11
votes

I'm having problems triggering a pipeline from another Pipeline in Azure DevOps. I have a CI pipeline and I want to trigger a Deploy Pipeline whenever CI passes on a master branch. This seems to be technically possible, but the documentation is unclear.

I see the following:

# this is being defined in app-ci pipeline
resources:
  pipelines:
  - pipeline: securitylib
    source: security-lib-ci
    trigger: 
      branches:
      - releases/*
      - master

But it's unclear as to a) whether this goes in the triggering pipeline (in my case the CI pipeline) or the triggered pipeline (in my case, the deploy pipeline).

It's also unclear as to what the pipeline and source refer to, and how I find out these variables? Are they both the name of the pipeline? I've tried various different permutations and nothing seems to be working.

4
did my answer helped you? it does answer all your questions... If so, please accept it :)ccoutinho
Would be really cool if you would make your contribution to the community @Pezholio and mark my solution as valid, since it clearly answers your query. SO is not only to ask questions and get answers in return....ccoutinho

4 Answers

15
votes

EDIT

After having written my answer, Microsoft has come up with another solution to solve this problem, by using a build completion trigger via a classic pipeline. Their solution can be found here.



If you're not publishing an artifact from the triggering pipeline, it won't trigger the triggered pipeline.

Also, there is a very big restriction on the use of these types of triggers. It is necessary to change the defaultBranch for manual and scheduled builds in the depends pipeline, to the working branch. Otherwise it won't kick in at the end of the source pipeline execution. So, let's say you're working on feature branch, and defaultBranch is set to feature. You commit your code, and everything will run as expected: the source pipeline kicks in, and at its end, the depends pipeline will be triggered. All good! But when you will merge into master, if you do not change the defaultBranch, the depends pipeline won't be triggered at the end of the source pipeline. I explain how to change the defaultBranch at the end of the answer.


How to setup a pipeline trigger

I managed to get this up and running on a minimalistic project. Here you can have the code and here the project on Azure DevOps. I will try to guide you through how I did it, and answer the questions you've asked in your post.

I will be calling the triggered pipeline as depends pipeline and the triggering pipeline as source pipeline.

On the source pipeline, there's no need to do anything except publishing an artifact. If you don't publish an artifact from the source pipeline, it won't work. Below you can find the code I am using for my dummy source pipeline. I want it to be triggered for master branch, and at the end I want to be sure to publish an artifact.

trigger:
  branches:
    include: # branch names which will trigger a build
    - master
pr: none

steps:
  # required to cause pipeline triggering downstream
  - task: CopyFiles@2
    inputs:
      contents: $(System.DefaultWorkingDirectory)/**/*.yml
      targetFolder: $(Build.ArtifactStagingDirectory)
  - task: PublishBuildArtifacts@1
    inputs:
      pathtoPublish: $(Build.ArtifactStagingDirectory)
      artifactName: dummy-$(Build.BuildId)

On the depends pipeline (code shown below), I have to disable CI and PR triggers, otherwise when I commit to this repo, this pipeline will be triggered by the CI trigger, and then by the end of the execution of the source pipeline. This is done by the two first lines of my code. Then I want that the pipeline named source (this is the source property in the YAML below), within the project named Pipelining (project property in the YAML) will trigger the current (depends) pipeline when this updates master branch.

trigger: none
pr: none
resources:
  pipelines:
    - pipeline: source
      project: Pipelining
      source: source
      trigger: 
        branches:
          include:
          - master
steps:
  - checkout: none
  - script: echo 'triggered depends'

Does it make sense? It is important for your project name on Azure DevOps to match the property in the YAML depends pipeline code.For me it is Pipelining

enter image description here

As well as the source property, again in the YAML depends pipeline code.

enter image description here


Change the default branch

In order to change the defaultBranch, because of the issue mentioned above, you should edit the pipeline (in this case, the depends pipeline), then on the three dots on the top right corner pick Triggers. Then choose the YAML tab, and you will get to the screen shown in the image below, where you can set the working branch.

enter image description here

0
votes

Above yaml pipeline trigger should be defined in the triggered pipeline(deploy pipeline).

- pipeline: string the string here is identifier you give to this pipeline resource. It can any string.

source: string the string here is the definition name of the triggering pipeline(the name of your CI pipeline).

Below yaml is from the document pipeline resource.

resources:
  pipelines:
  - pipeline: string  # identifier for the pipeline resource
    project:  string # project for the build pipeline; optional input for current project
    source: string  # source pipeline definition name
    branch: string  # branch to pick the artifact, optional; defaults to all branches
    version: string # pipeline run number to pick artifact, optional; defaults to last successfully completed run
    trigger:     # optional; triggers are not enabled by default.
      branches:
        include: [string] # branches to consider the trigger events, optional; defaults to all branches.
        exclude: [string] # branches to discard the trigger events, optional; defaults to none.

Option: You can also set the pipeline triggers from Ui page. Go the edit page of the triggered yaml pipeline(Deploy pipeline), Click the 3dots and choose Triggers

enter image description here

Go to Triggers--> Build completion and click add--> Select your triggering pipeline(CI pipeline)

enter image description here

Update:

I saw the pipeline resource in azure-deploy.yml is defined as below.

resources:
  pipelines:
  - pipeline: 'Deploy to Development'
    source: 'DFE-Digital.dfe-teachers-payment-service'
  trigger:
    branches:
      include:
      - "master"
      - "release-stuff"

please try changing the indentation of trigger element the same as source element. Check below example:

    resources:
      pipelines:
      - pipeline: 'Deploy to Development'
        source: 'DFE-Digital.dfe-teachers-payment-service'
        trigger:
          branches:
            include:
            - "master"
            - "release-stuff"
0
votes

I may assume you are not working on the master branch, right? I have the same issue previously. But after I read the section Default branch for triggers of MS's doc. I understand why. The trigger only examine master's branch's yaml file by default. This means the pipeline will only be triggered by the definition of triggers in master branch's yaml file.

Therefore, whatever branches you add in the trigger section of yaml file in other branches(not master), tirgger is not active. You need to change the pipeline to look the yaml file in your current branch, not master. Just follow the doc's instruction, change the default trigger branch. You will get it working.

Once you merge your work into master, you probably need to change the dedault trigger branch back to master.

0
votes

I found the following:

  • In source pipeline I didn't need to create an artifact

  • In depends pipeline if I wanted to build after any commit to the source branch I could get it to work with this:

    trigger: none
    pr: none
    resources:
          pipelines:
          - pipeline: 'depends'
            source: 'common-gulp-trigger'
            trigger: true