Configuring VCS Triggers
VCS triggers automatically start a new build each time TeamCity detects new changes in the configured VCS roots and displays the change in the pending changes. Only one VCS trigger can be added to a build configuration.
A new VCS trigger with the default settings triggers a build once there are pending changes in the build configuration: the version control is polled for changes according to the checking for changes interval of a VCS root honoring a VCS commit hook if configured. Only the changes matched by the checkout rules are displayed as pending and thus are processed by the trigger. If several check-ins are made within short time frame and discovered by TeamCity together, only one build will be triggered.
After the last change is detected, a quiet period can be configured to wait for some time without changes before the build is queued.
The global default value for both options is 60 seconds and can be configured for the server on the Administration | Global Settings page.
You can adjust a VCS trigger to your needs using the options described below:
Trigger a build on changes in snapshot dependencies
If you have a build chain (i.e. a number of builds interconnected by snapshot dependencies), the triggers are to be configured in the final build in the chain. This is pack setup in the image below.
If triggering rules are specified (described below), they are applied to all the changes (including changes from snapshot dependencies) and only the changes matching the rules trigger the build chain.
See also details at the Build Dependencies page.
Per-check-in Triggering
When this option is not enabled, several check-ins by different committers can be made; and once they are detected, TeamCity will add only one build to the queue with all of these changes.
If you have fast builds and enough build agents, you can make TeamCity launch a new build for each check-in ensuring that no other changes get into the same build. To do that, select the Trigger a build on each check-in option. If you select the Include several check-ins in build if they are from the same committer option, and TeamCity will detect a number of pending changes, it will group them by user and start builds having single user changes only.
This helps to figure out whose change broke a build or caused a new test failure, should such issue arise.
Quiet Period Settings
By specifying the quiet period you can ensure the build is not triggered in the middle of non-atomic check-ins consisting of several VCS check-ins.
A quiet period is a period (in seconds) that TeamCity maintains between the moment the last VCS change is detected and a build is added into the queue. If new VCS change is detected in the Build Configuration within the period, the period starts over from the new change detection time. The build is added into the queue only if there were no new VCS changes detected within the quiet period. Note that the actual quiet period will not be less than the maximum checking for changes interval among the VCS roots of a build configuration, as TeamCity must ensure that changes were collected at least once during the quiet period.
The quiet period can be set to the default value (60 seconds, can be changed globally at the Administration | Global Settings page) or to a custom value for a build configuration.
VCS Trigger Rules
If no trigger rules specified, a build is triggered upon any detected change displayed for the build configuration. You can affect the changes detected by changing the VCS root settings and specifying Checkout Rules.
To limit the changes that trigger the build, use the VCS trigger rules. You can add these rules manually in the text area (one per line), or use the Add new rule option to generate them.
Each rule is either an "include" (starts with "+") or an "exclude" (starts with "-").
General Syntax
The general syntax for a single rule is:
Where:
Ant_like_wildcard - A wildcard to match the changed file path. Only "*" and "**" patterns are supported, the "?" pattern is not supported. The file paths in the rule can be relative (not started with '/' or '\') to match resulting paths on the agent or absolute (started with '/') to match VCS paths relative to a VCS root. For each file in a change the most specific rule is found (the rule matching the longest file path). The build is triggered if there is at least one file with a matching "include" rule or a file with no matching "exclude" rules.
Managing Users and User Groups- if specified, limits the rule only to the changes made by a user with the corresponding VCS username.
VCS_root_id - if specified, limits the rule only to the changes from the corresponding VCS root.
VCS_comment_regexp - if specified, limits the rule only to the changes that contain specified text in the VCS comment. Use the Java Regular Expression pattern for matching the text in a comment (see examples below). The rule matches if the comment text contains a matched text portion; to match the entire text, include the ^ and $ special characters.
Trigger Rules Examples
+:.
-:**.html
-:user=techwriter;root=InternalSVN:/misc/doc/*.xml
-:lib/**
-:comment=minor:**
-:comment=^oops$:**
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Trigger Rules and Branch Filter Combined
Trigger rules and branch filter are combined by AND, which means that the build is triggered only when both conditions are satisfied.
For example, if you specify a comment text in the trigger rules field and provide the branch specification, the build will be triggered only if a commit has the special text and is also in a branch matched by branch filter.
Triggering a Build on Branch Merge
The VCS trigger is fully aware of branches and will trigger a build once a check-in is detected in a branch.
When changes are merged / fast-forwarded from one branch to another, strictly speaking there are no actual changes in the code. By default, the VCS trigger behaves in the following way:
When merging/fast forwarding of two non-default branches: the changes in a build are calculated with regard to previous builds in the same branch, so if there is a build on same commit in a different branch, the trigger will start a build in another branch pointing to the same commit.
If the default branch is one of the branches in the merging/fast-forwarding, the changes are always calculated against the default branch, if there is a build on same revision in the default branch, TeamCity will not run a new build on the same revision.