BigW Consortium Gitlab

Commit cfb35cd7 by Achilleas Pipinellis

It's secret variables, not secure

[ci skip]
parent 4099b560
......@@ -10,15 +10,15 @@ The variables can be overwritten and they take precedence over each other in
this order:
1. [Trigger variables][triggers] (take precedence over all)
1. [Secure variables](#secure-variables)
1. [Secret variables](#secret-variables)
1. YAML-defined [job-level variables](../yaml/README.md#job-variables)
1. YAML-defined [global variables](../yaml/README.md#variables)
1. [Predefined variables](#predefined-variables-environment-variables) (are the
lowest in the chain)
For example, if you define `API_TOKEN=secure` as a secure variable and
For example, if you define `API_TOKEN=secure` as a secret variable and
`API_TOKEN=yaml` in your `.gitlab-ci.yml`, the `API_TOKEN` will take the value
`secure` as the secure variables are higher in the chain.
`secure` as the secret variables are higher in the chain.
## Predefined variables (Environment variables)
......@@ -124,23 +124,23 @@ job_name:
variables: []
```
## Secure variables
## Secret variables
>**Notes:**
- This feature requires GitLab Runner 0.4.0 or higher.
- Be aware that secure variables are not masked, and their values can be shown
- Be aware that secret variables are not masked, and their values can be shown
in the build logs if explicitly asked to do so. If your project is public or
internal, you can set the pipelines private from your project's Pipelines
settings. Follow the discussion in issue [#13784][ce-13784] for masking the
secure variables.
secret variables.
GitLab CI allows you to define per-project **Secure variables** that are set in
the build environment. The secure variables are stored out of the repository
GitLab CI allows you to define per-project **secret variables** that are set in
the build environment. The secret variables are stored out of the repository
(`.gitlab-ci.yml`) and are securely passed to GitLab Runner making them
available in the build environment. It's the recommended method to use for
storing things like passwords, secret keys and credentials.
Secure variables can be added by going to your project's
Secret variables can be added by going to your project's
**Settings ➔ Variables ➔ Add variable**.
Once you set them, they will be available for all subsequent builds.
......@@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ Once you set them, they will be available for all subsequent builds.
> Introduced in GitLab Runner 1.7.
>
> **WARNING:** Enabling debug tracing can have severe security implications. The
output **will** contain the content of all your secure variables and any other
output **will** contain the content of all your secret variables and any other
secrets! The output **will** be uploaded to the GitLab server and made visible
in build traces!
......@@ -311,7 +311,7 @@ job_name:
```
You can also list all environment variables with the `export` command,
but be aware that this will also expose the values of all the secure variables
but be aware that this will also expose the values of all the secret variables
you set, in the build log:
```
......
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