docs: add ADR-0015 for the CI/CD pipeline (Gitea Actions, trunk-based + squash-merge, thin YAML)

Pin the CI/CD shape with an explicit two-level structure, anticipating
the GitLab migration on the 6-18-month horizon:

Level 1 - vendor-neutral, survives the migration:
- Trunk-based with short-lived feature branches; squash-merge only.
- Branch protection on main: no direct push, no force push, linear
  history, required green CI, required reviewers = 0 in v1 (raised to
  >=1 when a second contributor joins), branch deletion after merge.
- Required CI gates (all blocking): format, lint, type-check, test,
  build (nx affected), audit (pnpm + Trivy), secret-scan (gitleaks),
  commit-lint (Conventional Commits on the PR commit range). Future
  a11y and perf gates land with their respective ADRs.
- Conventional Commits validated locally (hook from ADR-0007) and in
  CI as defense in depth.
- Signed commits recommended but not required in v1; revisited at the
  GitLab migration.
- Thin YAML: all orchestration logic lives in package.json scripts
  (ci:check, ci:scan, ci:commits) and Nx targets. Workflow files only
  do checkout, setup, cache, and call one script per job. The migration
  rewrites the YAML wrappers, never the gates.
- Secrets convention SCOPE_PURPOSE; gitleaks enforces no-secrets-in-code.
- Container images / deploy explicitly out of scope (deferred to the
  on-prem infrastructure ADR).

Level 2 - Gitea Actions specific, will be superseded by a GitLab
migration ADR:
- Engine: Gitea Actions (built-in, GitHub Actions-compatible syntax,
  partial portability hedge if the org pivots to GitHub).
- Runners: >=3 self-hosted act_runner instances on-prem, Debian image
  pinned by SHA, weekly rebuild via security-scheduled.yml.
- Three workflow files: ci.yml (PR + push to main), release.yml
  (stub for tag, populated by the deploy ADR), security-scheduled.yml
  (weekly Trivy + gitleaks full-tree scan + Renovate trigger).

Migration weight estimated at 3-5 days dev/ops when GitLab arrives:
the YAML is rewritten, the gates and scripts are unchanged. A future
ADR will explicitly supersede only the level-2 sections.

decisions/README.md index updated. CLAUDE.md gains an explicit 'CI/CD'
line pointing to ADR-0015 and noting the future GitLab supersession.
This commit is contained in:
Julien Gautier
2026-04-30 11:21:30 +02:00
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---
status: accepted
date: 2026-04-30
decision-makers: R&D Lead
tags: [infrastructure, process]
---
# CI/CD pipeline — Gitea Actions, trunk-based + squash-merge, thin YAML over portable scripts
## Context and Problem Statement
The repository currently lives on Gitea (`gitea@git.unespace.com:julien/adastra_portal.git`). The organisation plans to migrate to GitLab on a 618-month horizon. The pipeline shape we adopt now must be (a) operational on Gitea immediately, (b) low-cost to migrate later, and (c) consistent with the project's anti-bricolage and security-first values.
We also need to fix the branch model, the merge strategy, the required gates, the protection rules on `main`, and the location of the orchestration logic — all of these have first-order effects on the Nx scaffold (`package.json` scripts, lint configs, branch tags, conventional-commits validation surface).
This ADR is split into two levels of decision:
- **Level 1 — vendor-neutral.** Survives the future GitLab migration unchanged.
- **Level 2 — Gitea Actions implementation.** Will be rewritten when GitLab is adopted; a future ADR will supersede the level-2 sections without affecting level-1.
## Decision Drivers
* Pipeline portability across CI vendors (Gitea now, GitLab later, possibly other platforms in the future).
* All gates blocking — no "warnings ignored". Either we fail or we adjust the threshold via ADR.
* Trunk-based development for fast feedback and continuous integration discipline.
* Compatibility with the Nx monorepo's `affected` model and remote cache.
* Self-hosted runners (on-prem context — see ADR-0008's hosting constraint).
* Mature, mainstream tooling — anti-bricolage applies particularly here.
* Local enforcement (Husky + lint-staged + commitlint, ADR-0007) plus CI defense in depth — the same checks run twice, on purpose.
## Considered Options
### Branch / merge strategy (level 1)
* **Trunk-based + squash-merge.** (Chosen.)
* Trunk-based + rebase-merge.
* Trunk-based + merge commit.
* GitFlow.
### Required reviewer count on PRs to `main` (level 1)
* **0 in v1, ≥1 once a second active contributor exists.** (Chosen.)
* 1 always (blocks if solo).
* 2 (heavy for a small team).
### Signed commits (level 1)
* **Recommended but not required in v1; reconsidered at the GitLab migration ADR.** (Chosen.)
* Required in v1.
* Never.
### Conventional Commits validation (level 1)
* **Local `commit-msg` hook (ADR-0007) + CI defense-in-depth on the PR commit range.** (Chosen.)
* Local hook only.
* CI only.
### Pipeline orchestration logic location (level 1)
* **Thin YAML — logic lives in `package.json` scripts and Nx targets, the workflow file orchestrates.** (Chosen.)
* Logic in YAML, scripts called step by step.
### CI engine (level 2 — Gitea-specific)
* **Gitea Actions** (built-in since Gitea 1.19, GitHub Actions-compatible YAML). (Chosen.)
* Drone CI alongside Gitea.
* Concourse / Tekton / Buildkite / etc.
### Runner topology (level 2)
* **≥ 3 self-hosted `act_runner` instances on-prem.** (Chosen.)
* Single runner.
* Cloud-hosted (rejected — on-prem constraint).
## Decision Outcome
### Level 1 — vendor-neutral decisions
**Branch model.** Trunk-based with `main` always deployable. Feature branches are short-lived (hours to days), named `feat/<short-slug>` or `fix/<slug>` or `chore/<slug>`. Releases happen by tagging `vX.Y.Z` on `main`.
**Merge strategy.** Squash-merge only. The squash subject is the PR title and must be a valid Conventional Commits message; the squash body inherits the PR body. This produces a clean linear history on `main` where each commit corresponds 1:1 to a PR. Rebase-merge and merge-commit are disabled at the platform level.
**Branch protection on `main`:**
- direct push: forbidden (no exceptions, including the project lead);
- force push: forbidden;
- linear history: required (consistent with squash-merge);
- required status checks: every CI gate listed below, all blocking;
- required PR review approvals: 0 in v1 (solo), revisited to ≥1 once a second active contributor joins (a follow-up ADR or amendment will mark the date);
- branch deletion after merge: required;
- merge of stale branches: PRs must be up-to-date with `main` before merging (or use a merge queue once GitLab provides one).
**Required CI gates** (every gate is blocking; failing any blocks the merge):
| Gate | What it runs | Tooling |
| --- | --- | --- |
| `format` | Prettier check, no auto-fix | `prettier --check` via `pnpm nx format:check` |
| `lint` | ESLint across affected projects, including `@nx/enforce-module-boundaries` | `pnpm nx affected -t lint` |
| `type-check` | TypeScript strict, no emit | `pnpm nx affected -t type-check` |
| `test` | Unit/component tests | Vitest (front, ADR-0004) and Jest (back, ADR-0005), via `pnpm nx affected -t test` |
| `build` | Production builds of affected apps and libs | `pnpm nx affected -t build` |
| `audit` | Dependency vulnerabilities | `pnpm audit` + Trivy filesystem scan |
| `secret-scan` | Repo-wide secret detection | `gitleaks` |
| `commit-lint` | Conventional Commits validation on the PR commit range | `commitlint --from <base> --to HEAD` |
| `a11y` | Pending — defined by future a11y ADR (axe-core in e2e) | (placeholder) |
| `perf` | Pending — defined by future perf ADR (Lighthouse CI) | (placeholder) |
**Conventional Commits.** Already enforced locally via the `commit-msg` hook (ADR-0007). In CI, `commitlint --from origin/main --to HEAD` runs against the PR commit range as defense in depth — even if a contributor bypasses the local hook, the CI gate catches it.
**Signed commits.** Recommended but not required in v1. Setup overhead for contributors (GPG or SSH signing key) is non-trivial relative to the marginal value with a single contributor and a well-controlled host. The decision is revisited as part of the GitLab migration ADR (GitLab has stronger built-in tooling for centralised signing policies than current Gitea).
**Logic location — the "thin YAML" pattern.** All non-trivial CI logic lives in `package.json` scripts and Nx targets, *not* in the workflow YAML. The YAML's role is restricted to: checkout, runtime setup, cache restoration, and calling a single high-level script per job. Concretely:
```jsonc
// package.json (excerpt — lands with the scaffold)
"scripts": {
"ci:check": "pnpm exec nx affected -t format:check lint type-check test build",
"ci:scan": "pnpm audit --audit-level=moderate && pnpm exec trivy fs --skip-dirs node_modules --exit-code 1 . && pnpm exec gitleaks detect --no-banner --redact",
"ci:commits": "pnpm exec commitlint --from $COMMIT_LINT_FROM --to HEAD --verbose"
}
```
The migration to GitLab then becomes a rewrite of the YAML wrappers (a few dozen lines) and not a re-derivation of the gates — these scripts are platform-agnostic, runnable locally, and serve as the source of truth.
**Caching.** Two cache surfaces, both portable:
- the `pnpm` store, keyed on `pnpm-lock.yaml`;
- the Nx local cache (`.nx/cache`), keyed on the project graph.
The level-2 implementation wires both via the CI vendor's cache action; the level-1 contract is "these two paths must be cached".
**Secrets policy.**
- Secrets live exclusively in CI vendor variables (Gitea → GitLab later). Naming convention: `SCOPE_PURPOSE` (e.g. `BFF_DATABASE_URL`, `OBO_CACHE_ENCRYPTION_KEY`).
- No secret ever in source. `gitleaks` enforces.
- Rotation procedures, key vault, and operator runbooks belong in the future operations / secret-management ADR.
**Container images / deployment.** Explicitly out of scope of this ADR. CI v1 builds and tests; image build and deploy will land with the on-prem infrastructure ADR (phase 3).
### Level 2 — Gitea-specific implementation
**Engine.** Gitea Actions, available since Gitea 1.19. The workflow YAML is GitHub Actions-syntax-compatible, which means most third-party actions (`actions/checkout`, `actions/setup-node`, `pnpm/action-setup`, etc.) work unchanged. This compatibility is also a partial migration hedge: the same workflows can be ported to GitHub Actions with near-zero changes if the org pivots to GitHub instead of GitLab.
**Runners.** Three self-hosted `act_runner` instances on internal infrastructure. The first runner is deployed to validate the pipeline; the second and third are added before the project hits any non-trivial PR volume. Runners are labelled `self-hosted`, `on-prem`, plus capacity labels (`size:default`) for future job differentiation. Runner image baseline: a Debian image (aligned with the WSL development environment) pinned by SHA and rebuilt on a cadence by a security-scheduled job.
**Workflow file structure.**
- `.gitea/workflows/ci.yml` — runs on `pull_request` and `push` to `main`. Hosts the `check`, `scan`, and `commits` jobs.
- `.gitea/workflows/release.yml` — runs on `push` of a `vX.Y.Z` tag. Builds release artefacts. Empty stub in v1; gains content when the on-prem deploy ADR lands.
- `.gitea/workflows/security-scheduled.yml` — runs weekly via `schedule:` cron. Re-runs Trivy and gitleaks on the full tree (not just affected), and triggers Renovate (configuration covered by the security baseline ADR).
Three files; small surface; clear scope per file.
**Workflow shape (illustrative — final lands with the scaffold):**
```yaml
# .gitea/workflows/ci.yml
name: CI
on:
pull_request:
branches: [main]
push:
branches: [main]
jobs:
check:
runs-on: [self-hosted, on-prem]
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with: { fetch-depth: 0 }
- uses: nrwl/nx-set-shas@v4
- uses: pnpm/action-setup@v3
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with: { node-version-file: '.nvmrc', cache: pnpm }
- run: pnpm install --frozen-lockfile
- run: pnpm ci:check
scan:
runs-on: [self-hosted, on-prem]
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: pnpm/action-setup@v3
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with: { node-version-file: '.nvmrc', cache: pnpm }
- run: pnpm install --frozen-lockfile
- run: pnpm ci:scan
commits:
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
runs-on: [self-hosted, on-prem]
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with: { fetch-depth: 0 }
- uses: pnpm/action-setup@v3
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with: { node-version-file: '.nvmrc', cache: pnpm }
- run: pnpm install --frozen-lockfile
- run: COMMIT_LINT_FROM=origin/main pnpm ci:commits
```
This is a sketch, not the final file — the final lands with the scaffold and any iteration on it is not by itself an ADR-worthy change.
**Branch protection (Gitea-side configuration):** `Settings → Branches → Add rule` on `main`:
- Disable force push: yes;
- Disable direct push: yes (only PR merge);
- Required status checks: `check`, `scan`, `commits`, plus future `a11y`, `perf`;
- Require pull request reviews: 0 in v1, raise to 1 when a second contributor joins;
- Require linear history: yes;
- Delete head branches after merge: yes.
### Migration to GitLab — what changes, what doesn't
When the GitLab migration happens (618-month horizon), a new ADR will be written that **supersedes only the level-2 sections** of this ADR. The level-1 decisions stand unchanged. Concretely the migration touches:
- `.gitea/workflows/*.yml``.gitlab-ci.yml` (rewrite — the *gates* are the same, the *DSL* is different). Estimate: 12 days.
- Self-hosted `act_runner` → GitLab Runner. Estimate: 0.51 day.
- Gitea branch protection rules → GitLab merge request approval rules. Same concepts, different UI. Estimate: a few hours.
- Secrets re-creation in GitLab CI/CD variables. Same naming convention, copy values. Estimate: a few hours.
The `package.json` scripts (`ci:check`, `ci:scan`, `ci:commits`), the Nx workspace, the dependency manifest, the entire code surface, and the level-1 decisions are unchanged.
### Consequences
* Good, because the gates are written once and run twice (locally via hooks, in CI as defense). Drift is impossible without breaking both layers.
* Good, because thin YAML keeps CI reproducible locally — anyone can run `pnpm ci:check` to mirror what the runner does.
* Good, because Gitea Actions' GHA-compatible syntax doubles as a hedge: the same YAML can land on GitHub Actions if the org's plans change again.
* Good, because squash-merge produces a Conventional-Commits-only history on `main` — clean changelog generation, predictable release notes, smooth semver inference.
* Good, because branch protection is enforced at the platform level, not at convention level.
* Good, because the migration weight is bounded and transparent: ~35 days of dev/ops work, no code rewrite.
* Bad, because the level-2 sections will need to be rewritten at the GitLab migration. This is the explicit trade-off; it is accepted because the alternatives (going GitLab now without the existing tooling, or staying CI-less until GitLab) cost more.
* Bad, because trunk-based with required-reviewers=0 in v1 leaves the project lead as the sole gatekeeper. Mitigated by mandating green CI (which the lead cannot bypass without rewriting branch protection — a deliberate, audit-visible action).
* Bad, because `act_runner` is younger than GitLab Runner; expect occasional rough edges, especially around large action ecosystems. Mitigated by pinning third-party actions by SHA and cadence-rebuilding the runner image.
* Bad, because deferring signed commits to v2 means the v1 history won't carry attribution-grade signatures. Reasonable for a small team; revisit at GitLab migration.
### Confirmation
* `.gitea/workflows/ci.yml`, `release.yml`, `security-scheduled.yml` exist with the structure above. The `release.yml` may be a stub until the deploy ADR lands.
* `package.json` exposes `ci:check`, `ci:scan`, `ci:commits` scripts. Each is runnable locally and produces the same exit code as the CI job.
* Gitea branch protection on `main` has the rules above; configuration is documented in `docs/operations/branch-protection.md` (created with the scaffold).
* `Trivy`, `gitleaks`, and `commitlint` are in `devDependencies` (or available as actions pinned by SHA — both acceptable).
* At least three `act_runner` instances are registered to the org; their bootstrap and update procedure live in an operations doc.
* CI exits non-zero on any gate failure; no gate is `continue-on-error: true`.
* Runner images are pinned by SHA in the workflows. The `security-scheduled.yml` job rebuilds the runner image weekly and reports to the security audit feed.
* A future migration ADR (GitLab) explicitly references this ADR, supersedes only level 2, and inherits level 1.
## Pros and Cons of the Options
### Branch / merge strategy
#### Trunk-based + squash-merge (chosen)
* Good, because clean linear history on `main`, one squash commit per PR.
* Good, because Conventional Commits + squash-merge yields a directly machine-readable changelog.
* Good, because feature branches stay short-lived — pressure against long-lived branches becomes structural, not cultural.
* Bad, because contributors lose granular commit history on the merged branch (the squash collapses it). Mitigated: the PR retains the full history for review purposes.
#### Trunk-based + rebase-merge
* Good, because preserves individual commits without merge bubbles.
* Bad, because contributors must groom every commit to be CI-clean (each commit must compile and pass tests if we want a clean bisect history). High discipline cost; squash-merge gets most of the benefit at lower cost.
#### Trunk-based + merge commit
* Good, because preserves the full history, including the branch topology.
* Bad, because produces messy merge bubbles on `main`; conflicts with the "linear history" branch protection.
#### GitFlow
* Good, because release branches isolate stabilisation.
* Bad, because heavy for a continuously deployable monorepo; redundant with semver tags on a trunk-based main; introduces the "long-lived `develop` branch" anti-pattern.
### CI engine (level 2)
#### Gitea Actions (chosen)
* Good, because built-in to Gitea, no extra deployment.
* Good, because GitHub Actions syntax means transferable skills and a partial portability hedge.
* Good, because actively developed by the Gitea team.
* Bad, because younger ecosystem than GitLab CI or GitHub Actions proper — expect occasional rough edges.
#### Drone CI
* Good, because mature, lean, opinionated.
* Bad, because separate deployment and operational surface; YAML is Drone-specific (less portable than GHA-compatible Gitea Actions).
#### Concourse / Tekton / Buildkite
* Good, because powerful for complex pipelines.
* Bad, because over-engineered for the v1 scope, and orthogonal to the Gitea/GitLab decision axis.
### Required reviewer count
#### 0 in v1, raise later (chosen)
* Good, because doesn't block solo development.
* Good, because the green-CI requirement still prevents the project lead from merging broken code without effort.
* Bad, because relies on the project lead's discipline (and CI's correctness) for code quality.
#### 1 always
* Good, because rigour.
* Bad, because blocks if there's only one contributor — would force the project lead to merge their own PRs by overriding protection, which is the opposite of the intended behaviour.
### Signed commits
#### Optional in v1, revisited at GitLab migration (chosen)
* Good, because no setup overhead for contributors during a phase where the priority is shipping the structural ADRs and scaffolding.
* Bad, because v1 history carries no attribution-grade signatures. Acceptable: the host (Gitea) records the user identity on each commit.
#### Required in v1
* Good, because rigorous attribution from day one.
* Bad, because every contributor must set up GPG or SSH signing — high friction for early stages.
## More Information
* Gitea Actions: https://docs.gitea.com/usage/actions/overview
* `act_runner`: https://gitea.com/gitea/act_runner
* GitHub Actions reference (compatible with Gitea Actions): https://docs.github.com/actions
* Conventional Commits: https://www.conventionalcommits.org/
* commitlint: https://commitlint.js.org/
* Trivy: https://github.com/aquasecurity/trivy
* gitleaks: https://github.com/gitleaks/gitleaks
* `nrwl/nx-set-shas`: https://github.com/nrwl/nx-set-shas
* Related ADRs: [ADR-0002](0002-adopt-nx-monorepo-apps-preset.md) (Nx workspace + `affected`), [ADR-0007](0007-pre-commit-hooks-and-conventional-commits.md) (local hooks + commitlint config), and the future ADRs for security baseline (Trivy / gitleaks / Renovate config), accessibility baseline (`a11y` gate), performance budgets (`perf` gate), on-prem infrastructure stack (deploy pipeline, runners hosting), and GitLab migration (level-2 supersession).
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@@ -58,3 +58,4 @@ ADRs are listed in numerical order. To slice by topic, filter on the `Tags` colu
| [0012](0012-observability-pino-opentelemetry.md) | Observability — Pino structured logs + OpenTelemetry tracing, W3C Trace Context propagation, stdout + collector | accepted | `observability`, `backend`, `frontend` | 2026-04-29 |
| [0013](0013-audit-trail-separated-postgres-append-only.md) | Audit trail — separated append-only Postgres schema, decoupled from app logs | accepted | `security`, `observability`, `data` | 2026-04-29 |
| [0014](0014-downstream-api-access-obo-pattern.md) | Downstream API access — On-Behalf-Of pattern, unified `DownstreamApiClient`, audience-aware authorization | accepted | `security`, `backend` | 2026-04-29 |
| [0015](0015-cicd-gitea-actions.md) | CI/CD pipeline — Gitea Actions, trunk-based + squash-merge, thin YAML over portable scripts | accepted | `infrastructure`, `process` | 2026-04-30 |