Found it, it's stored on the go-server itself not in the go-agent. For
googlers in the future, go stores console output to
"godata/artifacts/pipelines/"
On Saturday, January 30, 2021 at 6:12:27 PM UTC zuk...@gmail.com wrote:
> Are the logs from a Go task stored anywhere? I can't seem to find
Are the logs from a Go task stored anywhere? I can't seem to find the log.
On Saturday, January 30, 2021 at 4:30:12 PM UTC zuk...@gmail.com wrote:
> I can write them to a file, but they require knowledge of the default set
> env vars i.e. "GO_SERVER_URL", "GO_*" etc..
>
> It seems there are a
I can write them to a file, but they require knowledge of the default set
env vars i.e. "GO_SERVER_URL", "GO_*" etc..
It seems there are a few approaches:
1. `cat` the go-agent log and extract env var key and value using regex
against "setting environment variable 'GO_SERVER_URL' to value '
I can write them to a file, but they require knowledge of the default set
env vars i.e. "GO_SERVER_URL", "GO_*" etc..
It seems there are a few approaches:
1. `cat` the go-agent log and extract env var key and value using regex
against "setting environment variable 'GO_SERVER_URL' to value
Ah you re-posted. The reason why I don't want to explicitly state what is
required is because it means you can set any env var in Go CI/CD (in stage,
job etc..) and you won't require changes to the bash script underneath.
It's a cleaner approach.
On Saturday, January 30, 2021 at 4:22:03 PM UTC
I understand they are running in a separate bash shell, let me clarify the
question. If I run "env" other environment variables will be printed to
stdout. I am only interested in the specific environment variables that are
posted above without filtering it.
On Saturday, January 30, 2021 at
Okay, I just realised from this post once again. I don't think there is any
way to get only those values that are set directly, instead if you know
what those values are then you can write a script to write these values
into a text file and use that as a artifact for the remaining Tasks.
Having
The process environment variables overrides the system variables (if any).
If you're interested only in the environment variables that are shown above
you don't have to worry about value being changed or overwritten by another
process because GoCD uses *bash -c* to run tasks with the new variables
>From my understanding, "env" prints out all the system environment
variables, rather than the process environment variables. If I used "env"
and a parallel job was running, wouldn't it overwrite the environment
variables (non thread-safe env vars)?
On Saturday, January 30, 2021 at 3:48:59 PM
If you're on a Linux instance try using the *env* command.
On Sat, 30 Jan, 2021, 21:14 zuk...@gmail.com, wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am deploying an image to AWS ECS using task definitions. In order for me
> to inject the environment variables from Go into the task definition, I
> require all the
Hi all,
I am deploying an image to AWS ECS using task definitions. In order for me
to inject the environment variables from Go into the task definition, I
require all the environment variables that Go sets when a pipeline is
running.
For instance:
[image: envvars.png]
I want to get all those
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