bothlint-repo
anddeploy-all
complete execution.
Specifying a display name
The displayName
field is an optional field that allows you to add a user-facing name of the Pipeline
that can be used to populate a UI. For example:
spec:
displayName: "Code Scan"
tasks:
- name: scan
taskRef:
name: sonar-scan
Adding a description
The description
field is an optional field and can be used to provide description of the Pipeline
.
Adding Finally
to the Pipeline
You can specify a list of one or more final tasks under finally
section. finally
tasks are guaranteed to be executed
in parallel after all PipelineTasks
under tasks
have completed regardless of success or error. finally
tasks are very
similar to PipelineTasks
under tasks
section and follow the same syntax. Each finally
task must have a
valid name
and a taskRef or
taskSpec. For example:
spec:
tasks:
- name: tests
taskRef:
name: integration-test
finally:
- name: cleanup-test
taskRef:
name: cleanup
Specifying displayName
in finally
tasks
Similar to specifying displayName
in pipelineTasks
, finally
tasks also
allows to add a user-facing name of the finally
task that can be used to populate and distinguish in the dashboard.
For example:
spec:
finally:
- name: notification
displayName: "Notify"
taskRef:
name: notification
- name: notification-using-context-variable
displayName: "Notification from $(context.pipeline.name)"
taskRef:
name: notification
The displayName
also allows you to parameterize the human-readable name of your choice based on the
params, the task results,
and the context variables.
Fully resolved displayName
is also available in the status as part of the pipelineRun.status.childReferences
. The
clients such as the dashboard, CLI, etc. can retrieve the displayName
from the childReferences
. The displayName
mainly
drives a better user experience and at the same time it is not validated for the content or length by the controller.
Specifying Workspaces
in finally
tasks
finally
tasks can specify workspaces which PipelineTasks
might have utilized
e.g. a mount point for credentials held in Secrets. To support that requirement, you can specify one or more
Workspaces
in the workspaces
field for the finally
tasks similar to tasks
.
spec:
workspaces:
- name: shared-workspace
tasks:
- name: clone-app-source
taskRef:
name: clone-app-repo-to-workspace
workspaces:
- name: shared-workspace
workspace: shared-workspace
finally:
- name: cleanup-workspace
taskRef:
name: cleanup-workspace
workspaces:
- name: shared-workspace
workspace: shared-workspace
Specifying Parameters
in finally
tasks
Similar to tasks
, you can specify Parameters
in finally
tasks:
spec:
tasks:
- name: tests
taskRef:
name: integration-test
finally:
- name: report-results
taskRef:
name: report-results
params:
- name: url
value: "someURL"
Specifying matrix
in finally
tasks
🌱
Matrix
is an beta feature. Theenable-api-fields
feature flag can be set to"beta"
to specifyMatrix
in aPipelineTask
.
Similar to tasks
, you can also provide Parameters
through matrix
in finally
tasks:
spec:
tasks:
- name: tests
taskRef:
name: integration-test
finally:
- name: report-results
taskRef:
name: report-results
params:
- name: url
value: "someURL"
matrix:
params:
- name: slack-channel
value:
- "foo"
- "bar"
include:
- name: build-1
params:
- name: slack-channel
value: "foo"
- name: flags
value: "-v"
For further information, read Matrix
.
Consuming Task
execution results in finally
finally
tasks can be configured to consume Results
of PipelineTask
from the tasks
section:
spec:
tasks:
- name: clone-app-repo
taskRef:
name: git-clone
finally:
- name: discover-git-commit
params:
- name: commit
value: $(tasks.clone-app-repo.results.commit)
Note: The scheduling of such finally
task does not change, it will still be executed in parallel with other
finally
tasks after all non-finally
tasks are done.
The controller resolves task results before executing the finally
task discover-git-commit
. If the task
clone-app-repo
failed before initializing commit
or skipped with when expression
resulting in uninitialized task result commit
, the finally
Task discover-git-commit
will be included in the list of
skippedTasks
and continues executing rest of the finally
tasks. The pipeline exits with completion
instead of
success
if a finally
task is added to the list of skippedTasks
.
Consuming Pipeline
result with finally
finally
tasks can emit Results
and these results emitted from the finally
tasks can be configured in the
Pipeline Results. References of Results
from finally
will follow the same naming conventions as referencing Results
from tasks
: $(finally.<finally-pipelinetask-name>.result.<result-name>)
.
results:
- name: comment-count-validate
value: $(finally.check-count.results.comment-count-validate)
finally:
- name: check-count
taskRef:
name: example-task-name
In this example, pipelineResults
in status
will show the name-value pair for the result comment-count-validate
which is produced in the Task
example-task-name
.
PipelineRun
Status with finally
With finally
, PipelineRun
status is calculated based on PipelineTasks
under tasks
section and finally
tasks.
Without finally
:
PipelineTasks under tasks |
PipelineRun status |
Reason |
---|---|---|
all PipelineTasks successful |
true |
Succeeded |
one or more PipelineTasks skipped and rest successful |
true |
Completed |
single failure of PipelineTask |
false |
failed |
With finally
:
PipelineTasks under tasks |
finally tasks |
PipelineRun status |
Reason |
---|---|---|---|
all PipelineTask successful |
all finally tasks successful |
true |
Succeeded |
all PipelineTask successful |
one or more failure of finally tasks |
false |
Failed |
one or more PipelineTask skipped and rest successful |
all finally tasks successful |
true |
Completed |
one or more PipelineTask skipped and rest successful |
one or more failure of finally tasks |
false |
Failed |
single failure of PipelineTask |
all finally tasks successful |
false |
failed |
single failure of PipelineTask |
one or more failure of finally tasks |
false |
failed |
Overall, PipelineRun
state transitioning is explained below for respective scenarios:
- All
PipelineTask
andfinally
tasks are successful:Started
->Running
->Succeeded
- At least one
PipelineTask
skipped and rest successful:Started
->Running
->Completed
- One
PipelineTask
failed / one or morefinally
tasks failed:Started
->Running
->Failed
Please refer to the table under Monitoring Execution Status to learn about
what kind of events are triggered based on the Pipelinerun
status.
Using Execution Status
of pipelineTask
A pipeline
can check the status of a specific pipelineTask
from the tasks
section in finally
through the task
parameters:
finally:
- name: finaltask
params:
- name: task1Status
value: "$(tasks.task1.status)"
taskSpec:
params:
- name: task1Status
steps:
- image: ubuntu
name: print-task-status
script: |
if [ $(params.task1Status) == "Failed" ]
then
echo "Task1 has failed, continue processing the failure"
fi
This kind of variable can have any one of the values from the following table:
Status | Description |
---|---|
Succeeded |
taskRun for the pipelineTask completed successfully |
Failed |
taskRun for the pipelineTask completed with a failure or cancelled by the user |
None |
the pipelineTask has been skipped or no execution information available for the pipelineTask |
For an end-to-end example, see status
in a PipelineRun
.
Using Aggregate Execution Status
of All Tasks
A pipeline
can check an aggregate status of all the tasks
section in finally
through the task parameters:
finally:
- name: finaltask
params:
- name: aggregateTasksStatus
value: "$(tasks.status)"
taskSpec:
params:
- name: aggregateTasksStatus
steps:
- image: ubuntu
name: check-task-status
script: |
if [ $(params.aggregateTasksStatus) == "Failed" ]
then
echo "Looks like one or more tasks returned failure, continue processing the failure"
fi
This kind of variable can have any one of the values from the following table:
Status | Description |
---|---|
Succeeded |
all tasks have succeeded |
Failed |
one ore more tasks failed |
Completed |
all tasks completed successfully including one or more skipped tasks |
None |
no aggregate execution status available (i.e. none of the above), one or more tasks could be pending/running/cancelled/timedout |
For an end-to-end example, see $(tasks.status)
usage in a Pipeline
.
Guard finally
Task
execution using when
expressions
Similar to Tasks
, finally
Tasks
can be guarded using when
expressions
that operate on static inputs or variables. Like in Tasks
, when
expressions in finally
Tasks
can operate on
Parameters
and Results
. Unlike in Tasks
, when
expressions in finally
tasks
can also operate on the Execution Status
of Tasks
.
when
expressions using Parameters
in finally
Tasks
when
expressions in finally
Tasks
can utilize Parameters
as demonstrated using golang-build
and send-to-channel-slack
Catalog
Tasks
:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1 # or tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: PipelineRun
metadata:
generateName: pipelinerun-
spec:
pipelineSpec:
params:
- name: enable-notifications
type: string
description: a boolean indicating whether the notifications should be sent
tasks:
- name: golang-build
taskRef:
name: golang-build
# […]
finally:
- name: notify-build-failure # executed only when build task fails and notifications are enabled
when:
- input: $(tasks.golang-build.status)
operator: in
values: ["Failed"]
- input: $(params.enable-notifications)
operator: in
values: ["true"]
taskRef:
name: send-to-slack-channel
# […]
params:
- name: enable-notifications
value: true
when
expressions using Results
in finally
‘Tasks`
when
expressions in finally
tasks
can utilize Results
, as demonstrated using git-clone
and github-add-comment
Catalog Tasks
:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1 # or tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: PipelineRun
metadata:
generateName: pipelinerun-
spec:
pipelineSpec:
tasks:
- name: git-clone
taskRef:
name: git-clone
- name: go-build
# […]
finally:
- name: notify-commit-sha # executed only when commit sha is not the expected sha
when:
- input: $(tasks.git-clone.results.commit)
operator: notin
values: [$(params.expected-sha)]
taskRef:
name: github-add-comment
# […]
params:
- name: expected-sha
value: 54dd3984affab47f3018852e61a1a6f9946ecfa
If the when
expressions in a finally
task
use Results
from a skipped or failed non-finally Tasks
, then the
finally
task
would also be skipped and be included in the list of Skipped Tasks
in the Status
, similarly to when using
Results
in other parts of the finally
task
.
when
expressions using Execution Status
of PipelineTask
in finally
tasks
when
expressions in finally
tasks
can utilize Execution Status
of PipelineTasks
,
as demonstrated using golang-build
and
send-to-channel-slack
Catalog Tasks
:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1 # or tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: PipelineRun
metadata:
generateName: pipelinerun-
spec:
pipelineSpec:
tasks:
- name: golang-build
taskRef:
name: golang-build
# […]
finally:
- name: notify-build-failure # executed only when build task fails
when:
- input: $(tasks.golang-build.status)
operator: in
values: ["Failed"]
taskRef:
name: send-to-slack-channel
# […]
For an end-to-end example, see PipelineRun with when
expressions.
when
expressions using Aggregate Execution Status
of Tasks
in finally
tasks
when
expressions in finally
tasks
can utilize
Aggregate Execution Status
of Tasks
as demonstrated:
finally:
- name: notify-any-failure # executed only when one or more tasks fail
when:
- input: $(tasks.status)
operator: in
values: ["Failed"]
taskRef:
name: notify-failure
For an end-to-end example, see PipelineRun with when
expressions.
Known Limitations
Cannot configure the finally
task execution order
It’s not possible to configure or modify the execution order of the finally
tasks. Unlike Tasks
in a Pipeline
,
all finally
tasks run simultaneously and start executing once all PipelineTasks
under tasks
have settled which means
no runAfter
can be specified in finally
tasks.
Using Custom Tasks
Custom Tasks have been promoted from v1alpha1
to v1beta1
. Starting from v0.43.0
to v0.46.0
, Pipeline Controller is able to create either v1alpha1
or v1beta1
Custom Task gated by a feature flag custom-task-version
, defaulting to v1beta1
. You can set custom-task-version
to v1alpha1
or v1beta1
to control which version to create.
Starting from v0.47.0
, feature flag custom-task-version
is removed and only v1beta1
Custom Task will be supported. See the migration doc for details.
Custom Tasks
can implement behavior that doesn’t correspond directly to running a workload in a Pod
on the cluster.
For example, a custom task might execute some operation outside of the cluster and wait for its execution to complete.
A PipelineRun
starts a custom task by creating a CustomRun
instead of a TaskRun
.
In order for a custom task to execute, there must be a custom task controller running on the cluster
that is responsible for watching and updating CustomRun
s which reference their type.
Specifying the target Custom Task
To specify the custom task type you want to execute, the taskRef
field
must include the custom task’s apiVersion
and kind
as shown below.
Using apiVersion
will always create a CustomRun
. If apiVersion
is set, kind
is required as well.
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
This creates a Run/CustomRun
of a custom task of type Example
in the example.dev
API group with the version v1alpha1
.
Validation error will be returned if apiVersion
or kind
is missing.
You can also specify the name
of a custom task resource object previously defined in the cluster.
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
name: myexample
If the taskRef
specifies a name, the custom task controller should look up the
Example
resource with that name and use that object to configure the execution.
If the taskRef
does not specify a name, the custom task controller might support
some default behavior for executing unnamed tasks.
Specifying a Custom Task Spec in-line (or embedded)
For v1alpha1.Run
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskSpec:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
spec:
field1: value1
field2: value2
For v1beta1.CustomRun
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskSpec:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
customSpec:
field1: value1
field2: value2
If the custom task controller supports the in-line or embedded task spec, this will create a Run/CustomRun
of a custom task of
type Example
in the example.dev
API group with the version v1alpha1
.
If the taskSpec
is not supported, the custom task controller should produce proper validation errors.
Please take a look at the
developer guide for custom controllers supporting taskSpec
:
taskSpec
support for pipelineRun
was designed and discussed in
TEP-0061
Specifying parameters
If a custom task supports parameters
, you can use the
params
field to specify their values:
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
name: myexample
params:
- name: foo
value: bah
Context Variables
The Parameters
in the Params
field will accept
context variables that will be substituted, including:
PipelineRun
name, namespace and uidPipeline
namePipelineTask
retries
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
name: myexample
params:
- name: foo
value: $(context.pipeline.name)
Specifying matrix
🌱
Matrix
is an alpha feature. Theenable-api-fields
feature flag must be set to"alpha"
to specifyMatrix
in aPipelineTask
.
If a custom task supports parameters
, you can use the
matrix
field to specify their values, if you want to fan:
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
name: myexample
params:
- name: foo
value: bah
matrix:
params:
- name: bar
value:
- qux
- thud
include:
- name: build-1
params:
- name: common-package
value: path-to-common-pkg
For further information, read Matrix
.
Specifying workspaces
If the custom task supports it, you can provide Workspaces
to share data with the custom task.
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
name: myexample
workspaces:
- name: my-workspace
Consult the documentation of the custom task that you are using to determine whether it supports workspaces and how to name them.
Using Results
If the custom task produces results, you can reference them in a Pipeline using the normal syntax,
$(tasks.<task-name>.results.<result-name>)
.
Specifying Timeout
v1alpha1.Run
If the custom task supports it as we recommended, you can provide timeout
to specify the maximum running time of a CustomRun
(including all retry attempts or other operations).
v1beta1.CustomRun
If the custom task supports it as we recommended, you can provide timeout
to specify the maximum running time of one CustomRun
execution.
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
timeout: 2s
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
name: myexample
Consult the documentation of the custom task that you are using to determine whether it supports Timeout
.
Specifying Retries
If the custom task supports it, you can provide retries
to specify how many times you want to retry the custom task.
spec:
tasks:
- name: run-custom-task
retries: 2
taskRef:
apiVersion: example.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Example
name: myexample
Consult the documentation of the custom task that you are using to determine whether it supports Retries
.
Known Custom Tasks
We try to list as many known Custom Tasks as possible here so that users can easily find what they want. Please feel free to share the Custom Task you implemented in this table.
v1beta1.CustomRun
Custom Task | Description |
---|---|
Wait Task Beta | Waits a given amount of time before succeeding, specified by an input parameter named duration. Support timeout and retries . |
Approvals | Pauses the execution of PipelineRuns and waits for manual approvals. Version 0.6.0 and up. |
v1alpha1.Run
Custom Task | Description |
---|---|
Pipeline Loops | Runs a Pipeline in a loop with varying Parameter values. |
Common Expression Language | Provides Common Expression Language support in Tekton Pipelines. |
Wait | Waits a given amount of time, specified by a Parameter named “duration”, before succeeding. |
Approvals | Pauses the execution of PipelineRuns and waits for manual approvals. Version up to (and including) 0.5.0 |
Pipelines in Pipelines | Defines and executes a Pipeline in a Pipeline . |
Task Group | Groups Tasks together as a Task . |
Pipeline in a Pod | Runs Pipeline in a Pod . |
Code examples
For a better understanding of Pipelines
, study our code examples.
Except as otherwise noted, the content of this page is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, and code samples are licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
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