Buildkite Builder (BKB) is a Buildkite pipeline builder written in Ruby. It allows you to build your pipeline with a Ruby DSL for dynamically generated pipeline steps.
There are 2 components to this toolkit. The buildkite-builder
RubyGem and the buildkite-builder
Docker image. You technically only need the image to use Buildkite Builder, but installing the gem in your repo helps you preview your pipeline during development.
To install the gem, add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'buildkite-builder'
The gem provides a command line tool that lets you perform various operations on your pipelines:
buildkite-builder help
As with every Buildkite pipeline, you'll need to define the initial pipeline step. You can do this directly in the Pipeline Settings or with a .buildkite/pipeline.yml
file in your repository. You'll need to define a single step to kick off Buildkite Builder:
steps:
- label: ":toolbox:"
plugins:
- docker#v3.7.0:
image: gusto/buildkite-builder:2.1.0
propagate-environment: true
Some things to note:
- The
label
can be whatever you like. - You'll want to update the
docker
plugin version from time to time. - You can update the
buildkite-builder
version by bumping the Docker image tag.
💡 We have a Showcase pipeline (defined in .buildkite/pipelines/showcase/pipeline.rb
) that, well, showcases some of the features and possibilities with Buildkite Builder. Sometimes the best way to learning something is seeing how it's used.
At its core, BKB is really just a YAML builder. This tool allows you to scale your needs when it comes to building a Buildkite pipeline. Your pipeline can be as straight forward as you'd like, or as complex as you need. Since you have Ruby at your disposal, you can do some cool things like:
- Perform pre-build code/diff analysis to determine whether or not to to add a step to the pipeline.
- Reorder pipeline steps dynamically.
- Augment your pipeline steps with BKB processors.
Your repo can contain as many pipeline definitions as you'd like. By convention, pipeline file structure are as such:
.buildkite/
pipelines/
<your-pipeline1-slug>/
pipeline.rb
<your-pipeline2-slug>/
pipeline.rb
For an example, refer to the dummy pipeline in the fixtures directory.
Buildkite Builder was designed to be as intuitive as possible by making DSL match Buildkite's attributes and step types. Here's a basic pipeline:
Buildkite::Builder.pipeline do
command do
label "Rspec", emoji: :rspec
command "bundle exec rspec"
end
wait
trigger do
trigger "deploy-pipeline"
end
end
Which generates:
steps:
- label: ":rspec: RSpec"
command: "bundle exec rspec"
- wait
- trigger: deploy-pipeline
If the step type or attribute exists in Buildkite docs, then it should exist in the DSL. The only exception is the if
attribute. Since if
is a ruby keyword, we've mapped it to condition
.
If your pipeline has a lot of steps, you should consider using Step Templates. Templates allow you to break out your build steps into reusable template files.
.buildkite/
pipelines/
foobar-widget/
pipeline.rb
templates/
rspec.rb
rubocop.rb
A template is basically a step that was extracted from the pipeline:
.buildkite/pipelines/foobar-widget/templates/rspec.rb
Buildkite::Builder.template do
label "Rspec", emoji: :rspec
commmand "bundle exec rspec"
end
You can then include the template into the the pipeline once or as many time as you need. The template name will be the name of the file (without the extension).
.buildkite/pipelines/foobar-widget/pipeline.rb
Buildkite::Builder.pipeline do
command(:rspec)
# Reuse and agument templates on the fly.
command(:rspec) do
label "Run RSpec again!"
end
end
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/gusto/buildkite-builder. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Everyone interacting in the Buildkite::Builder
project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.