This topic provides important reference information about build specification (buildspec) files. A buildspec is a collection of build commands and related settings, in YAML format, that CodeBuild uses to run a build. You can include a buildspec as part of the source code or you can define a buildspec when you create a build project. For information about how a build spec works, see How CodeBuild works.
Buildspec file name and storage locationIf you include a buildspec as part of the source code, by default, the buildspec file must be named buildspec.yml
and placed in the root of your source directory.
You can override the default buildspec file name and location. For example, you can:
Use a different buildspec file for different builds in the same repository, such as buildspec_debug.yml
and buildspec_release.yml
.
Store a buildspec file somewhere other than the root of your source directory, such as config/buildspec.yml
or in an S3 bucket. The S3 bucket must be in the same AWS Region as your build project. Specify the buildspec file using its ARN (for example, arn:aws:s3:::
).<my-codebuild-sample2>
/buildspec.yml
You can specify only one buildspec for a build project, regardless of the buildspec file's name.
To override the default buildspec file name, location, or both, do one of the following:
Run the AWS CLI create-project
or update-project
command, setting the buildspec
value to the path to the alternate buildspec file relative to the value of the built-in environment variable CODEBUILD_SRC_DIR
. You can also do the equivalent with the create project
operation in the AWS SDKs. For more information, see Create a build project or Change build project settings.
Run the AWS CLI start-build
command, setting the buildspecOverride
value to the path to the alternate buildspec file relative to the value of the built-in environment variable CODEBUILD_SRC_DIR
. You can also do the equivalent with the start build
operation in the AWS SDKs. For more information, see Run builds manually.
In an AWS CloudFormation template, set the BuildSpec
property of Source
in a resource of type AWS::CodeBuild::Project
to the path to the alternate buildspec file relative to the value of the built-in environment variable CODEBUILD_SRC_DIR
. For more information, see the BuildSpec property in AWS CodeBuild project source in the AWS CloudFormation User Guide.
Buildspec files must be expressed in YAML format.
If a command contains a character, or a string of characters, that is not supported by YAML, you must enclose the command in quotation marks (""). The following command is enclosed in quotation marks because a colon (:) followed by a space is not allowed in YAML. The quotation mark in the command is escaped (\").
"export PACKAGE_NAME=$(cat package.json | grep name | head -1 | awk -F: '{ print $2 }' | sed 's/[\",]//g')"
The buildspec has the following syntax:
version: 0.2
run-as: Linux-user-name
env:
shell: shell-tag
variables:
key
: "value
"
key
: "value
"
parameter-store:
key
: "value
"
key
: "value
"
exported-variables:
- variable
- variable
secrets-manager:
key
: secret-id
:json-key
:version-stage
:version-id
git-credential-helper: no | yes
proxy:
upload-artifacts: no | yes
logs: no | yes
batch:
fast-fail: false | true
# build-list:
# build-matrix:
# build-graph:
# build-fanout:
phases:
install:
run-as: Linux-user-name
on-failure: ABORT | CONTINUE | RETRY | RETRY-count
| RETRY-regex
| RETRY-count
-regex
runtime-versions:
runtime
: version
runtime
: version
commands:
- command
- command
finally:
- command
- command
pre_build:
run-as: Linux-user-name
on-failure: ABORT | CONTINUE | RETRY | RETRY-count
| RETRY-regex
| RETRY-count
-regex
commands:
- command
- command
finally:
- command
- command
build:
run-as: Linux-user-name
on-failure: ABORT | CONTINUE | RETRY | RETRY-count
| RETRY-regex
| RETRY-count
-regex
commands:
- command
- command
finally:
- command
- command
post_build:
run-as: Linux-user-name
on-failure: ABORT | CONTINUE | RETRY | RETRY-count
| RETRY-regex
| RETRY-count
-regex
commands:
- command
- command
finally:
- command
- command
reports:
report-group-name-or-arn
:
files:
- location
- location
base-directory: location
discard-paths: no | yes
file-format: report-format
artifacts:
files:
- location
- location
name: artifact-name
discard-paths: no | yes
base-directory: location
exclude-paths: excluded paths
enable-symlinks: no | yes
s3-prefix: prefix
secondary-artifacts:
artifactIdentifier
:
files:
- location
- location
name: secondary-artifact-name
discard-paths: no | yes
base-directory: location
artifactIdentifier
:
files:
- location
- location
discard-paths: no | yes
base-directory: location
cache:
key: key
fallback-keys:
- fallback-key
- fallback-key
action: restore | save
paths:
- path
- path
The buildspec contains the following:
versionRequired mapping. Represents the buildspec version. We recommend that you use 0.2
.
Although version 0.1 is still supported, we recommend that you use version 0.2 whenever possible. For more information, see Buildspec versions.
run-asOptional sequence. Available to Linux users only. Specifies a Linux user that runs commands in this buildspec file. run-as
grants the specified user read and run permissions. When you specify run-as
at the top of the buildspec file, it applies globally to all commands. If you don't want to specify a user for all buildspec file commands, you can specify one for commands in a phase by using run-as
in one of the phases
blocks. If run-as
is not specified, then all commands run as the root user.
Optional sequence. Represents information for one or more custom environment variables.
NoteTo protect sensitive information, the following are hidden in CodeBuild logs:
Optional sequence. Specifies the supported shell for Linux or Windows operating systems.
For Linux operating systems, supported shell tags are:
For Windows operating systems, supported shell tags are:
Required if env
is specified, and you want to define custom environment variables in plain text. Contains a mapping of key
/value
scalars, where each mapping represents a single custom environment variable in plain text. key
is the name of the custom environment variable, and value
is that variable's value.
We strongly discourage the storing of sensitive values in environment variables. Environment variables can be displayed in plain text using tools such as the CodeBuild console and the AWS CLI. For sensitive values, we recommend that you use parameter-store
or secrets-manager
mapping instead, as described later in this section.
Any environment variables you set replace existing environment variables. For example, if the Docker image already contains an environment variable named MY_VAR
with a value of my_value
, and you set an environment variable named MY_VAR
with a value of other_value
, then my_value
is replaced by other_value
. Similarly, if the Docker image already contains an environment variable named PATH
with a value of /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin
, and you set an environment variable named PATH
with a value of $PATH:/usr/share/ant/bin
, then /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin
is replaced by the literal value $PATH:/usr/share/ant/bin
.
Do not set any environment variable with a name that starts with CODEBUILD_
. This prefix is reserved for internal use.
If an environment variable with the same name is defined in multiple places, the value is determined as follows:
Required if env
is specified, and you want to retrieve custom environment variables stored in Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store. Contains a mapping of key
/value
scalars, where each mapping represents a single custom environment variable stored in Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store. key
is the name you use later in your build commands to refer to this custom environment variable, and value
is the name of the custom environment variable stored in Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store. To store sensitive values, see Systems Manager Parameter Store and Walkthrough: Create and test a String parameter (console) in the Amazon EC2 Systems Manager User Guide.
To allow CodeBuild to retrieve custom environment variables stored in Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store, you must add the ssm:GetParameters
action to your CodeBuild service role. For more information, see Allow CodeBuild to interact with other AWS services.
Any environment variables you retrieve from Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store replace existing environment variables. For example, if the Docker image already contains an environment variable named MY_VAR
with a value of my_value
, and you retrieve an environment variable named MY_VAR
with a value of other_value
, then my_value
is replaced by other_value
. Similarly, if the Docker image already contains an environment variable named PATH
with a value of /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin
, and you retrieve an environment variable named PATH
with a value of $PATH:/usr/share/ant/bin
, then /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin
is replaced by the literal value $PATH:/usr/share/ant/bin
.
Do not store any environment variable with a name that starts with CODEBUILD_
. This prefix is reserved for internal use.
If an environment variable with the same name is defined in multiple places, the value is determined as follows:
Required if you want to retrieve custom environment variables stored in AWS Secrets Manager. Specify a Secrets Manager reference-key
using the following pattern:
: <key>
<secret-id>
:<json-key>
:<version-stage>
:<version-id>
<key>
(Required) The local environment variable name. Use this name to access the variable during the build.
<secret-id>
(Required) The name or Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that serves as a unique identifier for the secret. To access a secret in your AWS account, simply specify the secret name. To access a secret in a different AWS account, specify the secret ARN.
<json-key>
(Optional) Specifies the key name of the Secrets Manager key-value pair whose value you want to retrieve. If you do not specify a json-key
, CodeBuild retrieves the entire secret text.
<version-stage>
(Optional) Specifies the secret version that you want to retrieve by the staging label attached to the version. Staging labels are used to keep track of different versions during the rotation process. If you use version-stage
, don't specify version-id
. If you don't specify a version stage or version ID, the default is to retrieve the version with the version stage value of AWSCURRENT
.
<version-id>
(Optional) Specifies the unique identifier of the version of the secret that you want to use. If you specify version-id
, don't specify version-stage
. If you don't specify a version stage or version ID, the default is to retrieve the version with the version stage value of AWSCURRENT
.
In the following example, TestSecret
is the name of the key-value pair stored in Secrets Manager. The key for TestSecret
is MY_SECRET_VAR
. You access the variable during the build using the LOCAL_SECRET_VAR
name.
env:
secrets-manager:
LOCAL_SECRET_VAR: "TestSecret:MY_SECRET_VAR"
For more information, see What is AWS Secrets Manager in the AWS Secrets Manager User Guide.
Optional mapping. Used to list environment variables you want to export. Specify the name of each variable you want to export on a separate line under exported-variables
. The variable you want to export must be available in your container during the build. The variable you export can be an environment variable.
Exported environment variables are used in conjunction with AWS CodePipeline to export environment variables from the current build stage to subsequent stages in the pipeline. For more information, see Working with variables in the AWS CodePipeline User Guide.
During a build, the value of a variable is available starting with the install
phase. It can be updated between the start of the install
phase and the end of the post_build
phase. After the post_build
phase ends, the value of exported variables cannot change.
The following cannot be exported:
Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store secrets specified in the build project.
Secrets Manager secrets specified in the build project
Environment variables that start with AWS_
.
Optional mapping. Used to indicate if CodeBuild uses its Git credential helper to provide Git credentials. yes
if it is used. Otherwise, no
or not specified. For more information, see gitcredentials on the Git website.
git-credential-helper
is not supported for builds that are triggered by a webhook for a public Git repository.
Optional sequence. Used to represent settings if you run your build in an explicit proxy server. For more information, see Run CodeBuild in an explicit proxy server.
Optional mapping. Set to yes
if you want your build in an explicit proxy server to upload artifacts. The default is no
.
Optional mapping. Set to yes
for your build in a explicit proxy server to create CloudWatch logs. The default is no
.
Required sequence. Represents the commands CodeBuild runs during each phase of the build.
NoteIn buildspec version 0.1, CodeBuild runs each command in a separate instance of the default shell in the build environment. This means that each command runs in isolation from all other commands. Therefore, by default, you cannot run a single command that relies on the state of any previous commands (for example, changing directories or setting environment variables). To get around this limitation, we recommend that you use version 0.2, which solves this issue. If you must use buildspec version 0.1, we recommend the approaches in Shells and commands in build environments.
Optional sequence. Use in a build phase to specify a Linux user that runs its commands. If run-as
is also specified globally for all commands at the top of the buildspec file, then the phase-level user takes precedence. For example, if globally run-as
specifies User-1, and for the install
phase only a run-as
statement specifies User-2, then all commands in then buildspec file are run as User-1 except commands in the install
phase, which are run as User-2.
Optional sequence. Specifies the action to take if a failure occurs during the phase. This can be one of the following values:
ABORT
- Abort the build.
CONTINUE
- Continue to the next phase.
RETRY
- Retry the build up to 3 times with an error message that matches the regular expression .*
.
RETRY-
- Retry the build for a specified number of times, as represented by count
count
with an error message that matches the regular expression .*
. Note that count
must be between 0 and 100. For example, valid values include RETRY-4
and RETRY-8
.
RETRY-
- Retry the build up to 3 times, and use regex
regex
to include a regular expression to match a specifed error message. For example, valid values include Retry-.*Error: Unable to connect to database.*
and RETRY-invalid+
.
RETRY-
- Retry the build for a specified number of times, as represented by count
-regex
count
. Note that count
must be between 0 and 100. You can also use regex
to include a regular expression to match the error message. For example, valid values include Retry-3-.*connection timed out.*
and RETRY-8-invalid+
.
If this property is not specified, the failure process follows the transition phases as shown in Build phase transitions.
ImportantThe on-failure
attribute is not supported when using Lambda compute or reserved capacity. This attribute only works with EC2 compute images provided by CodeBuild.
Optional block. Commands specified in a finally
block are run after commands in the commands
block. The commands in a finally
block are run even if a command in the commands
block fails. For example, if the commands
block contains three commands and the first fails, CodeBuild skips the remaining two commands and runs any commands in the finally
block. The phase is successful when all commands in the commands
and the finally
blocks run successfully. If any command in a phase fails, the phase fails.
The allowed build phase names are:
Optional sequence. Represents the commands, if any, that CodeBuild runs during installation. We recommend that you use the install
phase only for installing packages in the build environment. For example, you might use this phase to install a code testing framework such as Mocha or RSpec.
Optional sequence. A runtime version is supported with the Ubuntu standard image 5.0 or later and the Amazon Linux 2 standard image 4.0 or later. If specified, at least one runtime must be included in this section. Specify a runtime using a specific version, a major version followed by .x
to specify that CodeBuild uses that major version with its latest minor version, or latest
to use the most recent major and minor version (for example, ruby: 3.2
, nodejs: 18.x
, or java: latest
). You can specify the runtime using a number or an environment variable. For example, if you use the Amazon Linux 2 standard image 4.0, then the following specifies that version 17 of Java, the latest minor version of python version 3, and a version contained in an environment variable of Ruby is installed. For more information, see Docker images provided by CodeBuild.
phases:
install:
runtime-versions:
java: corretto8
python: 3.x
ruby: "$MY_RUBY_VAR"
You can specify one or more runtimes in the runtime-versions
section of your buildspec file. If your runtime is dependent upon another runtime, you can also specify its dependent runtime in the buildspec file. If you do not specify any runtimes in the buildspec file, CodeBuild chooses the default runtimes that are available in the image you use. If you specify one or more runtimes, CodeBuild uses only those runtimes. If a dependent runtime is not specified, CodeBuild attempts to choose the dependent runtime for you.
If two specified runtimes conflict, the build fails. For example, android: 29
and java: openjdk11
conflict, so if both are specified, the build fails.
For more information about the available runtimes, see Available runtimes.
NoteIf you specify a runtime-versions
section and use an image other than Ubuntu Standard Image 2.0 or later, or the Amazon Linux 2 (AL2) standard image 1.0 or later, the build issues the warning, "Skipping install of runtimes. Runtime version selection is not supported by this build image
."
Optional sequence. Contains a sequence of scalars, where each scalar represents a single command that CodeBuild runs during installation. CodeBuild runs each command, one at a time, in the order listed, from beginning to end.
Optional sequence. Represents the commands, if any, that CodeBuild runs before the build. For example, you might use this phase to sign in to Amazon ECR, or you might install npm dependencies.
Required sequence if pre_build
is specified. Contains a sequence of scalars, where each scalar represents a single command that CodeBuild runs before the build. CodeBuild runs each command, one at a time, in the order listed, from beginning to end.
Optional sequence. Represents the commands, if any, that CodeBuild runs during the build. For example, you might use this phase to run Mocha, RSpec, or sbt.
Required if build
is specified. Contains a sequence of scalars, where each scalar represents a single command that CodeBuild runs during the build. CodeBuild runs each command, one at a time, in the order listed, from beginning to end.
Optional sequence. Represents the commands, if any, that CodeBuild runs after the build. For example, you might use Maven to package the build artifacts into a JAR or WAR file, or you might push a Docker image into Amazon ECR. Then you might send a build notification through Amazon SNS.
Required if post_build
is specified. Contains a sequence of scalars, where each scalar represents a single command that CodeBuild runs after the build. CodeBuild runs each command, one at a time, in the order listed, from beginning to end.
Optional sequence. Specifies the report group that the reports are sent to. A project can have a maximum of five report groups. Specify the ARN of an existing report group, or the name of a new report group. If you specify a name, CodeBuild creates a report group using your project name and the name you specify in the format <project-name>-<report-group-name>
. The report group name can also be set using an environment variable in the buildspec such as $REPORT_GROUP_NAME
. For more information, see Report group naming.
Required sequence. Represents the locations that contain the raw data of test results generated by the report. Contains a sequence of scalars, with each scalar representing a separate location where CodeBuild can find test files, relative to the original build location or, if set, the base-directory
. Locations can include the following:
A single file (for example, my-test-report-file.json
).
A single file in a subdirectory (for example,
or my-subdirectory
/my-test-report-file.json
).my-parent-subdirectory
/my-subdirectory
/my-test-report-file.json
'**/*'
represents all files recursively.
represents all files in a subdirectory named my-subdirectory
/*my-subdirectory
.
represents all files recursively starting from a subdirectory named my-subdirectory
/**/*my-subdirectory
.
Optional mapping. Represents the report file format. If not specified, JUNITXML
is used. This value is not case sensitive. Possible values are:
CUCUMBERJSON
Cucumber JSON
JUNITXML
JUnit XML
NUNITXML
NUnit XML
NUNIT3XML
NUnit 3 XML
TESTNGXML
TestNG XML
VISUALSTUDIOTRX
Visual Studio TRX
CLOVERXML
Clover XML
COBERTURAXML
Cobertura XML
JACOCOXML
JaCoCo XML
SIMPLECOV
SimpleCov JSON
Optional mapping. Represents one or more top-level directories, relative to the original build location, that CodeBuild uses to determine where to find the raw test files.
Optional. Specifies if the report file directories are flattened in the output. If this is not specified, or contains no
, report files are output with their directory structure intact. If this contains yes
, all of the test files are placed in the same output directory. For example, if a path to a test result is com/myapp/mytests/TestResult.xml
, specifying yes
will place this file in /TestResult.xml
.
Optional sequence. Represents information about where CodeBuild can find the build output and how CodeBuild prepares it for uploading to the S3 output bucket. This sequence is not required if, for example, you are building and pushing a Docker image to Amazon ECR, or you are running unit tests on your source code, but not building it.
NoteAmazon S3 metadata has a CodeBuild header named x-amz-meta-codebuild-buildarn
which contains the buildArn
of the CodeBuild build that publishes artifacts to Amazon S3. The buildArn
is added to allow source tracking for notifications and to reference which build the artifact is generated from.
Required sequence. Represents the locations that contain the build output artifacts in the build environment. Contains a sequence of scalars, with each scalar representing a separate location where CodeBuild can find build output artifacts, relative to the original build location or, if set, the base directory. Locations can include the following:
A single file (for example, my-file.jar
).
A single file in a subdirectory (for example,
or my-subdirectory
/my-file.jar
).my-parent-subdirectory
/my-subdirectory
/my-file.jar
'**/*'
represents all files recursively.
represents all files in a subdirectory named my-subdirectory
/*my-subdirectory
.
represents all files recursively starting from a subdirectory named my-subdirectory
/**/*my-subdirectory
.
When you specify build output artifact locations, CodeBuild can locate the original build location in the build environment. You do not have to prepend your build artifact output locations with the path to the original build location or specify ./
or similar. If you want to know the path to this location, you can run a command such as echo $CODEBUILD_SRC_DIR
during a build. The location for each build environment might be slightly different.
Optional name. Specifies a name for your build artifact. This name is used when one of the following is true.
You use the CodeBuild API to create your builds and the overrideArtifactName
flag is set on the ProjectArtifacts
object when a project is updated, a project is created, or a build is started.
You use the CodeBuild console to create your builds, a name is specified in the buildspec file, and you select Enable semantic versioning when you create or update a project. For more information, see Create a build project (console).
You can specify a name in the buildspec file that is calculated at build time. The name specified in a buildspec file uses the Shell command language. For example, you can append a date and time to your artifact name so that it is always unique. Unique artifact names prevent artifacts from being overwritten. For more information, see Shell command language.
This is an example of an artifact name appended with the date the artifact is created.
version: 0.2
phases:
build:
commands:
- rspec HelloWorld_spec.rb
artifacts:
files:
- '**/*'
name: myname-$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
This is an example of an artifact name that uses a CodeBuild environment variable. For more information, see Environment variables in build environments.
version: 0.2
phases:
build:
commands:
- rspec HelloWorld_spec.rb
artifacts:
files:
- '**/*'
name: myname-$AWS_REGION
This is an example of an artifact name that uses a CodeBuild environment variable with the artifact's creation date appended to it.
version: 0.2
phases:
build:
commands:
- rspec HelloWorld_spec.rb
artifacts:
files:
- '**/*'
name: $AWS_REGION-$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
You can add path information to the name so that the named artifacts are placed in directories based on the path in the name. In this example, build artifacts are placed in the output under builds/<build number>/my-artifacts
.
version: 0.2
phases:
build:
commands:
- rspec HelloWorld_spec.rb
artifacts:
files:
- '**/*'
name: builds/$CODEBUILD_BUILD_NUMBER/my-artifacts
Optional. Specifies if the build artifact directories are flattened in the output. If this is not specified, or contains no
, build artifacts are output with their directory structure intact. If this contains yes
, all of the build artifacts are placed in the same output directory. For example, if a path to a file in the build output artifact is com/mycompany/app/HelloWorld.java
, specifying yes
will place this file in /HelloWorld.java
.
Optional mapping. Represents one or more top-level directories, relative to the original build location, that CodeBuild uses to determine which files and subdirectories to include in the build output artifact. Valid values include:
A single top-level directory (for example, my-directory
).
'my-directory*'
represents all top-level directories with names starting with my-directory
.
Matching top-level directories are not included in the build output artifact, only their files and subdirectories.
You can use files
and discard-paths
to further restrict which files and subdirectories are included. For example, for the following directory structure:
.
âââ my-build-1
â âââ my-file-1.txt
âââ my-build-2
âââ my-file-2.txt
âââ my-subdirectory
âââ my-file-3.txt
And for the following artifacts
sequence:
artifacts:
files:
- '*/my-file-3.txt'
base-directory: my-build-2
The following subdirectory and file would be included in the build output artifact:
.
âââ my-subdirectory
âââ my-file-3.txt
While for the following artifacts
sequence:
artifacts:
files:
- '**/*'
base-directory: 'my-build*'
discard-paths: yes
The following files would be included in the build output artifact:
.
âââ my-file-1.txt
âââ my-file-2.txt
âââ my-file-3.txt
Optional mapping. Represents one or more paths, relative to base-directory
, that CodeBuild will exclude from the build artifacts. The asterisk (*
) character matches zero or more characters of a name component without crossing folder boundaries. A double asterisk (**
) matches zero or more characters of a name component across all directories.
Examples of exclude-paths include the following:
To exclude a file from all directories: "**/
file-name
/**/*"
To exclude all dot folders: "**/.*/**/*"
To exclude all dot files: "**/.*"
Optional. If the output type is ZIP
, specifies if internal symbolic links are preserved in the ZIP file. If this contains yes
, all internal symbolic links in the source will be preserved in the artifacts ZIP file.
Optional. Specifies a prefix used when the artifacts are output to an Amazon S3 bucket and the namespace type is BUILD_ID
. When used, the output path in the bucket is <s3-prefix>/<build-id>/<name>.zip
.
Optional sequence. Represents one or more artifact definitions as a mapping between an artifact identifier and an artifact definition. Each artifact identifiers in this block must match an artifact defined in the secondaryArtifacts
attribute of your project. Each separate definition has the same syntax as the artifacts
block above.
The artifacts/files sequence is always required, even when there are only secondary artifacts defined.
For example, if your project has the following structure:
{
"name": "sample-project",
"secondaryArtifacts": [
{
"type": "S3",
"location": "<output-bucket1>
",
"artifactIdentifier": "artifact1",
"name": "secondary-artifact-name-1"
},
{
"type": "S3",
"location": "<output-bucket2>
",
"artifactIdentifier": "artifact2",
"name": "secondary-artifact-name-2"
}
]
}
Then your buildspec looks like the following:
version: 0.2
phases:
build:
commands:
- echo Building...
artifacts:
files:
- '**/*'
secondary-artifacts:
artifact1:
files:
- directory/file1
name: secondary-artifact-name-1
artifact2:
files:
- directory/file2
name: secondary-artifact-name-2
Optional sequence. Represents information about where CodeBuild can prepare the files for uploading cache to an S3 cache bucket. This sequence is not required if the cache type of the project is No Cache
.
Optional sequence. Represents the primary key used when search or restore a cache. CodeBuild does an exact match for the primary key.
Here is an example for the key:
key: npm-key-$(codebuild-hash-files package-lock.json) }
Optional sequence. Represents a list of fallback keys used sequentially when a cache cannot be found using the primary key. Up to five fallback keys are supported, and each is matched using a prefix search. This sequence will be ignored if key is not provided.
Here is an example for the fallback-keys:
fallback-keys:
- npm-key-$(codebuild-hash-files package-lock.json) }
- npm-key-
- npm-
Optional sequence. Specifies the action to perform on the cache. Valid values include:
restore
which only restores the cache without saving updates.
save
which only saves the cache without restoring a previous version.
If no value is provided, CodeBuild defaults to performing both restore and save.
Required sequence. Represents the locations of the cache. Contains a sequence of scalars, with each scalar representing a separate location where CodeBuild can find build output artifacts, relative to the original build location or, if set, the base directory. Locations can include the following:
A single file (for example, my-file.jar
).
A single file in a subdirectory (for example,
or my-subdirectory
/my-file.jar
).my-parent-subdirectory
/my-subdirectory
/my-file.jar
'**/*'
represents all files recursively.
represents all files in a subdirectory named my-subdirectory
/*my-subdirectory
.
represents all files recursively starting from a subdirectory named my-subdirectory
/**/*my-subdirectory
.
Because a buildspec declaration must be valid YAML, the spacing in a buildspec declaration is important. If the number of spaces in your buildspec declaration is invalid, builds might fail immediately. You can use a YAML validator to test whether your buildspec declarations are valid YAML.
If you use the AWS CLI, or the AWS SDKs to declare a buildspec when you create or update a build project, the buildspec must be a single string expressed in YAML format, along with required whitespace and newline escape characters. There is an example in the next section.
If you use the CodeBuild or AWS CodePipeline consoles instead of a buildspec.yml file, you can insert commands for the build
phase only. Instead of using the preceding syntax, you list, in a single line, all of the commands that you want to run during the build phase. For multiple commands, separate each command by &&
(for example, mvn test && mvn package
).
You can use the CodeBuild or CodePipeline consoles instead of a buildspec.yml file to specify the locations of the build output artifacts in the build environment. Instead of using the preceding syntax, you list, in a single line, all of the locations. For multiple locations, separate each location with a comma (for example, buildspec.yml, target/my-app.jar
).
Here is an example of a buildspec.yml file.
version: 0.2
env:
variables:
JAVA_HOME: "/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk-amd64"
parameter-store:
LOGIN_PASSWORD: /CodeBuild/dockerLoginPassword
phases:
install:
commands:
- echo Entered the install phase...
- apt-get update -y
- apt-get install -y maven
finally:
- echo This always runs even if the update or install command fails
pre_build:
commands:
- echo Entered the pre_build phase...
- docker login -u User -p $LOGIN_PASSWORD
finally:
- echo This always runs even if the login command fails
build:
commands:
- echo Entered the build phase...
- echo Build started on `date`
- mvn install
finally:
- echo This always runs even if the install command fails
post_build:
commands:
- echo Entered the post_build phase...
- echo Build completed on `date`
reports:
arn:aws:codebuild:your-region:your-aws-account-id:report-group/report-group-name-1:
files:
- "**/*"
base-directory: 'target/tests/reports'
discard-paths: no
reportGroupCucumberJson:
files:
- 'cucumber/target/cucumber-tests.xml'
discard-paths: yes
file-format: CUCUMBERJSON # default is JUNITXML
artifacts:
files:
- target/messageUtil-1.0.jar
discard-paths: yes
secondary-artifacts:
artifact1:
files:
- target/artifact-1.0.jar
discard-paths: yes
artifact2:
files:
- target/artifact-2.0.jar
discard-paths: yes
cache:
paths:
- '/root/.m2/**/*'
Here is an example of the preceding buildspec, expressed as a single string, for use with the AWS CLI, or the AWS SDKs.
"version: 0.2\n\nenv:\n variables:\n JAVA_HOME: \"/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk-amd64\\"\n parameter-store:\n LOGIN_PASSWORD: /CodeBuild/dockerLoginPassword\n phases:\n\n install:\n commands:\n - echo Entered the install phase...\n - apt-get update -y\n - apt-get install -y maven\n finally:\n - echo This always runs even if the update or install command fails \n pre_build:\n commands:\n - echo Entered the pre_build phase...\n - docker login -u User -p $LOGIN_PASSWORD\n finally:\n - echo This always runs even if the login command fails \n build:\n commands:\n - echo Entered the build phase...\n - echo Build started on `date`\n - mvn install\n finally:\n - echo This always runs even if the install command fails\n post_build:\n commands:\n - echo Entered the post_build phase...\n - echo Build completed on `date`\n\n reports:\n reportGroupJunitXml:\n files:\n - \"**/*\"\n base-directory: 'target/tests/reports'\n discard-paths: false\n reportGroupCucumberJson:\n files:\n - 'cucumber/target/cucumber-tests.xml'\n file-format: CUCUMBERJSON\n\nartifacts:\n files:\n - target/messageUtil-1.0.jar\n discard-paths: yes\n secondary-artifacts:\n artifact1:\n files:\n - target/messageUtil-1.0.jar\n discard-paths: yes\n artifact2:\n files:\n - target/messageUtil-1.0.jar\n discard-paths: yes\n cache:\n paths:\n - '/root/.m2/**/*'"
Here is an example of the commands in the build
phase, for use with the CodeBuild or CodePipeline consoles.
echo Build started on `date` && mvn install
In these examples:
A custom environment variable, in plain text, with the key of JAVA_HOME
and the value of /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk-amd64
, is set.
A custom environment variable named dockerLoginPassword
you stored in Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store is referenced later in build commands by using the key LOGIN_PASSWORD
.
You cannot change these build phase names. The commands that are run in this example are apt-get update -y
and apt-get install -y maven
(to install Apache Maven), mvn install
(to compile, test, and package the source code into a build output artifact and to install the build output artifact in its internal repository), docker login
(to sign in to Docker with the password that corresponds to the value of the custom environment variable dockerLoginPassword
you set in Amazon EC2 Systems Manager Parameter Store), and several echo
commands. The echo
commands are included here to show how CodeBuild runs commands and the order in which it runs them.
files
represents the files to upload to the build output location. In this example, CodeBuild uploads the single file messageUtil-1.0.jar
. The messageUtil-1.0.jar
file can be found in the relative directory named target
in the build environment. Because discard-paths: yes
is specified, messageUtil-1.0.jar
is uploaded directly (and not to an intermediate target
directory). The file name messageUtil-1.0.jar
and the relative directory name of target
is based on the way Apache Maven creates and stores build output artifacts for this example only. In your own scenarios, these file names and directories will be different.
reports
represents two report groups that generate reports during the build:
arn:aws:codebuild:your-region:your-aws-account-id:report-group/report-group-name-1
specifies the ARN of a report group. Test results generated by the test framework are in the target/tests/reports
directory. The file format is JunitXml
and the path is not removed from the files that contain test results.
reportGroupCucumberJson
specifies a new report group. If the name of the project is my-project
, a report group with the name my-project-reportGroupCucumberJson
is created when a build is run. Test results generated by the test framework are in cucumber/target/cucumber-tests.xml
. The test file format is CucumberJson
and the path is removed from the files that contain test results.
The following table lists the buildspec versions and the changes between versions.
Version Changes 0.2environment_variables
has been renamed to env
.
plaintext
has been renamed to variables
.
The type
property for artifacts
has been deprecated.
In version 0.1, AWS CodeBuild runs each build command in a separate instance of the default shell in the build environment. In version 0.2, CodeBuild runs all build commands in the same instance of the default shell in the build environment.
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