Using Git submodules with GitLab CI/CD
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Use Git submodules to keep a Git repository as a subdirectory of another Git repository. You can clone another repository into your project and keep your commits separate.
.gitmodules
file
Configure the When you use Git submodules, your project should have a file named .gitmodules
.
You have multiple options to configure it to work in a GitLab CI/CD job.
Using absolute URLs
- Introduced in GitLab Runner 15.11.
For example, your generated .gitmodules
configuration might look like the following if:
- Your project is located at
https://gitlab.com/secret-group/my-project
. - Your project depends on
https://gitlab.com/group/project
, which you want to include as a submodule. - You check out your sources with an SSH address like
git@gitlab.com:secret-group/my-project.git
.
[submodule "project"]
path = project
url = git@gitlab.com:group/project.git
In this case, use the GIT_SUBMODULE_FORCE_HTTPS
variable
to instruct GitLab Runner to convert the URL to HTTPS before it clones the submodules.
Alternatively, if you also use HTTPS locally, you can configure an HTTPS URL:
[submodule "project"]
path = project
url = https://gitlab.com/group/project.git
You do not need to configure additional variables in this case, but you need to use a personal access token to clone it locally.
Using relative URLs
WARNING: If you use relative URLs, submodules may resolve incorrectly in forking workflows. Use absolute URLs instead if you expect your project to have forks.
When your submodule is on the same GitLab server, you can also use relative URLs in
your .gitmodules
file:
[submodule "project"]
path = project
url = ../../project.git
The above configuration instructs Git to automatically deduce the URL to use when cloning sources. You can clone with HTTPS in all your CI/CD jobs, and you can continue to use SSH to clone locally.
For submodules not located on the same GitLab server, always use the full URL:
[submodule "project-x"]
path = project-x
url = https://gitserver.com/group/project-x.git
Use Git submodules in CI/CD jobs
To make submodules work correctly in CI/CD jobs:
-
You can set the
GIT_SUBMODULE_STRATEGY
variable to eithernormal
orrecursive
to tell the runner to fetch your submodules before the job:variables: GIT_SUBMODULE_STRATEGY: recursive
-
For submodules located on the same GitLab server and configured with a Git or SSH URL, make sure you set the
GIT_SUBMODULE_FORCE_HTTPS
variable. -
Use
GIT_SUBMODULE_DEPTH
to configure the cloning depth of submodules independently of theGIT_DEPTH
variable:variables: GIT_SUBMODULE_DEPTH: 1
-
You can filter or exclude specific submodules to control which submodules are synchronized using
GIT_SUBMODULE_PATHS
.variables: GIT_SUBMODULE_PATHS: submoduleA submoduleB
-
You can provide additional flags to control advanced checkout behavior using
GIT_SUBMODULE_UPDATE_FLAGS
.variables: GIT_SUBMODULE_STRATEGY: recursive GIT_SUBMODULE_UPDATE_FLAGS: --jobs 4
If you use the CI_JOB_TOKEN
to clone a submodule in a
pipeline job, the user executing the job must be assigned to a role that has
permission to trigger a pipeline
in the upstream submodule project. Additionally, CI/CD job token access must be properly configured in the upstream submodule project.
Troubleshooting
.gitmodules
file
Can't find the The .gitmodules
file might be hard to find because it is usually a hidden file.
You can check documentation for your specific OS to learn how to find and display
hidden files.
If there is no .gitmodules
file, it's possible the submodule settings are in a
git config
file.
fatal: run_command returned non-zero status
error
This error can happen in a job when working with submodules and the GIT_STRATEGY
is set to fetch
.
Setting the GIT_STRATEGY
to clone
should resolve the issue.