# To contribute improvements to CI/CD templates, please follow the Development guide at: # https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/development/cicd/templates.html # This specific template is located at: # https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/lib/gitlab/ci/templates/MATLAB.gitlab-ci.yml # Use this template to run MATLAB and Simulink as part of your CI/CD pipeline. The template has three jobs: # - `command`: Run MATLAB scripts, functions, and statements. # - `test`: Run tests authored using the MATLAB unit testing framework or Simulink Test. # - `test_artifacts`: Run MATLAB and Simulink tests, and generate test and coverage artifacts. # # You can copy and paste one or more jobs in this template into your `.gitlab-ci.yml` file. # You should not add this template to an existing `.gitlab-ci.yml` file by using the `include:` keyword. # # - To run MATLAB and Simulink, MATLAB must be installed on the runner that will run the jobs. # The runner will use the topmost MATLAB version on the system path. # The build fails if the operating system cannot find MATLAB on the path. # - The jobs in this template use the `matlab -batch` syntax to start MATLAB. The `-batch` option is supported # in MATLAB R2019a and later. # The `command` job runs MATLAB scripts, functions, and statements. To use the job in your pipeline, # substitute `mycommand` with the code you want to run. # command: script: matlab -batch mycommand # If the value of `mycommand` is the name of a MATLAB script or function, do not specify the file extension. # For example, to run a script named `myscript.m` in the root of your repository, specify `mycommand` like this: # # "myscript" # # If you specify more than one script, function, or statement, use a comma or semicolon to separate them. # For example, to run `myscript.m` in a folder named `myfolder` located in the root of the repository, # you can specify `mycommand` like this: # # "addpath('myfolder'), myscript" # # MATLAB exits with exit code 0 if the specified script, function, or statement executes successfully without # error. Otherwise, MATLAB terminates with a nonzero exit code, which causes the job to fail. To have the # job fail in certain conditions, use the [`assert`][1] or [`error`][2] functions. # # [1] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/assert.html # [2] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/error.html # The `test` job runs the MATLAB and Simulink tests in your project. It calls the [`runtests`][3] function # to run the tests and then the [`assertSuccess`][4] method to fail the job if any of the tests fail. # test: script: matlab -batch "results = runtests('IncludeSubfolders',true), assertSuccess(results);" # By default, the job includes any files in your [MATLAB Project][5] that have a `Test` label. If your repository # does not have a MATLAB project, then the job includes all tests in the root of your repository or in any of # its subfolders. # # [3] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/runtests.html # [4] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/matlab.unittest.testresult.assertsuccess.html # [5] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/projects.html # The `test_artifacts` job runs your tests and additionally generates test and coverage artifacts. # It uses the plugin classes in the [`matlab.unittest.plugins`][6] package to generate a JUnit test results # report and a Cobertura code coverage report. Like the `test` job, this job runs all the tests in your # project and fails the build if any of the tests fail. # test_artifacts: script: | matlab -batch " import matlab.unittest.TestRunner import matlab.unittest.Verbosity import matlab.unittest.plugins.CodeCoveragePlugin import matlab.unittest.plugins.XMLPlugin import matlab.unittest.plugins.codecoverage.CoberturaFormat suite = testsuite(pwd,'IncludeSubfolders',true); [~,~] = mkdir('artifacts'); runner = TestRunner.withTextOutput('OutputDetail',Verbosity.Detailed); runner.addPlugin(XMLPlugin.producingJUnitFormat('artifacts/results.xml')) runner.addPlugin(CodeCoveragePlugin.forFolder(pwd,'IncludingSubfolders',true, ... 'Producing',CoberturaFormat('artifacts/cobertura.xml'))) results = runner.run(suite) assertSuccess(results);" artifacts: reports: junit: "./artifacts/results.xml" coverage_report: coverage_format: cobertura path: "./artifacts/cobertura.xml" paths: - "./artifacts" # You can modify the contents of the `test_artifacts` job depending on your goals. For more # information on how to customize the test runner and generate various test and coverage artifacts, # see [Generate Artifacts Using MATLAB Unit Test Plugins][7]. # # [6] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/matlab.unittest.plugins-package.html # [7] https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/matlab_prog/generate-artifacts-using-matlab-unit-test-plugins.html