Change-Id: Ie6d077906a4d6e204d4cd1847486dc098de2f8f6
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- title
-
Jenkins Job Builder
Jenkins Job Builder
Jenkins Job Builder is a system for configuring Jenkins jobs using simple YAML files stored in Git.
At a Glance
- Hosts
-
- http://zm*.openstack.org
- Configuration
-
jenkins/jobs/
- Projects
- Bugs
- Resources
Overview
In order to make the process of managing thousands of Jenkins jobs easier, Jenkins Job Builder was designed to take YAML based configurations and convert those into jobs that are injected into Jenkins.
The documentation below describes how the OpenStack Infrastructure team uses the Jenkins Job Builder in our environment.
Configuring Projects
The YAML scripts to make this work are stored in the jenkins/jobs/
directory of
the project-config repository. In this directory you can have four
different types of yaml config files:
- Jenkins Jobs Defaults in
defaults.yaml
. - Jenkins Jobs Macros to give larger config sections meaningful names
in
macros.yaml
. - Project specific configurations in
project_name.yaml
. - Job template configurations. Need a
projects.yaml
file to specify how the templates should be filled out and templates go intemplate_name.yaml
.
YAML Format
Defaults
Example defaults config:
- defaults:
name: global
project-type: freestyle
concurrent: true
wrappers:
- timeout:
timeout: 30
fail: true
- timestamps
logrotate:
daysToKeep: 1
numToKeep: -1
artifactDaysToKeep: -1
artifactNumToKeep: -1
This config starts with the - defaults::
line. This
specifies that this section contains default values rather than job
specifications. In this section we specify a useful set of defaults
including a default description indicating Puppet manages these jobs,
jobs are allowed to run concurrently, and a thirty minute job
timeout.
Macros
Macros exist to give meaningful names to blocks of configuration that can be used in job configs in place of the blocks they name. For example:
- builder:
name: git-prep
builders:
- shell: "/slave_scripts/git-prep.sh"
- builder:
name: docs
builders:
- shell: "/slave_scripts/run-docs.sh"
- publisher:
name: console-log
publishers:
- scp:
site: 'scp-server'
files:
- target: 'logs/$JOB_NAME/$BUILD_NUMBER'
copy-console: true
copy-after-failure: true
In this block of code we define two builder macros and one publisher macro. Each macro has a name and using that name in a job config is equivalent to having the yaml below the name in place of the name in the job config. The next section shows how you can use these macros.
Job Config
Example job config:
- job:
name: example-docs
node: node-label
triggers:
- zuul
builders:
- git-prep
- docs
publishers:
- scp:
site: 'scp-server'
files:
- target: 'dir/ectory'
source: 'build/html/foo'
keep-hierarchy: true
- console-log
Each job specification begins with -job:
. Under this
section you can specify the job details like name, node, etc. Any detail
defined in the defaults section that is not defined under this job will
be included as well. In addition to attribute details you can also
specify how jenkins should perform this job. What trigger methods should
be used, the build steps, jenkins publishing steps and so on. The macros
defined earlier make this easy and simple.
Job Templates
Job templates allow you to specify a job config once with arguments
that are replaced with the values specified in
projects.yaml
. This allows you to reuse job configs across
many projects. First you need a templated job config:
- job-template:
name: '{name}-docs'
triggers:
- zuul
builders:
- git-prep
- docs
publishers:
- scp:
site: 'scp-server'
files:
- target: 'dir/ectory'
source: 'build/html/foo'
keep-hierarchy: true
- console-log
node: '{node}'
- job-group:
name: python-jobs
jobs:
- '{name}-docs'
This takes the previous example-docs
job and templatizes
it. This will allow us to easily create example1-docs
and
example2-docs
jobs. Each job template begins with
- job-template:
and the job specification is identical to
the previous one, but we have introduced variable arguments. In this
case {name}
is a variable value that will be replaced. The
values for name will be defined in the projects.yaml
file.
The - job-group:
section is not strictly necessary but
allows you to group many job templates with the same variable arguments
under one name.
The projects.yaml
pulls all of the magic together. It
specifies the arguments to and instantiates the job templates as real
jobs. For example:
- project:
name: example1
node: bare-trusty
jobs:
- python-jobs
- project:
name: example2
node: bare-centos6
jobs:
- {name}-docs
Each project using templated jobs should have its own
- project:
section. Under this sections there should be a
jobs:
section with a list of job templates or job groups to
be used by this project. Other values under the - project:
section define the arguments to the templates lised under
jobs:
. In this case we are giving the docs template
name
and node
values.
Notice that example1 makes use of the job group and example2 makes use of the job template.
Zuul
In our environment, we no longer use Jenkins to execute jobs. Zuul itself, via Ansible, runs the actual workload. Zuul reads JJB config files in order to define its jobs, so, aside from the detail of not actually using Jenkins or creating any jobs in it, the use of JJB to configure jobs in Zuul is the same.