This is a simple pipeline example for a .NET Core application, showing just how easy it is to get up and running with .NET development using GitLab.UPDA
If you're new to .NET you'll want to check out the tutorial, but if you're already a seasoned developer considering building your own .NET app with GitLab, this should all look very familiar.
The root of the repository contains the out of the dotnet new console
command,
which generates a new console application that just prints out "Hello, World."
It's a simple example, but great for demonstrating how easy GitLab CI is to
use with .NET. Check out the Program.cs
and dotnetcore.csproj
files to
see how these work.
In addition to the .NET Core content, there is a ready-to-go .gitignore
file
sourced from the the .NET Core .gitignore. This
will help keep your repository clean of build files and other configuration.
Finally, the .gitlab-ci.yml
contains the configuration needed for GitLab
to build your code. Let's take a look, section by section.
First, we note that we want to use the official Microsoft .NET SDK image to build our project.
image: microsoft/dotnet:latest
We're defining two stages here: build
, and test
. As your project grows
in complexity you can add more of these.
stages:
- build
- test
Next, we define our build job which simply runs the dotnet build
command and
identifies the bin
folder as the output directory. Anything in the bin
folder
will be automatically handed off to future stages, and is also downloadable through
the web UI.
build:
stage: build
script:
- "dotnet build"
artifacts:
paths:
- bin/
Similar to the build step, we get our test output simply by running dotnet test
.
test:
stage: test
script:
- "dotnet test"
This should be enough to get you started. There are many, many powerful options
for your .gitlab-ci.yml
. You can read about them in our documentation
here.
This template repository also has a fully-automated dev setup for Gitpod.
The .gitpod.yml
ensures that, when you open this repository in Gitpod, you'll get a cloud workspace with .NET Core pre-installed, and your project will automatically be built and start running.