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This project is now archived and unmaintained. Feel free to fork and contact us elsewhere if you would like to take this project over.

Lullabot's current CI tooling focus takes place in lullabot/drainpipe. Join us there!

Drupal 9 CI

Test Create release Publish Docker image codecov

This repository provides the foundation to implement Continuous Integration in a Drupal 9 project using any of the following CI providers:

If you want to test an individual module instead of a Drupal project, see Andrew Berry's drupal_tests.

Here is a clip that shows how it works for CircleCI.

Requirements

The scripts assume that you have a Drupal 9 project created using drupal-project, which sets a well known foundation. If your project's directory structure differs from what drupal-project sets up, you will need to adjust the CI scripts.

It's also recommended to adjust your project to add a subset of the settings.php file into version control and rely on settings.local.php for setting the database connection. The CI scripts have their own settings.local.php which is copied at build time into web/sites/default.

DocumentRoot: web vs docroot

By default, Apache and the rest of the code is set up to have the DocumentRoot folder as web. If your project uses docroot instead, the easiest thing to do is to symlink one to the other. This can be done adding a line like this one before running Apache (you will need to adapt paths).

Alternatively you can go through the files and replace as needed. You can see a list of affected files in this comment.

Installation

Demo repository | Deep dive article

Download the drupal9ci binary from https://github.com/Lullabot/drupal9ci/releases into the project root and run the command as ./drupal9ci and select CircleCI. Once complete, continue below to complete the setup.

Sign up at CircleCI and allow access to your project's repository.

CircleCI watch

Happy CI-ing! :-D. From now every time you create a pull request, CircleCI will run the set of jobs and report their result like in the following screenshot:

CircleCI pull request

For an overview of the CircleCI features, have a look at this article from the Lullabot blog.

Using a custom Docker image

The CircleCI configuration file uses a custom Docker image that extends from the official Drupal image. If this image does not fit your project's architecture then consider creating your own image based out of it.

Demo repository | Deep dive article

Download the drupal9ci binary from https://github.com/Lullabot/drupal9ci/releases into the project root and run the command as ./drupal9ci and select Travis CI. Once complete, continue below to complete the setup.

Sign up at Travis CI and allow access to your project's repository:

Travis watch

Happy CI-ing! :-D. From now on every pull request will trigger a build in Travis and its progress will be visible like in the following screenshot:

Travis pull request

For you to see the result of the individual jobs, you need to click at the Details link from the above screenshot:

Travis CI jobs

Setting up code coverage reports

Coveralls.io is a third party tool that can host and present PHPUnit code coverage reports in a neat way within a pull request. Here is how to set it up:

Register at https://coveralls.io using your GitHub account and then add your repository like in the following screenshot:

Coveralls add repository

Then take the chance to adjust a couple settings to get cleaner feedback in pull requests:

Coveralls settings

That's it! Here is a sample report which you can see by clicking at Details at the pull request's status message:

Coveralls report

Demo repository | Deep dive article

Download the drupal9ci binary from https://github.com/Lullabot/drupal9ci/releases into the project root and run the command as ./drupal9ci and select GitLab CI. Once complete, continue below to complete the setup.

Review, commit, and push the resulting changes. After doing that, navigate to the project's homepage at GitLab and open the CI / CD >> Pipelines section. You should see a running pipeline like the following one:

GitLab pipeline

Demo repository

Download the drupal9ci binary from https://github.com/Lullabot/drupal9ci/releases into the project root and run the command as ./drupal9ci and select GitHub Actions. Once complete, continue below to complete the setup.

Review, commit, and push the resulting changes. After doing that, navigate to the repository's homepage at GitHub and open the Actions tab. You should see a running workflow like the following one:

Github actions

Download the drupal9ci binary from https://github.com/Lullabot/drupal9ci/releases into the project root and run the command as ./drupal9ci and select Bitbucket. Once complete, continue below to complete the setup.

Review, commit, and push the resulting changes. After doing that, navigate to the repository's homepage at Bitbucket and open the Pipelines tab. You should see a running workflow like the following one:

Bitbucket pipelines

Setting up the Behat and Cypress jobs for all platforms

The Behat and Cypress jobs require a running Drupal 9 site. The repository contains the code, but for running tests in a realistic environment you need:

1. A recent copy of the production environment's database

There are several ways to accomplish this:

Using a prepopulated Docker database image

See Achieve Rocketship-Fast Jobs in CircleCI by Preinstalling the Database

Travis

If you have Drush site aliases, and your repository is private, then follow these instructions to add an SSH key. Next, set up a drush site alias. Finally, adjust the Behat job to run drush @my.alias sql-cli.

CircleCI

If you have Drush site aliases, then at the CircleCI dashboard go to the project's permissions and add an SSH key. Next, add drush @my.alias sql-cli to the Behat job at .circleci/config.yml.

Alternative

Alternatively, upload a sanitized database dump somewhere and set up the DB_DUMP_URL environment variable so the job can download it.

For example: Travis CI db env var CircleCI database via environment variable

A sample implementation is to use Dropbox API. See this repository for further details.

2. The production environment's files directory

If you have a site alias, then add drush rsync @my.alias @self to the Behat job. Alternatively, use Stage File Proxy module.