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## Test a Scala application
This example demonstrates the integration of Gitlab CI with Scala applications using SBT. Checkout the example [project](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/scala-sbt) and [build status](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/scala-sbt/builds).
### Add `.gitlab-ci.yml` file to project
The following `.gitlab-ci.yml` should be added in the root of your repository to trigger CI:
```yaml
image: java:8
before_script:
# Install SBT
- echo "deb http://dl.bintray.com/sbt/debian /" | tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/sbt.list
- apt-key adv --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com:80 --recv 642AC823
- apt-get update -y
- apt-get install sbt -y
- sbt sbt-version
test:
script:
- sbt clean coverage test coverageReport
```
The `before_script` installs [SBT](http://www.scala-sbt.org/) and displays the version that is being used. The `test` stage executes SBT to compile and test the project. [scoverage](https://github.com/scoverage/sbt-scoverage) is used as a SBT plugin to measure test coverage.
You can use other versions of Scala and SBT by defining them in `build.sbt`.
### Display test coverage in build
Add the `Coverage was \[\d+.\d+\%\]` regular expression in the `Continuous Integration > Test coverage parsing` project setting to retrieve the test coverage rate from the build trace and have it displayed with your builds.
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