--- slug: /1202/plan displayed_sidebar: europa --- # It all starts with a plan A CI/CD pipeline declared in Dagger starts with a plan, specifically `dagger.#Plan` This plan is the entrypoint for everything that runs within a pipeline. The simplest plan will usually: - interact with the client filesystem to read (e.g. source code) or write files (e.g. build output) - read environment variables - declare a few actions, e.g. deps, test & build This is our **Getting Started** example app plan structure: ```cue file=../tests/core-concepts/plan/structure.cue.fragment ``` When the above plan gets executed via `dagger do build`, it produces the following output: ```shell [✔] client.filesystem.".".read 0.0s [✔] actions.deps 1.1s [✔] actions.test.script 0.0s [✔] actions.test 0.0s [✔] actions.build.run.script 0.0s [✔] actions.build.run 0.0s [✔] actions.build.contents 0.0s [✔] client.filesystem.build.write 0.1s ``` Since these actions have run before, they are cached and take less than 1 second to complete. While the names used for the actions above - `deps`, `test` & `build` - are short & descriptive, any other names would have worked. Put differently, action naming does not affect plan execution. In the example above, the `deps` action is an instance of the docker package build definition. This is written as `deps: docker.#Build` Default definition configuration - `docker.#Build` in this case - can be modified via curly brackets, e.g. ```cue deps: docker.#Build & { // ... } ``` We can build complex pipelines efficiently by referencing any definition, from any package in our actions. This is one of the fundamental concepts that makes Dagger a powerful language for CI/CD. Before we can use a package in a plan, we need to declare it at the top of the pipeline configuration, like this: ```cue import ( "universe.dagger.io/docker" ) ``` Since we are using the plan definition from the dagger package - `dagger.#Plan` - we also need to declare it at the top of the pipeline configuration: ```cue import ( "dagger.io/dagger" "universe.dagger.io/docker" ) ``` :::tip Now that we understand the basics of a Dagger plan, we are ready to learn more about how to interact with the client environment. This will enable us to configure plans just-in-time, save build artefacts, and perform other interactions with the environment within which Dagger runs. :::