str = 'branch IN (foo, bar) AND env(baz) =~ ^baz- OR tag IS present'
data = { branch: 'foo', env: { baz: 'baz-1' }, tag: 'v.1.0.0' }
Travis::Conditions.parse(str, data)
# => true
See this file for the EBNF.
With the gem installed you can use the command travis-conditions
in order to
test your conditions locally.
Check the syntax of a condition by inspecting the resulting abstract syntax tree.
$ travis-conditions eval "branch = foo"
[:eq, [:var, :branch], [:val, "foo"]]
Check conditions against a given data hash.
$ travis-conditions eval "branch = foo" --data '{"branch": "foo"}'
true
$ echo '{"branch": "foo"}' | travis-conditions eval "branch = foo"
true
The given data
hash can include known attributes (such as branch, tag, repo)
and an env
key that can either hold a hash, or an array of strings:
$ travis-conditions eval "env(foo) = bar" --data '{"env": {"foo": "bar"}}'
true
$ travis-conditions eval "env(foo) = bar" --data '{"env": ["foo=bar"]}'
true
Conditions can be used to filter out, and reject builds, stages, and jobs by
specifying conditions in your build configuration (your .travis.yml
file).
See Conditional Builds, Stages, and Jobs
for details.
# require the branch name to be master (note for PRs this is the base branch name)
branch = master
# require the tag name to match a regular expression (enclose in slashes for
# more complicated expressions)
tag =~ ^v1
tag =~ /^(v1|v2)/
# require the event type to be either `push` or `pull_request`
type IN (push, pull_request)
# require the branch name to not be one of several names
branch NOT IN (master, dev)
# require the sender login name to match a given name (use quotes for strings
# that contain spaces or special characters)
sender == my_account
sender != "deploy bot"
# exclude forks
fork == false
# match the commit message
commit_message !~ /no-deploy/
# match the os
os == linux
Conditions are being parsed using this library by the component that accepts your build request, and generates your build, stages, and jobs.
The following known attributes are available:
type
(the current event type, known event types are:push
,pull_request
,api
,cron
)repo
(the current repository slugowner_name/name
)branch
(the current branch name; for pull requests: the base branch name)tag
(the current tag name)commit_message
(the current commit message)sender
(the event sender's login name)fork
(true
orfalse
depending if the repository is a fork)head_repo
(for pull requests: the head repository slugowner_name/name
)head_branch
(for pull requests: the head repository branch name)os
(the operating system)language
(the build language)sudo
(sudo access)dist
(the distribution)group
(the image group)
Also, environment variables from your build configuration (.travis.yml
) and
repository settings are available, and can be matched using env(FOO)
, see
below.
Note that this means conditions do not have access to the build environment, and they are not evaluted in Bash. Bash variables or subprocesses can not be evaluated.
Variable names and unquoted strings starting with a dollar char $
raise a
parse error, causing the build request to be rejected. Quoted strings still can
start with a dollar char, so if you definitely need a string to start with a
dollar char you can enclose it in quotes.
The following expressions are parsed and evaluated as expected:
# individual terms
true
false
# compare values
1 = 1
true != false
# compare function calls
env(FOO) = env(BAR)
# compare function calls to attributes
env(FOO) = type
# nested function calls
env(env(FOO))
# function calls in lists
repo IN (env(ONE), env(OTHER))
# parenthesis
(tag =~ ^v) AND (branch = master)
All keywords (such as AND
, OR
, NOT
, IN
, IS
, attribute and functions names) are case-insensitive.
The only functions currently is:
# (the value of the environment variable `FOO`)
env(FOO)
The function env
currently supports environment variables that are given in
your build configuration (e.g. on env
or env.global
), and environment
variables specified in your repository settings. Note that there is no
function env.global
or similar. Instead all environment variables are
available through env
.
Values are strings that are given without quotes, not containing any whitespace or special characters, or single or double quoted strings:
"a word"
'a word'
a_word
This matches a string literally:
branch = master
sender != "my bot"
env(foo) = bar
"bar" = env("foo")
This matches a string using a regular expression:
# for simple expressions, not ending in a closing parenthesis:
branch =~ ^master$
env(foo) =~ ^bar$
# if an expression needs to include whitespace, or end in a parenthesis wrap it with slashes:
branch =~ /(master|foo)/
Usually parenthesis are not required (e.g. the above list of alternatives could also be written as just master|foo
). If you do need to end a regular expression with a parenthesis, or if it contains whitespace, then the whole expression needs to be wrapped in /
slashes.
This matches against a list (array) of values:
branch IN (master, dev)
env(foo) IN (bar, baz)
Note that commas are required to separate values.
Values that include whitespace or special characters should be quoted:
env(foo) IN ("bar baz", "buz bum")
The operator IN
can be negated as follows:
# these are the same
NOT branch IN (master, dev)
branch NOT IN (master, dev)
Known predicates are:
present
blank
true
false
This requires a value to be present or missing:
branch IS present
branch IS blank
env(foo) IS present
env(foo) IS blank
The operator IS
can be negated as follows:
# these are all the same
env(foo) IS NOT present
NOT env(foo) IS present
env(foo) IS blank
Note that the operator IS
is intended to work with the well known predicates present
and blank
. It is not the same as =
, and expressions like the following do not work:
# this does not work
branch IS "master"
# instead use =
branch = "master"
However, IS
can also be used to match against the boolean values true
and false
(this has been included after we found many users to expect this to work):
branch IS true
branch = true # this is the same
The following aliases are in place:
!
is an alias toNOT
&&
is an alias toAND
||
is an alias toOR
==
is an alias to=
~=
is an alias to=~
We were surprised to see users to expect line continuation using \
to work, as it does, for example, in Ruby or Python. We liked the idea, so we allowed the following:
if: env(PRIOR_VERSION) IS present AND \
env(PRIOR_VERSION) != env(RELEASE_VERSION) AND \
branch = master AND \
type = push
Using YAML multiline strings:
if: |
env(PRIOR_VERSION) IS present AND \
env(PRIOR_VERSION) != env(RELEASE_VERSION) AND \
branch = master AND \
type = push