We have observed that the Jenkins Pipeline Workspace project folder getting deleted. We have not configured any cleanup plugin for this as well as not configured any cleanup module in the pipeline.
This behavior is random and it's deleting Old as well as new jobs.
We can see the workspace deletion traces in /var/lib/jenkins/logs/tasks under Workspace clean-up.log. Please let me know if anybody is facing the same issue and how to fix this issue? Our Jenkins version is 2.289.2
Try disabling the workspace cleanup. There are two ways to achieve this. I was facing the same issue and I've just tried the first approach and monitoring the workspaces to see if this works.
Add -Dhudson.model.WorkspaceCleanupThread.disabled=true to the Jenkins system properties.
If Jenkins is running through terminal:
java -Dhudson.model.WorkspaceCleanupThread.disabled=true -jar jenkins.war
If Jenkins is running as a Linux service:
Stop Jenkins (service jenkins stop). You will need root privileges.
Edit the /etc/defaults/jenkins file.
Add an additional line for the JAVA_ARGS or add to it if it already exists.
JAVA_ARGS="-Dhudson.model.WorkspaceCleanupThread.disabled=true"
Start Jenkins (service jenkins start).
Disable or uninstall the Workspace Cleanup plugin. (I haven't tried this)
I am trying to use the
Build after other projects are built
feature of Jenkins. I am using Jenkins ver 2.73.2 and whenever I go to
Configure job -> Build Triggers
and specify my projects, the configuration does not get saved. There is no save button so when I navigate to another page the configuration gets lost.
I am using JenkinsFile in all projects to build it so this is the first thing I am doing from the UI.
Couldn't find a proper solution to this issue anywhere.
Try to restart your jenkins.
Possibly you my have harmed you jenkins folder in program files.
Please try to upgrade your jenkins
Recently our organization decided to move from using Maven/Cargo-plugin to deploy our applications to using Puppet. We still have all of our builds and test jobs in Jenkins. So what I'm trying to figure out is how do I trigger a specific Jenkins job based on a specific line being changed in a puppet manifest? We are using a manifest that has all of our deployed components and their versions. If I change the version of one of the components, I want a specific test job to be triggered based on which component was changed. And eventually I will want to rollback the puppet change if the test fails. Has anyone done something related?
I haven't used it for your specific use case, but for a "pull" scenario where you want to monitor the contents of the Puppet manifest for changes, the Jenkins FSTrigger plugin should work for you as long as your Jenkins job can access the Puppet manifest file. You can set it up to look for changes in the entire file content, or just in a particular part of the contents.
If you want a "push" scenario to trigger a build as soon as the Puppet manifest is changed, you could write a script that runs after the changes are saved, checks which components have been changed, and triggers a build via the Jenkins CLI.
I'm running Jenkins version 1.466.12.1 (Jenkins Enterprise 12.11). With a new job I'm trying to add a post-build action to build other projects, but the expect radio buttons for trigger options isn't there.
I have jobs that were already created that have the following options:
Trigger only if build succeeds
Trigger even if the build is unstable
Trigger even if the build fails
Those options don't exist if I create a new job. If I copy a job, then those options exist. I don't recall the version number of the previous Jenkins Enterprise, but it was working then.
I also have a non-enterprise version of Jenkins running on my desktop computer and those Trigger options don't exist on version 1.483.
Did something change with this post-build action? Maybe I forgot a fancy/useful plugin?
JENKINS-16444 was fixed in Jenkins 1.500. The workaround should be to add the build trigger, save the configuration, then go back to the configuration page again and these options should be visible—the problem applies only when first adding the trigger.
I am currently using Jenkins on my development PC. I installed it on my development PC, because I had limited knowledge on this tool; so I tested on it in my development PC. Now, I feel comfortable with Jenkins as my long term "partner" in the build process and would like to "move" this Jenkins to a dedicated server.
Before this I have done few builds and have the artifacts archived from each build. In particular, the build number is very important to me for version control.
How can I export all the Jenkins information from my current PC to my new server?
Following the Jenkins wiki, you'll have to:
Install a fresh Jenkins instance on the new server
Be sure the old and the new Jenkins instances are stopped
Archive all the content of the JENKINS_HOME of the old Jenkins instance
Extract the archive into the new JENKINS_HOME directory
Do not forget to change the owner of the new Jenkins files : chown -R jenkins:jenkins $JENKINS_HOME
Launch the new Jenkins instance
Do not forget to change documentation/links to your new instance of Jenkins :)
JENKINS_HOME is by default located in ~/.jenkins on a Linux installation, yet to exactly find where it is located, go on the http://your_jenkins_url/configure page and check the value of the first parameter: Home directory; this is the JENKINS_HOME.
In case your JENKINS_HOME directory is too large to copy, and all you need is to set up same jobs, Jenkins Plugins and Jenkins configurations (and don't need old Job artifacts and reports), then you can use the ThinBackup Plugin:
Install ThinBackup on both the source and the target Jenkins servers
Configure the backup directory on both (in Manage Jenkins → ThinBackup → Settings)
On the source Jenkins, go to ThinBackup → Backup Now
Copy from Jenkins source backup directory to the Jenkins target backup directory
On the target Jenkins, go to ThinBackup → Restore, and then restart the Jenkins service.
If some plugins or jobs are missing, copy the backup content directly to the target JENKINS_HOME.
If you had user authentication on the source Jenkins, and now locked out on the target Jenkins, then edit Jenkins config.xml, set <useSecurity> to false, and restart Jenkins.
This worked for me to move from Ubuntu 12.04 (Jenkins ver. 1.628) to Ubuntu 16.04 (Jenkins ver. 1.651.2). I first installed Jenkins from the repositories.
Stop both Jenkins servers
Copy JENKINS_HOME (e.g. /var/lib/jenkins) from the old server to the new one. From a console in the new server:
rsync -av username#old-server-IP:/var/lib/jenkins/ /var/lib/jenkins/
Start your new Jenkins server
You might not need this, but I had to
Manage Jenkins and Reload Configuration from Disk.
Disconnect and connect all the nodes again.
Check that in the Configure System > Jenkins Location, the Jenkins URL is correctly assigned to the new Jenkins server.
Jenkins Server Automation:
Step 1:
Set up a repository to store the Jenkins home (jobs, configurations, plugins, etc.) in a GitLab local or on GitHub private repository and keep it updated regularly by pushing any new changes to Jenkins jobs, plugins, etc.
Step 2:
Configure a Puppet host-group/role for Jenkins that can be used to spin up new Jenkins servers. Do all the basic configuration in a Puppet recipe and make sure it installs the latest version of Jenkins and sets up a separate directory/mount for JENKINS_HOME.
Step 3:
Spin up a new machine using the Jenkins-puppet configuration above. When everything is installed, grab/clone the Jenkins configuration from the Git repository to the Jenkins home direcotry and restart Jenkins.
Step 4:
Go to the Jenkins URL, Manage Jenkins → Manage Plugins and update all the plugins that require an update.
Done
You can use Docker Swarm or Kubernetes to auto-scale the slave nodes.
Sometimes we may not have access to a Jenkins machine to copy a folder directly into another Jenkins instance. So I wrote a menu driven utility which uses Jenkins REST API calls to install plugins and jobs from one Jenkins instance to another.
For plugin migration:
GET request: {SOURCE_JENKINS_SERVER}/pluginManager/api/json?depth=1 will get you the list of plugins installed with their version.
You can send a POST request with the following parameters to install these plugins.
final_url=`{DESTINATION_JENKINS_SERVER}/pluginManager/installNecessaryPlugins`
data=`<jenkins><install plugin="{PLUGIN_NAME}#latest"/></jenkins>` (where, latest will fetch the latest version of the plugin_name)
auth=`(destination_jenkins_username, destination_jenkins_password)`
header=`{crumb_field:crumb_value,"Content-Type":"application/xml”}` (where crumb_field=Jenkins-Crumb and get crumb value using API call {DESTINATION_JENKINS_SERVER}/crumbIssuer/api/json
For job migration:
You can get the list of jobs installed on {SOURCE_JENKINS_URL} using a REST call, {SOURCE_JENKINS_URL}/view/All/api/json
Then you can get each job config.xml file from the jobs on {SOURCE_JENKINS_URL} using the job URL {SOURCE_JENKINS_URL}/job/{JOB_NAME}.
Use this config.xml file to POST the content of the XML file on {DESTINATION_JENKINS_URL} and that will create a job on {DESTINATION_JENKINS_URL}.
I have created a menu-driven utility in Python which asks the user to start plugin or Jenkins migration and uses Jenkins REST API calls to do it.
You can refer the JenkinsMigration.docx from this URL
jenkinsjenkinsmigrationjenkinsrestapi
Let us say we are migrating Jenkins LTS from PC1 to PC2 (irrispective of LTS version is same of upgraded).
It is easy to use ThinBackUp Plugin for migration or Upgrade of Jenkins version.
Step1: Prepare PC1 for migration
Manage Jenkins -> ThinbackUp -> Setting
Select correct options and directory for backup
If you need a job history and artifacts need to be added then please select 'Back build results' option as well.
Go back click on Backup Now.
Note: This Thinbackup will also take Plugin Backup which is optional.
Check the ThinbackUp folder must have a folder with current date and timestamp.
(wait for couple of minutes it might take some time.)
You are ready with your back, .zip it and copy to PARTICULAR (which will be 'Backup directory') directory in PC2.
Unzip ThinbackUp zipped folder.
Stop Jenkins Service in PC1.
Step2: Install Jenkins (Install using .war file or Paste archived version) in PC2.
Create Jenkins Service using command sc create <Jenkins_PC2Servicename> binPath="<Path_to_Jenkinsexe>/jenkins.exe"
Modify JENKINS_HOME/jenkins.xml if needed in PC2.
Run windows service <Jenkins_PC2Servicename> in PC2
Manage Jenkins -> ThinbackUp -> Setting
Make sure that you PARTICULAR path from step1 as Backup Directory in ThinBackup settings.
ThinbackUp -> Restore will give you a Dropdown list, choose a right backup (identify with date and timestamp).
Wait for some minutes and you have latest backup configurations including jobs history and plugins in PC2.
In case if there are additional changes needed in JENKINS_HOME/Jenkins.xml (coming from PC1 ThinbackUp which is not needed) then this modification need to do manually.
NOTE: If you are using Database setting of SCM in your Jenkins jobs then you need to take extra care as all SCM plugins do not support to carry Database settings with the help of ThinbackUp plugin.
e.g. If you are using PTC Integrity SCM Plugin, and some Jenkins jobs are using DB using Integrity, then it will create a directory JENKINS_Home/IntegritySCM, ThinbackUp will not include this DB while taking backup.
Solution: Directly Copy this JENKINS_Home/IntegritySCM folder from PC1 to PC2.