Using shell scripts rather than inlining shell commands to YAML feels more
natural, more readable, and will keep all different variations of execution
consistent. Essentially the only disadvantage is that we won't see each command
listed one-by-one in gitlab's log output (unless we set -x that is), but given
that shell would complain if something was wrong with the script, it's fairly
easy to identify the problem.
Here's a successful pipeline after the change:
https://gitlab.com/eskultety/libvirt/-/pipelines/753090691
Erik Skultety (7):
ci: integration: Extract several hidden job definitions to a script
ci: integration: Drop the 'install-deps' hidden job and reference
ci: integration-template: Drop Fedora 35 check
ci: integration.sh: Replace most 'sudo' usage with running as root
ci: integration.sh: Add/Rewrite/Reformat commentaries
ci: integration.sh: Replace 'test' with '[' operator
ci: integration.sh: Define the SCRATCH_DIR variable for local
execution
ci/integration-template.yml | 42 ++----------------------------
ci/integration.sh | 51 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2 files changed, 53 insertions(+), 40 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 ci/integration.sh
--
2.39.0