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Select the right Git repository.
Navigate to Repository settings > Pipelines > Repository variables.
Click Variables and create variables PFX_USER and PFX_PASS:
Add the variable PFX_USER and set its value to pfx.deploy and click OK.
Add the variable PFX_PASS and set its value to be a strong password (at least 14 characters, at least 1 digit, at least 1 capital letter). Select Keep this value secret and click OK.
Select Starter Pipeline and replace the existing editor content with the Navigate to Repository settings > Pipelines > Deployments.
Create required environments
For each environments create variable for URL with partition url.
Navigate to Repository settings > Pipelines > Settings.
Enable Pipeline
Click on “Configure bitbucket-pipelines.yml”
Commit the yml file.
Create a feature branch for Pipeline and fetch the yml file in intellij.
Replace the existing code with following:
Code Block image: maven:3.6-jdk-11 pipelines: branches: dev: -
step:
name:
dev script:
-
mvn
clean test -e --batch-mode
-
step: name: Deploy DEV
deployment: DEV
image: pricefx/pfxpackage
script:
- pfxpackage -import -timeout 120 -url $URL -user $PFX_USER -password $PFX_PASS -partition
{parition name} -from . $OPTIONS
Replace the {parition name} with dev partition name.
Create the similar pipeline for other partitions if required.
Commit the file and create the Pull request.
Create a user account pfx.deploy in the target partitions (QA, PROD) and assign this user the General Admin privileges in each of the partitions where you want to enable deployment and set the password to be identical to the PFX_PASS variable.
After merging the pull request for Pipeline branch with dev branch, Pipeline should start
Notes:
You should set
name
to correspond to your partition, eg.Deploy QA
orDeploy PROD
.You must set the PARTITION and URL variables to the right values of your environment.
You must set which branch to use for the source under the
trigger
section.
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