In gitlab-ci there's an option in the .gitlab-ci.yml file to execute commands before any of the actual script runs, called before_script. .gitlab-ci.yml examples illustrate installing ancillary programs here. However, what I've noticed is that these changes are not cached in Docker when using a docker executor. I had naively assumed that after running these commands, docker would cache the image, so for the next run or test, docker would just load the cached image produced after before_script. This would drastically speed up builds.
As an example, my .gitlab-ci.yml looks a little like:
image: ubuntu
before_script:
- apt-get update -qq && apt-get install -yqq make ...
build:
script:
- cd project && make
A possible solution is to go to the runner machine and create a docker image that can build my software without any other installation and then reference it in the image section of the yaml file. The downside of this is that whenever I want to add a dependency, I need to log in to the runner machine and update the image before builds will succeed. It would be much nicer if I just had to add the dependency to to the end of apt-get install and have docker / gitlab-ci handle the appropriate caching.
There is also a cache command in .gitlab-ci.yml, which I tried setting to untracked: true, which I thought would cache everything that wasn't a byproduct of my project, but it didn't seem to have any effect.
Is there any way to get the behavior I desire?