bitbucket-pipelines-runner

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Published: Jul 14, 2021 License: MIT

README

Bitbucket Cloud Pipeline Runner

This is my first attempt a developing a CLI tool using Golang, so please bare with me.

The runner has been developed because of limitation within BitBucket pipelines, there is no native support in the YAML spec for triggering other piplines, while the Trigger pipeline pipe fills the lack of the native support, it can add an incredible about of noise to your pipelines and doesn't send the output to the triggering pipeline, you must click through to it.

Notes

  • Please try not to judge the code too much. I'm new to golang and I just want to get it working first.
  • Tests need work, we've got some but not enough.

Configuration

Regardless of the configuration choice, you must have an App Password setup with write access to pipelines.

Using env vars

export BPR_BITBUCKET_USERNAME="username"
export BPR_BITBUCKET_PASSWORD="password"

Using config file

; ~/.bpr.env
BITBUCKET_USERNAME="username"
BITBUCKET_PASSWORD="password"

Commands

Pipeline

Runs a single pipeling via flags

bpr pipeline $workspace/$repo_slug/$ref_type/$ref_name[/pipeline_name]

  • --var 'key=value' a repeatable flag for providing variables to your pipeline
  • --secrete 'key=value' a repeatable flag for providing secured variables to your pipeling
  • --dry shows what the command will do rather than do it
Examples
# runs default pipeline on the main branch
bpr pipeline Owner/repo-slug/branch/main
# runs a custom pipeline (my-pipeline) on main
bpr pipeline Owner/repo-slug/branch/main/my-pipeline
# runs a custom pipeline (my-pipeline) on a tag
bpr pipeline Owner/repo-slug/tag/v1.0.0/my-pipeline
# runs a pipeline with variables/secrets to send to your pipeline
bpr pipeline Owner/repo-slug/branch/main --var 'username=user' --secret 'password=password' --var 'timeout=10'
Spec

Loads all .bpr.yml files in your current working directory to build a list of pipelines to run. Then either runs all of pipelines or just one if you provide the --only flag. Secrets are deliberately left our of the YAML spec, as we don't want to risk of them being introduced into source control.

Example Spec file
# Variables global to pipelines created with in
variables:
  USERNAME: username
pipelines:
  # Pipeline keys are be globally unique to your working directory, not just the file
  my_pipeline_key:
    pipeline: Owner/repo-slug/branch/example # defaults to "default"
  my_other_pipeliny_key:
    pipeline: Owner/repo-slug/branch/example/pipeline # custom pipeline on main
    variables:
      WAIT: 10 # Provides WAIT as a variable to the pipeline
Running Specs

Using spec files with bpr requires your current working directory to be where your .bpr.yml are.

Run everything:

bpr spec

Run a specific pipeline by its key in the spec:

bpr spec --only "my_pipeline"

Run piplines with additional variables, works the same as when running pipelines directly

bpr spec --var 'key=value' --secret 'key2=value'

Do a dry run

bpr spec --dry

You can also override the target branch, tag, and pipeline. Use this with great care as it will override the target for all pipelines, so its recomended to only be used with the --only flag.

bpr spec --target-type "tag" --target-ref "main" --target-pipeline "custom_pipeline"

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