woodpecker/docs/versioned_docs/version-1.0/30-administration/22-backends/20-local.md

2.7 KiB

Local backend

:::danger The local backend will execute the pipelines on the local system without any isolation of any kind. :::

:::note This backend is still pretty new and cannot be treated as stable. Its implementation and configuration can change at any time. :::

Since the code runs directly in the same context as the agent (same user, same filesystem), a malicious pipeline could be used to access the agent configuration especially the WOODPECKER_AGENT_SECRET variable.

It is recommended to use this backend only for private setup where the code and pipeline can be trusted. You shouldn't use it for a public facing CI where anyone can submit code or add new repositories. You shouldn't execute the agent as a privileged user (root).

The local backend will use a random directory in $TMPDIR to store the cloned code and execute commands.

In order to use this backend, you need to download (or build) the binary of the agent, configure it and run it on the host machine.

Configuration

Server

Enable connection to the server from the outside of the docker environment by exposing the port 9000:

# docker-compose.yml for the server
version: '3'

services:
  woodpecker-server:
  [...]
    ports:
      - 9000:9000
      [...]
    environment:
      - [...]

Agent

You can use the .env file to store environmental variables for configuration. At the minimum you need the following information:

# .env for the agent
WOODPECKER_AGENT_SECRET=replace_with_your_server_secret
WOODPECKER_SERVER=replace_with_your_server_address:9000

Running the agent

Start the agent from the directory with the .env file:

woodpecker-agent

:::note When using the local backend, the plugin-git binary must be in your $PATH for the default clone step to work. If not, you can still write a manual clone step. :::

Further configuration

Specify the shell to be used for a pipeline step

The image entry is used to specify the shell, such as Bash or Fish, that is used to run the commands.

# .woodpecker.yml

steps:
  build:
    image: bash
    commands:
      [...]

Using labels to filter tasks

You can use the agent configuration options and the pipeline syntax to only run certain pipelines on certain agents. Example:

Define a label type with value exec for a particular agent:

# .env for the agent

WOODPECKER_FILTER_LABELS=type=exec

Then, use this label type with value exec in the pipeline definition, to only run on this agent:

# .woodpecker.yml

labels:
  type: exec

steps:
  [...]