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Automating DevOps with GitLab CI/CD Pipelines

You're reading from  Automating DevOps with GitLab CI/CD Pipelines

Product type Book
Published in Feb 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803233000
Pages 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Authors (3):
Christopher Cowell Christopher Cowell
Profile icon Christopher Cowell
Nicholas Lotz Nicholas Lotz
Profile icon Nicholas Lotz
Chris Timberlake Chris Timberlake
Profile icon Chris Timberlake
View More author details

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1 Getting Started with DevOps, Git, and GitLab
2. Chapter 1: Understanding Life Before DevOps 3. Chapter 2: Practicing Basic Git Commands 4. Chapter 3: Understanding GitLab Components 5. Chapter 4: Understanding GitLab’s CI/CD Pipeline Structure 6. Part 2 Automating DevOps Stages with GitLab CI/CD Pipelines
7. Chapter 5: Installing and Configuring GitLab Runners 8. Chapter 6: Verifying Your Code 9. Chapter 7: Securing Your Code 10. Chapter 8: Packaging and Deploying Code 11. Part 3 Next Steps for Improving Your Applications with GitLab
12. Chapter 9: Enhancing the Speed and Maintainability of CI/CD Pipelines 13. Chapter 10: Extending the Reach of CI/CD Pipelines 14. Chapter 11: End-to-End Example 15. Chapter 12: Troubleshooting and the Road Ahead with GitLab 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Enabling DevOps practices with GitLab flow

Let’s end this chapter by seeing how issues, branches, and merge requests fit together in a realistic example. This shows GitLab’s recommended best practice for how to use all the components you’ve been introduced to in a smooth workflow that works for most situations. In fact, this workflow is so strongly recommended and so well proven over time that GitLab even has a name for this workflow: GitLab flow. As always, you’re encouraged to treat this workflow as a starting point when developing your own processes and procedures; feel free to tinker with it as needed for your team, product, and organizational culture.

While working on the Hats for Cats web app, you decide to add a feature that lets you filter the hats by cat breed. After all, a cowboy hat for a large-headed Maine Coon might swamp the dainty head of a Devon Rex. Here are all the steps prescribed by GitLab flow to bring that feature into existence...

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