Configuring .gitlab-ci.yml file in Gitlab to test python Codes





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Currently I am stuck with trying to configure the gitlab-ci.yml file. Im trying to automatically build and test my python code when I made a commit. At the moment, I just wanted to build a simple hello world program and purposely put a mistake within the python file by misspelling print (printt instead of print). When I commit, the pipeline is run, but it seems to successfully pass the build and test phase (which it shouldn't).



Any help how to properly configure the gitlab-ci.yml file to automatically test python codes?



I've also attached my current gitlab-ci.yml file.



enter image description here
Thank you










share|improve this question

























  • For improvement, could you paste your file in the question instead of using an image? You can use the source code formatting to make it look nice :). It will attract answers ;).

    – David Guyon
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:04











  • Thank you for the advice David, I've made the changes to my post :D

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:34


















0















Currently I am stuck with trying to configure the gitlab-ci.yml file. Im trying to automatically build and test my python code when I made a commit. At the moment, I just wanted to build a simple hello world program and purposely put a mistake within the python file by misspelling print (printt instead of print). When I commit, the pipeline is run, but it seems to successfully pass the build and test phase (which it shouldn't).



Any help how to properly configure the gitlab-ci.yml file to automatically test python codes?



I've also attached my current gitlab-ci.yml file.



enter image description here
Thank you










share|improve this question

























  • For improvement, could you paste your file in the question instead of using an image? You can use the source code formatting to make it look nice :). It will attract answers ;).

    – David Guyon
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:04











  • Thank you for the advice David, I've made the changes to my post :D

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:34














0












0








0








Currently I am stuck with trying to configure the gitlab-ci.yml file. Im trying to automatically build and test my python code when I made a commit. At the moment, I just wanted to build a simple hello world program and purposely put a mistake within the python file by misspelling print (printt instead of print). When I commit, the pipeline is run, but it seems to successfully pass the build and test phase (which it shouldn't).



Any help how to properly configure the gitlab-ci.yml file to automatically test python codes?



I've also attached my current gitlab-ci.yml file.



enter image description here
Thank you










share|improve this question
















Currently I am stuck with trying to configure the gitlab-ci.yml file. Im trying to automatically build and test my python code when I made a commit. At the moment, I just wanted to build a simple hello world program and purposely put a mistake within the python file by misspelling print (printt instead of print). When I commit, the pipeline is run, but it seems to successfully pass the build and test phase (which it shouldn't).



Any help how to properly configure the gitlab-ci.yml file to automatically test python codes?



I've also attached my current gitlab-ci.yml file.



enter image description here
Thank you







python gitlab-ci






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 23 '18 at 14:34









Catarina Ferreira

5751622




5751622










asked Nov 23 '18 at 13:47









Endis SapuandiEndis Sapuandi

23




23













  • For improvement, could you paste your file in the question instead of using an image? You can use the source code formatting to make it look nice :). It will attract answers ;).

    – David Guyon
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:04











  • Thank you for the advice David, I've made the changes to my post :D

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:34



















  • For improvement, could you paste your file in the question instead of using an image? You can use the source code formatting to make it look nice :). It will attract answers ;).

    – David Guyon
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:04











  • Thank you for the advice David, I've made the changes to my post :D

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Nov 23 '18 at 14:34

















For improvement, could you paste your file in the question instead of using an image? You can use the source code formatting to make it look nice :). It will attract answers ;).

– David Guyon
Nov 23 '18 at 14:04





For improvement, could you paste your file in the question instead of using an image? You can use the source code formatting to make it look nice :). It will attract answers ;).

– David Guyon
Nov 23 '18 at 14:04













Thank you for the advice David, I've made the changes to my post :D

– Endis Sapuandi
Nov 23 '18 at 14:34





Thank you for the advice David, I've made the changes to my post :D

– Endis Sapuandi
Nov 23 '18 at 14:34












1 Answer
1






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oldest

votes


















0














It's dead simple. Here is minimal working example I use in my repo:



pytest:
image: python:3.6
script:
- apt-get update -q -y
- pip install -r requirements.txt
- pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
- pytest # or pytest tests/


source






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you! this is really useful!

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Apr 1 at 11:35











  • @EndisSapuandi mark answer as solved if this solves your problem

    – azzamsa
    Apr 1 at 13:06












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1 Answer
1






active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














It's dead simple. Here is minimal working example I use in my repo:



pytest:
image: python:3.6
script:
- apt-get update -q -y
- pip install -r requirements.txt
- pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
- pytest # or pytest tests/


source






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you! this is really useful!

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Apr 1 at 11:35











  • @EndisSapuandi mark answer as solved if this solves your problem

    – azzamsa
    Apr 1 at 13:06
















0














It's dead simple. Here is minimal working example I use in my repo:



pytest:
image: python:3.6
script:
- apt-get update -q -y
- pip install -r requirements.txt
- pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
- pytest # or pytest tests/


source






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you! this is really useful!

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Apr 1 at 11:35











  • @EndisSapuandi mark answer as solved if this solves your problem

    – azzamsa
    Apr 1 at 13:06














0












0








0







It's dead simple. Here is minimal working example I use in my repo:



pytest:
image: python:3.6
script:
- apt-get update -q -y
- pip install -r requirements.txt
- pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
- pytest # or pytest tests/


source






share|improve this answer













It's dead simple. Here is minimal working example I use in my repo:



pytest:
image: python:3.6
script:
- apt-get update -q -y
- pip install -r requirements.txt
- pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
- pytest # or pytest tests/


source







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 31 at 3:40









azzamsaazzamsa

275511




275511













  • Thank you! this is really useful!

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Apr 1 at 11:35











  • @EndisSapuandi mark answer as solved if this solves your problem

    – azzamsa
    Apr 1 at 13:06



















  • Thank you! this is really useful!

    – Endis Sapuandi
    Apr 1 at 11:35











  • @EndisSapuandi mark answer as solved if this solves your problem

    – azzamsa
    Apr 1 at 13:06

















Thank you! this is really useful!

– Endis Sapuandi
Apr 1 at 11:35





Thank you! this is really useful!

– Endis Sapuandi
Apr 1 at 11:35













@EndisSapuandi mark answer as solved if this solves your problem

– azzamsa
Apr 1 at 13:06





@EndisSapuandi mark answer as solved if this solves your problem

– azzamsa
Apr 1 at 13:06




















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