This example will guide you how to run tests in your Ruby on Rails application and deploy it automatically as Heroku application.
You can checkout the example source and check CI status.
This is what the .gitlab-ci.yml
file looks like for this project:
test:
script:
- apt-get update -qy
- apt-get install -y nodejs
- bundle install --path /cache
- bundle exec rake db:create RAILS_ENV=test
- bundle exec rake test
staging:
type: deploy
script:
- gem install dpl
- dpl --provider=heroku --app=gitlab-ci-ruby-test-staging --api-key=$HEROKU_STAGING_API_KEY
only:
- master
production:
type: deploy
script:
- gem install dpl
- dpl --provider=heroku --app=gitlab-ci-ruby-test-prod --api-key=$HEROKU_PRODUCTION_API_KEY
only:
- tags
This project has three jobs:
test
- used to test Rails application,staging
- used to automatically deploy staging environment every push to master
branchproduction
- used to automatically deploy production environment for every created tagYou'll need to create two variables in Project > Variables
:
HEROKU_STAGING_API_KEY
- Heroku API key used to deploy staging app,HEROKU_PRODUCTION_API_KEY
- Heroku API key used to deploy production app.Find your Heroku API key in Manage Account.
For each of your environments, you'll need to create a new Heroku application. You can do this through the Dashboard.
First install Docker Engine. To build this project you also need to have GitLab Runner. You can use public runners available on gitlab.com/ci
, but you can register your own:
gitlab-ci-multi-runner register \
--non-interactive \
--url "https://gitlab.com/ci/" \
--registration-token "PROJECT_REGISTRATION_TOKEN" \
--description "ruby-2.2" \
--executor "docker" \
--docker-image ruby:2.2 \
--docker-postgres latest
With the command above, you create a runner that uses ruby:2.2 image and uses postgres database.
To access PostgreSQL database you need to connect to host: postgres
as user postgres
without password.