groovy emoji show up as strange square - jenkins

I'm using jenkins dsl jobs to process a job, however, my emoji shows up in the job configure script section as a square like
String a = ''
my groovy job
pipelineJob("title") {
description("description")
definition {
cps {
script('''
String a = '💡'
''')
}
}
anyone knows how to fix it ?
Thanks

Related

Jenkins Job DSL - can't load parmeters from file

DSL job:
#!groovy
def file = readFileFromWorkspace('params.properties').trim()
job('app-adm') {
label("adm")
println("#" + file + "#")
parameters{
file
}
steps
{
shell(readFileFromWorkspace('script-adm.sh'))
}
}
job('app-tst-mt')
{
parameters
{
booleanParam('FLAG', true)
}
steps
{
shell(readFileFromWorkspace('script-tst-mt.sh'))
}
}
params.properties:
choiceParam('OPTION', ['option 1 (default)', 'option 2', 'option 3'])
I've tried:
Use files as input to Jenkins JobDSL
adding through single variable like x=<param> and parameteres { x }
different formats
Nothing is working, through println inside job, I can clearly see that there is string that I want to put in parameters, but when doing so it dosen't register it and I don't get any params.
Okey, the answer is stupidly obvious but if anybody has same problem just make a shell job previous to DSL job in Jenkins build.
In this shell job you can easily modify files in workspace, so place there a whole dsl job (groovy script), and just replace parts of text with sed or envsubst.

Execute a stage if environment variable contains specific substring

I have a jenkins declarative pipeline which I am interested to be able to perform a stage only if a specific environment variable contains a specific substring(not fully equals to it, just contains it).
Does anyone got any idea on how can I implement it(maybe using the when condition if possible).
Thanks in advance,
Alon
As you mentioned, in declarative pipeline you can use the when directive to establish a condition in which the stage will be executed.
Among the built in condition options like triggeredBy,branch and tag there is the generic expression option, which allows you to run any groovy code and calculate the relevant Boolean value according to your needs.
So for your case for example you can just use the groovy contains methods to achieve what you want, something like:
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Conditional Stage') {
when {
expression { return env.MyParamter.contains('MySubstring') }
}
steps {
echo "Running the conditional stage"
}
}
}
}

Jenkins pipelineJob DSL not interpreting variables in pipeline script

I'm trying to generate Jenkins pipelines using the pipelineJob function in the jobDSL pluging, but cannot pass parameters from the DSL to the pipeline script. I have several projects that use what is essentially the same Jenkinsfile, with differences only in a few steps. I'm trying to use the JobDSL plugin to generate these pipelines on the fly, with the values I want changed in them interpreted to match the parameters to the DSL.
I've tried just about every combination of string interpretation that I can in the pipeline script, as well as in the DSL, but cannot get Jenkins/groovy to interpret variables in the pipeline script.
I'm calling the job DSL in a pipeline step:
def projectName = "myProject"
def envs = ['DEV','QA','UAT']
def repositoryURL = 'myrepo.com'
jobDsl targets: ['jobs/*.groovy'].join('\n'),
additionalParameters: [
project: projectName,
environments: envs,
repository: repositoryURL
],
removedJobAction: 'DELETE',
removedViewAction: 'DELETE'
The DSL is as follows:
pipelineJob("${project} pipeline") {
displayName('Pipeline')
definition {
cps {
script(readFileFromWorkspace(pipeline.groovy))
}
}
}
pipeline.groovy:
pipeline {
agent any
environment {
REPO = repository
}
parameters {
choice name: "ENVIRONMENT", choices: environments
}
stages {
stage('Deploy') {
steps {
echo "Deploying ${env.REPO} to ${params.ENVIRONMENT}..."
}
}
}
}
The variables that I pass in additionalParameters are interpreted in the jobDSL script; a pipeline with the correct name does get generated. The problem is that the variables are not passed to the pipeline script read from the workspace - the Jenkins configuration for the generated pipeline looks exactly the same as the file, without any interpretation on the variables.
I've made a number of attempts at getting the string to interpret, including a lot of variations of "${environments}", ${environments}, $environments, \$environments...I can't find any that work. I've also tried reading the file as a gstringImpl:
script("${readFileFromWorkspace(pipeline.groovy)}")
Does anyone have any ideas as to how I can make variables propagate down to the pipeline script? I know that I could just use a for loop to do string.replaceAll() on the script text, but that seems cumbersome; there's got to be a better way.
I've come up with a way to make this work. It's not what I'd prefer, which is having the string contents of the file implicitly interpreted during job creation, but it does work; it just adds an extra step.
import groovy.text.SimpleTemplateEngine
def fileContents = readFileFromWorkspace "pipeline.groovy"
def engine = new SimpleTemplateEngine()
template = engine.createTemplate(fileContents).make(binding.getVariables()).toString()
pipelineJob("${project} pipeline") {
displayName('Pipeline')
definition {
cps {
script(template)
}
}
}
This reads a file from your workspace, then uses it as a template with the binding variables. The other changes needed to make this work are escaping any variables used in your Jenkinsfile script, like \${VARIABLE} so that they are expanded at runtime, not at the time you build the job. Any variables you want to be expanded at job creation should be referenced as ${VARIABLE}.
You could achieve what you're trying to do by defining environment variables in the pipelineJob and then using those variables in your pipeline.
They are a bit limited because environment variables are strings, but it should work for basic stuff
Ex.:
//job-dsl
pipelineJob('example') {
environmentVariables {
// these vars could be specified by parameters of this job
env('repository', 'blah')
env('environments', "a,b,c"]) //comma separated string
}
displayName('Pipeline')
definition {
cps {
script(readFileFromWorkspace(pipeline.groovy))
}
}
}
}
And then in the pipeline:
//pipeline.groovy
pipeline {
agent any
environment {
REPO = env.repository
}
parameters {
choice name: "ENVIRONMENT", choices: env.environments.split(',')
//note the need to split the comma separated string above
}
}
You need to use the complete job name as a variable without the quotes. E.g., if JOBNAME is a parameter containing the entire job name:
pipelineJob(JOBNAME) {
displayName('Pipeline')
definition {
cps {
script(readFileFromWorkspace(pipeline.groovy))
}
}
}

How can I parameterize Jenkinsfile jobs

I have Jenkins Pipeline jobs, where the only difference between the jobs is a parameter, a single "name" value, I could even use the multibranch job name (though not what it's passing as JOB_NAME which is the BRANCH name, sadly none of the envs look suitable without parsing). It would be great if I could set this outiside of the Jenkinsfile, since then I could reuse the same jenkinsfile for all the various jobs.
Add this to your Jenkinsfile:
properties([
parameters([
string(name: 'myParam', defaultValue: '')
])
])
Then, once the build has run once, you will see the "build with parameters" button on the job UI.
There you can input the parameter value you want.
In the pipeline script you can reference it with params.myParam
Basically you need to create a jenkins shared library example name myCoolLib and have a full declarative pipeline in one file under vars, let say you call the file myFancyPipeline.groovy.
Wanted to write my examples but actually I see the docs are quite nice, so I'll copy from there. First the myFancyPipeline.groovy
def call(int buildNumber) {
if (buildNumber % 2 == 0) {
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Even Stage') {
steps {
echo "The build number is even"
}
}
}
}
} else {
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Odd Stage') {
steps {
echo "The build number is odd"
}
}
}
}
}
}
and then aJenkinsfile that uses it (now has 2 lines)
#Library('myCoolLib') _
evenOrOdd(currentBuild.getNumber())
Obviously parameter here is of type int, but it can be any number of parameters of any type.
I use this approach and have one of the groovy scripts that has 3 parameters (2 Strings and an int) and have 15-20 Jenkinsfiles that use that script via shared library and it's perfect. Motivation is of course one of the most basic rules in any programming (not a quote but goes something like): If you have "same code" at 2 different places, something is not right.
There is an option This project is parameterized in your pipeline job configuration. Write variable name and a default value if you wish. In pipeline access this variable with env.variable_name

Conditional loops in Job DSL

I'm taking the build type i.e either Maven Job or Freestyle job as an input parameter (using the build parameterized plugin) and based on the input condition create the corresponding Job
My input parameter: "maven" (to create Maven job) , else block for freestyle Job.
if(params[build_type]=="maven"){
mavenJob('example') {
using(template_job)
scm {
svn {
location(svn_url)
}
}
}
}
freeStyleJob('example') {
using(template_job)
scm {
svn {
location(svn_url)
}
}
}
I'm facing the following error message and I'm very new to groovy so please excuse. Looking forward for any suggestions.Thanks.
Processing provided DSL script ERROR: (script, line 1) No such
property: params for class: script
The Job DSL script inherits the build parameters as variables in your Job DSL. So if you have a parameter named build_type, you can use it as a variable.
if (build_type == "maven") {
mavenJob('example') {
using(template_job)
scm {
svn {
location(svn_url)
}
}
}
}
See: User Power Moves: Parameterized Seed Job

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