इसके माध्यम से साझा किया गया


Define variables

TFS 2017 | TFS 2015

Note

In Microsoft Team Foundation Server (TFS) 2018 and previous versions, build and release pipelines are called definitions, runs are called builds, service connections are called service endpoints, stages are called environments, and jobs are called phases.

Variables give you a convenient way to get key bits of data into various parts of the pipeline. The most common use of variables is to define a value that you can then use in your pipeline. All variables are stored as strings and are mutable. The value of a variable can change from run to run or job to job of your pipeline.

When you define the same variable in multiple places with the same name, the most locally scoped variable wins. So, a variable defined at the job level can override a variable set at the stage level. A variable defined at the stage level will override a variable set at the pipeline root level. A variable set in the pipeline root level will override a variable set in the Pipeline settings UI.

You can use variables with expressions to conditionally assign values and further customize pipelines.

User-defined variables

When you define a variable, you can use different syntaxes (macro, template expression, or runtime) and what syntax you use will determine where in the pipeline your variable will render.

In YAML pipelines, you can set variables at the root, stage, and job level. You can also specify variables outside of a YAML pipeline in the UI. When you set a variable in the UI, that variable can be encrypted and set as secret.

User-defined variables can be set as read-only. There are naming restrictions for variables (example: you can't use secret at the start of a variable name).

You can use a variable group to make variables available across multiple pipelines.

You can use templates to define variables that are used in multiple pipelines in one file.

System variables

In addition to user-defined variables, Azure Pipelines has system variables with predefined values. If you are using YAML or classic build pipelines, see predefined variables for a comprehensive list of system variables. If you are using classic release pipelines, see release variables.

System variables are set with their current value when you run the pipeline. Some variables are set automatically. As a pipeline author or end user, you change the value of a system variable before the pipeline is run.

System variables are read-only.

Environment variables

Environment variables are specific to the operating system you are using. They are injected into a pipeline in platform-specific ways. The format corresponds to how environment variables get formatted for your specific scripting platform.

On UNIX systems (macOS and Linux), environment variables have the format $NAME. On Windows, the format is %NAME% for batch and $env:NAME in PowerShell.

System and user-defined variables also get injected as environment variables for your platform. When variables are turned into environment variables, variable names become uppercase, and periods turn into underscores. For example, the variable name any.variable becomes the variable name $ANY_VARIABLE.

Variable naming restrictions

User-defined variables can consist of letters, numbers, ., and _ characters. Don't use variable prefixes that are reserved by the system. These are: endpoint, input, secret, and securefile. Any variable that begins with one of these strings (regardless of capitalization) will not be available to your tasks and scripts.

Understand variable syntax

Azure Pipelines supports three different ways to reference variables: macro, template expression, and runtime expression. Each syntax can be used for a different purpose and has some limitations.

In a pipeline, template expression variables (${{ variables.var }}) get processed at compile time, before runtime starts. Macro syntax variables ($(var)) get processed during runtime before a task runs. Runtime expressions ($[variables.var]) also get processed during runtime but were designed for use with conditions and expressions. When you use a runtime expression, it must take up the entire right side of a definition.

In this example, you can see that the template expression still has the initial value of the variable after the variable is updated. The value of the macro syntax variable updates. The template expression value does not change because all template expression variables get processed at compile time before tasks run. In contrast, macro syntax variables are evaluated before each task runs.

variables:
- name: one
  value: initialValue 

steps:
  - script: |
      echo ${{ variables.one }} # outputs initialValue
      echo $(one)
    displayName: First variable pass
  - bash: echo "##vso[task.setvariable variable=one]secondValue"
    displayName: Set new variable value
  - script: |
      echo ${{ variables.one }} # outputs initialValue
      echo $(one) # outputs secondValue
    displayName: Second variable pass

Macro syntax variables

Most documentation examples use macro syntax ($(var)). Macro syntax is designed to interpolate variable values into task inputs and into other variables.

Variables with macro syntax get processed before a task executes during runtime. Runtime happens after template expansion. When the system encounters a macro expression, it replaces the expression with the contents of the variable. If there's no variable by that name, then the macro expression is left unchanged. For example, if $(var) can't be replaced, $(var) won't be replaced by anything.

Macro syntax variables remain unchanged with no value because an empty value like $() might mean something to the task you are running and the agent should not assume you want that value replaced. For example, if you use $(foo) to reference variable foo in a Bash task, replacing all $() expressions in the input to the task could break your Bash scripts.

Macro variables are only expanded when they are used for a value, not as a keyword. Values appear on the right side of a pipeline definition. The following is valid: key: $(value). The following isn't valid: $(key): value. Macro variables are not expanded when used to display a job name inline. Instead, you must use the displayName property.

Note

Macro syntax variables are only expanded for stages, jobs, and steps. You cannot, for example, use macro syntax inside a resource or trigger.

In this example, macro syntax is used with Bash, PowerShell, and a script task. The syntax for calling a variable with macro syntax is the same for all three.

variables:
 - name: projectName
   value: contoso

steps: 
- bash: echo $(projectName)
- powershell: echo $(projectName)
- script: echo $(projectName)

Template expression syntax

You can use template expression syntax to expand both template parameters and variables (${{ variables.var }}). Template variables are processed at compile time, and are replaced before runtime starts. Template expressions are designed for reusing parts of YAML as templates.

Template variables silently coalesce to empty strings when a replacement value isn't found. Template expressions, unlike macro and runtime expressions, can appear as either keys (left side) or values (right side). The following is valid: ${{ variables.key }} : ${{ variables.value }}.

Runtime expression syntax

You can use runtime expression syntax for variables that are expanded at runtime ($[variables.var]). Runtime expression variables silently coalesce to empty strings when a replacement value isn't found. Runtime expressions are designed to be used in the conditions of jobs, to support conditional execution of jobs, or whole stages.

Runtime expression variables are only expanded when they are used for a value, not as a keyword. Values appear on the right side of a pipeline definition. The following is valid: key: $[variables.value]. The following isn't valid: $[variables.key]: value. The runtime expression must take up the entire right side of a key-value pair. For example, key: $[variables.value] is valid but key: $[variables.value] foo is not.

Syntax Example When is it processed? Where does it expand in a pipeline definition? How does it render when not found?
macro $(var) runtime before a task executes value (right side) prints $(var)
template expression ${{ variables.var }} compile time key or value (left or right side) empty string
runtime expression $[variables.var] runtime value (right side) empty string

What syntax should I use?

Use macro syntax if you are providing input for a task.

Choose a runtime expression if you are working with conditions and expressions. The exception to this is if you have a pipeline where it will cause a problem for your empty variable to print out. For example, if you have conditional logic that relies on a variable having a specific value or no value. In that case, you should use a runtime expression.

If you are defining a variable in a template, use a template expression.

Set variables in pipeline

YAML isn't supported on TFS 2017.

Set secret variables

YAML isn't supported on TFS 2017.

Share variables across pipelines

To share variables across multiple pipelines in your project, use the web interface. Under Library, use variable groups.

Use output variables from tasks

Some tasks define output variables, which you can consume in downstream steps within the same job.

  • To reference a variable from a different task within the same job, use TASK.VARIABLE.
  • To reference a variable from a task from a different job, use dependencies.JOB.outputs['TASK.VARIABLE'].

Note

By default, each stage in a pipeline depends on the one just before it in the YAML file. If you need to refer to a stage that isn't immediately prior to the current one, you can override this automatic default by adding a dependsOn section to the stage.

Note

The following examples use standard pipeline syntax. If you're using deployment pipelines, both variable and conditional variable syntax will differ. For information about the specific syntax to use, see Deployment jobs.

YAML isn't supported on TFS 2017.

Set variables in scripts

A script in your pipeline can define a variable so that it can be consumed by one of the subsequent steps in the pipeline. All variables set by this method are treated as strings. To set a variable from a script, you use a command syntax and print to stdout.

YAML isn't supported on TFS 2017.

Set variables by using expressions

YAML isn't supported on TFS 2017.

Allow at queue time

YAML isn't supported on TFS 2017.

Expansion of variables

YAML isn't supported on TFS 2017.