Commit ab9aa821 authored by Piotr Wosiek's avatar Piotr Wosiek

Update .NET Core YAML template - improve caching

Revise logic of dependency caching, add cache key, make before script global.
parent b00fe08d
......@@ -43,29 +43,36 @@ stages:
# What that means is that before every job a dependency restore must be performed
# because restored dependencies are removed along with machines. Fortunately,
# GitLab provides cache mechanism with the aim of keeping restored dependencies
# for other jobs. In this example dependencies are restored only once
# and then passed over to the next jobs.
# for other jobs. This example shows how to configure cache to pass over restored
# dependencies for re-use.
#
# With global cache rule, cached dependencies will be downloaded before every job
# and then unpacked to the paths as specified below.
cache:
# Per-stage and per-branch caching.
key: "$CI_JOB_STAGE-$CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG"
paths:
# Specify three paths that should be cached:
#
# 1) Main JSON file holding information about package dependency tree, packages versions,
# frameworks etc. It also holds information where to the dependencies were restored,
# so next time a 'dotnet build' is executed, the build engine will know
# where to look for already downloaded dependencies.
# frameworks etc. It also holds information where to the dependencies were restored.
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/project.assets.json'
# 2) Other NuGet and MSBuild related files. Also needed.
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/*.csproj.nuget.*'
# 3) Path to the directory where restored dependencies are kept.
- '$NUGET_PACKAGES_DIRECTORY'
policy: pull # Only download the cache, don't upload it after the job is completed.
#
# 'pull-push' policy means that latest cache will be downloaded (if exists)
# before executing the job, and a newer version will be uploaded afterwards.
# Such setting saves time when there are no changes in referenced third-party
# packages. For example if you run a pipeline with changes in your code,
# but with no changes within third-party packages which your project is using,
# then project restore will happen in next to no time as all required dependencies
# will already be there — unzipped from cache. 'pull-push' policy is a default
# cache policy, you do not have to specify it explicitly.
policy: pull-push
build:
stage: build
#
# ### Restore project dependencies
#
......@@ -76,24 +83,12 @@ build:
# in the root of project repository, so it's content can be cached.
#
# Learn more about GitLab cache: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/caching/index.html
before_script:
before_script:
- 'dotnet restore --packages $NUGET_PACKAGES_DIRECTORY'
# Override global cache rule for uploading.
cache:
paths:
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/project.assets.json'
- '$SOURCE_CODE_PATH$OBJECTS_DIRECTORY/*.csproj.nuget.*'
- '$NUGET_PACKAGES_DIRECTORY'
#
# 'pull-push' policy means that latest cache will be downloaded (if exists)
# before executing the job, and a newer version will be uploaded afterwards.
# Such setting saves time when there are no changes in referenced third-party
# packages. For example if you run a pipeline with changes in your code,
# but with no changes within third-party packages which your project is using,
# then project restore will happen in next to no time as all required dependencies
# will already be there — unzipped from cache. 'pull-push' policy is a default
# cache policy, you do not have to specify it explicitly.
policy: pull-push
build:
stage: build
#
# ### Build all projects discovered from solution file.
#
......
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