Runs
You add Runs when you want Garden to execute specific commands before executing an different Action. At its most basic, the configuration looks like this:
Runs that have dependents (i.e. something that depends on them) are run automatically by Garden. For example, if a Deploy depends on a Run, then Garden will automatically run that Run before executing the Deploy. Other Runs will need to be run manually.
Garden caches Run results and re-runs the Runs if its dependencies have changed. It is therefore recommended that you make sure your Runs are idempotent (i.e. can safely be run multiple times). This behaviour can be disabled via the spec.cacheResult
field on Runs.
You can run a Run manually with the garden run <run-name>
command. This will run the Run regardless of whether or not the result is cached.
You can view task results by running garden get run-result <run-name>
.
Examples
Database Migration
Below is an example of two Runs for a Deploy that uses the postgresql
Helm chart. The db-init
Run is for initializing the database and db-clear
is for clearing it. Notice how the Runs depend on deploy.db
. These Runs are of type kubernetes-exec
that's used for running commands directly in a running Deploy.
The full example is available here. There's also a version that uses the container
action type instead of Helm charts.
Advanced
Run Artifacts
Many action types, including container
, exec
and helm
, allow you to extract artifacts after Runs have completed. This can be handy when you'd like to view reports or logs, or if you'd like a script (via a local exec
action, for instance) to validate the output from a Run.
Desired artifacts can be specified using the spec.artifacts
field on Run configurations. For example, for the container
Run, you can do something like this:
After running my-run
, you can find the contents of the report
directory in the runs's container, locally under .garden/artifacts/my-run-report
.
Please look at individual action type references to see how to configure each Run to extract artifacts.
Runs with arguments from the CLI
For Runs that are often run ad-hoc from the CLI, you can use variables and the --var
CLI flag to pass in values to the Run. Here for example, we have a simple container Run that can receive an argument via a variable:
You can run this Run and override the argument variable like this:
Further Reading
For the full configuration possibilities please take a look at our reference docs.
Next Steps
Take a look at our Workflows section to learn how to define sequences of Garden commands and custom scripts.
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