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openshift-docs/modules/builds-using-gitlab-webhooks.adoc
2023-10-30 10:13:25 -04:00

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// Module included in the following assemblies:
//
// * builds/triggering-builds-build-hooks.adoc
:_mod-docs-content-type: PROCEDURE
[id="builds-using-gitlab-webhooks_{context}"]
= Using GitLab webhooks
GitLab webhooks handle the call made by GitLab when a repository is updated. As with the GitHub triggers, you must specify a secret. The following example is a trigger definition YAML within the `BuildConfig`:
[source,yaml]
----
type: "GitLab"
gitlab:
secretReference:
name: "mysecret"
----
The payload URL is returned as the GitLab Webhook URL by the `oc describe` command, and is structured as follows:
.Example output
[source,terminal]
----
https://<openshift_api_host:port>/apis/build.openshift.io/v1/namespaces/<namespace>/buildconfigs/<name>/webhooks/<secret>/gitlab
----
.Procedure
. To configure a GitLab Webhook:
.. Describe the `BuildConfig` to get the webhook URL:
+
[source,terminal]
----
$ oc describe bc <name>
----
.. Copy the webhook URL, replacing `<secret>` with your secret value.
.. Follow the link:https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/user/project/integrations/webhooks.html#webhooks[GitLab setup instructions]
to paste the webhook URL into your GitLab repository settings.
. Given a file containing a valid JSON payload, such as `payload.json`, you can
manually trigger the webhook with `curl`:
+
[source,terminal]
----
$ curl -H "X-GitLab-Event: Push Hook" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -k -X POST --data-binary @payload.json https://<openshift_api_host:port>/apis/build.openshift.io/v1/namespaces/<namespace>/buildconfigs/<name>/webhooks/<secret>/gitlab
----
+
The `-k` argument is only necessary if your API server does not have a properly
signed certificate.
////
[role="_additional-resources"]
.Additional resources
////
//* link:https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/user/project/integrations/webhooks.html[GitLab]