Compartir vía


Build Azure Repos Git or TFS Git repositories

TFS 2017 | TFS 2015

Note

In Microsoft Team Foundation Server (TFS) 2018 and previous versions, build and release pipelines are called definitions, runs are called builds, service connections are called service endpoints, stages are called environments, and jobs are called phases.

Azure Pipelines can automatically build and validate every pull request and commit to your Azure Repos Git repository.

Choose a repository to build

YAML pipelines aren't available in TFS.

Azure Pipelines must be granted access to your repositories to trigger their builds and fetch their code during builds. Normally, a pipeline has access to repositories in the same project. But, if you wish to access repositories in a different project, then you need to update the permissions granted to job access tokens.

CI triggers

Continuous integration (CI) triggers cause a pipeline to run whenever you push an update to the specified branches or you push specified tags.

YAML pipelines aren't available in TFS.

Skipping CI for individual pushes

You can also tell Azure Pipelines to skip running a pipeline that a push would normally trigger. Just include ***NO_CI*** in the message of any of the commits that are part of a push, and Azure Pipelines will skip running CI for this push.

Using the trigger type in conditions

It is a common scenario to run different steps, jobs, or stages in your pipeline depending on the type of trigger that started the run. You can do this using the system variable Build.Reason. For example, add the following condition to your step, job, or stage to exclude it from PR validations.

condition: and(succeeded(), ne(variables['Build.Reason'], 'PullRequest'))

Behavior of triggers when new branches are created

It is common to configure multiple pipelines for the same repository. For instance, you may have one pipeline to build the docs for your app and another to build the source code. You may configure CI triggers with appropriate branch filters and path filters in each of these pipelines. For instance, you may want one pipeline to trigger when you push an update to the docs folder, and another one to trigger when you push an update to your application code. In these cases, you need to understand how the pipelines are triggered when a new branch is created.

Here is the behavior when you push a new branch (that matches the branch filters) to your repository:

  • If your pipeline has path filters, it will be triggered only if the new branch has changes to files that match that path filter.
  • If your pipeline does not have path filters, it will be triggered even if there are no changes in the new branch.

Wildcards

When specifying a branch or tag, you may use an exact name or a wildcard. Wildcards patterns allow * to match zero or more characters and ? to match a single character.

  • If you start your pattern with * in a YAML pipeline, you must wrap the pattern in quotes, like "*-releases".
  • For branches, tags, and paths, a wildcard may appear anywhere in the pattern.
trigger:
  branches:
    include:
    - master
    - releases/*
    - feature/*
    exclude:
    - releases/old*
    - feature/*-working
  paths:
    include:
    - docs/*.md

PR triggers

Pull request (PR) triggers cause a pipeline to run whenever you open a pull request, or when you push changes to it. In Azure Repos Git, this functionality is implemented using branch policies. To enable PR validation, navigate to the branch policies for the desired branch, and configure the Build validation policy for that branch. For more information, see Configure branch policies.

If you have an open PR and you push changes to its source branch, multiple pipelines may run:

  • The pipeline specified by the target branch's policy will run on the commit corresponding to the merged PR, regardless if there exist pushed commits whose messages or descriptions contain [skip ci] (or any of its variants).
  • The pipelines triggered by changes to the PR's source branch won't run if there exist pushed commits whose messages or descriptions contain [skip ci] (or any of its variants).

Finally, when you merge the PR, the pipelines triggered by changes to the target branch's policy will run, even though some of the merged commits' messages or descriptions contain [skip ci] (or any of its variants).

Note

To configure validation builds for an Azure Repos Git repository, you must be a project administrator of its project.

Note

Draft pull requests do not trigger a pipeline even if you configure a branch policy.

FAQ

Problems related to Azure Repos integration fall into three categories:

  • Failing triggers: My pipeline is not being triggered when I push an update to the repo.
  • Failing checkout: My pipeline is being triggered, but it fails in the checkout step.
  • Wrong version: My pipeline runs, but it is using an unexpected version of the source/YAML.

Failing triggers

I just created a new YAML pipeline with CI/PR triggers, but the pipeline is not being triggered.

Follow each of these steps to troubleshoot your failing triggers:

  • Are your YAML CI or PR triggers being overridden by pipeline settings in the UI? While editing your pipeline, choose ... and then Triggers.

    Pipeline settings UI.

    Check the Override the YAML trigger from here setting for the types of trigger (Continuous integration or Pull request validation) available for your repo.

    Override YAML trigger from here.

  • Are you configuring the PR trigger in the YAML file or in branch policies for the repo? For an Azure Repos Git repo, you cannot configure a PR trigger in the YAML file. You need to use branch policies.
  • Is your pipeline paused or disabled? Open the editor for the pipeline, and then select Settings to check. If your pipeline is paused or disabled, then triggers do not work.

  • Have you updated the YAML file in the correct branch? If you push an update to a branch, then the YAML file in that same branch governs the CI behavior. If you push an update to a source branch, then the YAML file resulting from merging the source branch with the target branch governs the PR behavior. Make sure that the YAML file in the correct branch has the necessary CI or PR configuration.

  • Have you configured the trigger correctly? When you define a YAML trigger, you can specify both include and exclude clauses for branches, tags, and paths. Ensure that the include clause matches the details of your commit and that the exclude clause doesn't exclude them. Check the syntax for the triggers and make sure that it is accurate.

  • Have you used variables in defining the trigger or the paths? That is not supported.

  • Did you use templates for your YAML file? If so, make sure that your triggers are defined in the main YAML file. Triggers defined inside template files are not supported.

  • Have you excluded the branches or paths to which you pushed your changes? Test by pushing a change to an included path in an included branch. Note that paths in triggers are case-sensitive. Make sure that you use the same case as those of real folders when specifying the paths in triggers.

  • Did you just push a new branch? If so, the new branch may not start a new run. See the section "Behavior of triggers when new branches are created".

My CI or PR triggers have been working fine. But, they stopped working now.

First go through the troubleshooting steps in the previous question. Then, follow these additional steps:

  • Do you have merge conflicts in your PR? For a PR that did not trigger a pipeline, open it and check whether it has a merge conflict. Resolve the merge conflict.

  • Are you experiencing a delay in the processing of push or PR events? You can usually verify this by seeing if the issue is specific to a single pipeline or is common to all pipelines or repos in your project. If a push or a PR update to any of the repos exhibits this symptom, we might be experiencing delays in processing the update events. Check if we are experiencing a service outage on our status page. If the status page shows an issue, then our team must have already started working on it. Check the page frequently for updates on the issue.

I do not want users to override the list of branches for triggers when they update the YAML file. How can I do this?

Users with permissions to contribute code can update the YAML file and include/exclude additional branches. As a result, users can include their own feature or user branch in their YAML file and push that update to a feature or user branch. This may cause the pipeline to be triggered for all updates to that branch. If you want to prevent this behavior, then you can:

  1. Edit the pipeline in the Azure Pipelines UI.
  2. Navigate to the Triggers menu.
  3. Select Override the YAML continuous Integration trigger from here.
  4. Specify the branches to include or exclude for the trigger.

When you follow these steps, any CI triggers specified in the YAML file are ignored.

I have multiple repositories in my YAML pipeline. How do I set up triggers for each repository?

See triggers in Using multiple repositories.

Failing checkout

I see the following error in the log file during checkout step. How do I fix it?

remote: TF401019: The Git repository with name or identifier XYZ does not exist or you do not have permissions for the operation you are attempting.
fatal: repository 'XYZ' not found
##[error] Git fetch failed with exit code: 128

Follow each of these steps to troubleshoot your failing triggers:

  • Does the repository still exist? First, make sure it does by opening it in the Repos page.

  • What is the job authorization scope of the pipeline?

    • If the scope is collection:

      • This may be an intermittent error. Re-run the pipeline.
      • Someone may have removed the access to Project Collection Build Service account.
        • Go to the project settings of the project in which the repository exists. Select Repos -> Repositories -> specific repository.
        • Check if Project Collection Build Service (your-collection-name) exists in the list of users.
        • Check if that account has Create tag and Read access.
    • If the scope is project:

      • Is the repo in the same project as the pipeline?
        • Yes:
          • This may be an intermittent error. Re-run the pipeline.
          • Someone may have removed the access to Project Build Service account.
            • Go to the project settings of the project in which the repository exists. Select Repos -> Repositories -> specific repository.
            • Check if your-project-name Build Service (your-collection-name) exists in the list of users.
            • Check if that account has Create tag and Read access.
        • No:
          • Is your pipeline in a public project?
            • Yes: You cannot access resources outside of your public project. Make the project private.
            • No: You need to take additional steps to grant access. Let us say that your pipeline exists in project A and that your repository exists in project B.
              • Go to the project settings of the project in which the repository exists (B). Select Repos -> Repositories -> specific repository.
              • Add your-project-name Build Service (your-collection-name) to the list of users, where your-project-name is the name of the project in which your pipeline exists (A).
              • Give Create tag and Read access to the account.

Wrong version

A wrong version of the YAML file is being used in the pipeline. Why is that?

  • For CI triggers, the YAML file that is in the branch you are pushing is evaluated to see if a CI build should be run.
  • For PR triggers, the YAML file resulting from merging the source and target branches of the PR is evaluated to see if a PR build should be run.