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GitLab CI template for Python

This project implements a generic GitLab CI template for Python.

It provides several features, usable in different modes (by configuration) following those recommendations

Usage

In order to include this template in your project, add the following to your gitlab-ci.yml:

include:
  - project: 'to-be-continuous/python'
    ref: '2.1.1'
    file: '/templates/gitlab-ci-python.yml'

Global configuration

The Python template uses some global configuration used throughout all jobs.

Name description default value
PYTHON_IMAGE The Docker image used to run Python
⚠️ set the version required by your project
python:3
PIP_INDEX_URL Python repository url none
PYTHON_PROJECT_DIR Python project root directory .
REQUIREMENTS_FILE Path to requirements file (relative to $PYTHON_PROJECT_DIR) requirements.txt
PIP_OPTS pip extra options none

The cache policy also declares the .cache/pip directory as cached (not to download Python dependencies over and over again).

Default configuration follows this Python project structure

Poetry support

The Python template supports Poetry as packaging and dependency management tool.

If a pyproject.toml and poetry.lock file is detected at the root of your project structure, requirements will automatically be generated from Poetry. Poetry support is disabled if PYTHON_POETRY_DISABLED is set to true.

⚠️ as stated in Poetry documentation, You should commit the poetry.lock file to your project repo so that all people working on the project are locked to the same versions of dependencies.

It uses the following variables:

Name description default value
PYTHON_POETRY_EXTRAS Poetry extra sets of dependencies to include, space separated none

Jobs

Lint jobs

py-pylint job

This job is disabled by default and performs code analysis based on pylint Python lib. It is activated by setting $PYLINT_ENABLED to true.

It is bound to the build stage, and uses the following variables:

Name description default value
PYLINT_ARGS Additional pylint CLI options none
PYLINT_FILES Files or directories to analyse none (by default analyses all found python source files)

This job produces the following artifacts, kept for one day:

  • Code quality json report in code climate format.

Test jobs

The Python template features four alternative test jobs:

  • py-unittest that performs tests based on unittest Python lib,
  • or py-pytest that performs tests based on pytest Python lib,
  • or py-nosetest that performs tests based on nose Python lib,
  • or py-compile that performs byte code generation to check syntax if not tests are available.

py-unittest job

This job is disabled by default and performs tests based on unittest Python lib. It is activated by setting $UNITTEST_ENABLED to true.

In order to produce JUnit test reports, the tests are executed with the xmlrunner module.

It is bound to the build stage, and uses the following variables:

Name description default value
TEST_REQUIREMENTS_FILE Path to test requirements file (relative to $PYTHON_PROJECT_DIR) test-requirements.txt
UNITTEST_ARGS Additional xmlrunner/unittest CLI options none

This job produces the following artifacts, kept for one day:

  • JUnit test report (using the xmlrunner module)
  • code coverage report (cobertura xml format).

⚠️ create a .coveragerc file at the root of your Python project to control the coverage settings.

Example:

[run]
# enables branch coverage
branch = True
# list of directories/packages to cover
source = 
    module_1
    module_2

py-pytest job

This job is disabled by default and performs tests based on pytest Python lib. It is activated by setting $PYTEST_ENABLED to true.

It is bound to the build stage, and uses the following variables:

Name description default value
TEST_REQUIREMENTS_FILE Path to test requirements file (relative $PYTHON_PROJECT_DIR) test-requirements.txt
PYTEST_ARGS Additional pytest or pytest-cov CLI options none

This job produces the following artifacts, kept for one day:

  • JUnit test report (with the --junit-xml argument)
  • code coverage report (cobertura xml format).

⚠️ create a .coveragerc file at the root of your Python project to control the coverage settings.

Example:

[run]
# enables branch coverage
branch = True
# list of directories/packages to cover
source = 
    module_1
    module_2

py-nosetest job

This job is disabled by default and performs tests based on nose Python lib. It is activated by setting $NOSETESTS_ENABLED to true.

It is bound to the build stage, and uses the following variables:

Name description default value
TEST_REQUIREMENTS_FILE Path to test requirements file (relative to $PYTHON_PROJECT_DIR) test-requirements.txt
NOSETESTS_ARGS Additional nose CLI options none

By default coverage will be run on all the directory. You can restrict it to your packages by setting NOSE_COVER_PACKAGE variable. More info

This job produces the following artifacts, kept for one day:

  • JUnit test report (with the --with-xunit argument)
  • code coverage report (cobertura xml format + html report).

⚠️ create a .coveragerc file at the root of your Python project or use nose CLI options to control the coverage settings.

py-compile job

This job is a fallback if no unit test has been setup ($UNITTEST_ENABLED and $PYTEST_ENABLED and $NOSETEST_ENABLED are not set), and performs a compileall.

It is bound to the build stage, and uses the following variables:

Name description default value
PYTHON_COMPILE_ARGS compileall CLI options *

SonarQube analysis

If you're using the SonarQube template to analyse your Python code, here is a sample sonar-project.properties file:

# see: https://docs.sonarqube.org/latest/analysis/languages/python/
# set your source directory(ies) here (relative to the sonar-project.properties file)
sonar.sources=.
# exclude unwanted directories and files from being analysed
sonar.exclusions=**/test_*.py

# set your tests directory(ies) here (relative to the sonar-project.properties file)
sonar.tests=.
sonar.test.inclusions=**/test_*.py

# tests report: generic format
sonar.python.xunit.reportPath=reports/unittest/TEST-*.xml
# coverage report: XUnit format
sonar.python.coverage.reportPaths=reports/coverage.xml

More info:

py-bandit job (SAST)

This job is disabled by default and performs a Bandit analysis.

It is bound to the test stage, and uses the following variables:

Name description default value
BANDIT_ENABLED Set to true to enable Bandit analysis none (disabled)
BANDIT_ARGS Additional Bandit CLI options --recursive .

This job outputs a textual report in the console, and in case of failure also exports a JSON report in the reports/ directory (relative to project root dir).

py-safety job (dependency check)