I use the Jenkins Office 365 Connector and it sends messages of the build status to MS Teams as expected.
Now I want to add the value of a Jenkins job parameter to the message.
My usecase: I use a single job to deploy several services. I want to know in the message which service was deployed.
Notification from Dev_Deploy
Latest status of build #43
Status
Build Success
Remarks
Started by user XXX
Service
service-abc
I've seen in the Advanced configuration that there are Macros and Fact Definitions. Unfortunately there is no documentation in the plugin docs. Perhaps this configuration could help?
There is no option to customize the message in the jenkins GUI.
But a custom message can be specified in the pipeline script:
steps {
// some instructions here
office365ConnectorSend webhookUrl: 'https://outlook.office.com/webhook/123456...',
message: 'Application has been [deployed](https://uat.green.biz)',
status: 'Success',
color: '#0000FF'
}
Hint: The status color is not automatically set. So you have to set the color depending on the status.
Official documentation
In order to get the repository data, you can follow instructions to create a checkout snippet through the Jenkins UI in the configuration.
Once you input the correct URL, browser, and so on, you may invoke the office365ConnectorSend plugin. You may adapt the card sent by passing the factDefinitions attribute an array of [name,template] objects as outlined in Jenkins Docs. You can find an example in the open-source code readme.
there are some defaulted add-ons, but this should set you on the correct path.
Here is an example of my office365ConnectorSend:
office365ConnectorSend (
webhookUrl: "${webhookURL}",
color: "${currentBuild.currentResult} == 'SUCCESS' ? '00ff00' : 'ff0000'",
factDefinitions:[
[ name: "Commit Message", template: "${commit_message}"],
[ name: "Pipeline Duration", template: "${currentBuild.durationString.minus(' and counting')}"]
]
)
Related
What i did:
I managed to send Notifications with Status of every Build to my private Slack Channel. So i configured my Jenkins as well as my Slack app.
What i want to do:
Sending messages to other users private Channels.
What i have tried:
I added channels to my Jenkinsfile and checked them in the Slack App of Jenkins and it wasn't successful. I think i have to create sth like a Bot, which is in the specific Channel i want to send a message to. Very sure that Jenkins can't see the channel because its a private channel of another person(obviously) and is not able to find it. Couldn't find a solution for this Problem.
Thanks a lot for your help, i think i wasted way to much time trying to find an answer for that.
I setup our build pipeline to send Slack notifications to commit authors. The biggest challenge is mapping to the Slack username. I had every developer on the team change their git user.name to match their Slack Display name. This is the most straight-forward way I know to make this work.
git config --global user.name "Mona Lisa" where "Mona Lisa" is the Slack display name of the user.
In the Jenkins pipeline, I used env.GIT_COMMIT_AUTHOR to get this value back.
Note, that the environment variable provides the commit author at the HEAD of whatever was checked out. For pull requests in a multi-branch pipeline, if the PR is not a fast forward, the commit is what the merge would produce, resulting in an author of 'Jenkins'. So, in that case, you would need the author from HEAD~1
In my experience sending Slack messages to a private channel requires OAuth. I have only succeeded sending to private channels via slackSend() when Jenkins is added to Slack as a bot and invited to the channel.
Here's an example pipeline that works:
#!/usr/bin/env groovy
pipeline {
agent {
node {
label "master"
}
}
stages {
stage('Send Notification') {
steps {
script {
def color = "${params.MESSAGE_STATUS}" == "GOOD"? "good" : "warning"
slackSend(color: "${color}", message: "${params.MESSAGE}", channel: "${params.CHANNEL}")
}
}
}
}
parameters {
string(name: 'MESSAGE', defaultValue: 'Hello')
string(name: 'CHANNEL', defaultValue: '#test_private')
choice(name: 'MESSAGE_STATUS', choices: ['GOOD', 'WARNING'], description: '')
}
}
Sending via bots etc. hasn't been successful as Slack reports the channel as non-existant.
According to the main Jenkins-Slack documentation you have to configure the Jenkins app for slack and there you specify a single channel where the plugin can post. Now in my case, I need to post to multiple channels and users from a Jenkins server and it is very cumbersome to manage multiple auth tokens. Is there a way to have a single token that would work with all the channels and users? Are there other approaches? I see that the Jenkins plugin has a bot checkbox, but there is almost no documentation on how to make this work.
You can add channel: '#CHANNEL_NAME:
More info: https://jenkins.io/doc/pipeline/steps/slack/
post {
success {
slackSend (channel: '#ch1', color: '#00FF00', message: "SUCCESSFUL: Job '${env.JOB_NAME} [${env.BUILD_NUMBER}]' (${env.BUILD_URL})")
}
failure {
slackSend (channel: '#ch1', color: '#FF0000', message: "FAILED: Job '${env.JOB_NAME} [${env.BUILD_NUMBER}]' (${env.BUILD_URL})")
}
}
I just implemented the solution for my project channels.
There is an Advanced button available in the Post build actions -> Slack notification of a Job.
You can give the base URL and token along with the channel name you want to send the notifications to.
If one has enough permissions to their organization's slack account, one can create an app at https://api.slack.com/apps?new_app=1 which acts as a bot.
Once this bot is installed to workspace [ https://api.slack.com/apps/<org-id>/install-on-team? ] and was given permission to post to targeted channels
( just send a message /invite #<bot-name> in the channel and it will have permissions to post to that channel]. Not sure how to do it for users, though.
Apart from that, slackSend supports sending to multiple channels in a single go.
Multiple channels may be provided as a comma, semicolon, or space delimited string.
https://jenkins.io/doc/pipeline/steps/slack/
For ex., any one of the following are valid:
channel: "#ch-1,#ch-2,#ch-3"
(OR)
channel: "#ch-1;#ch-2;#ch-3"
(OR)
channel: "#ch-1 #ch-2 #ch-3"
Full command may be as:
slackSend (channel: '#ch1 #ch2 #ch3', color: '#00FF00', message: "SUCCESSFUL: Job '${env.JOB_NAME} [${env.BUILD_NUMBER}]' (${env.BUILD_URL})")
I can find tons of information in the internet about integrating HipChat in a scripted Jenkins pipeline. So that works fine for me. But how can I post a status message to HipChat that contains an element to trigger an action back in Jenkins?
Currently I have input steps in Jenkins to approve a deployment to the next stage, e.g. PROD.
I also send a HipChat message if approval is needed which contains a link to JENKINS. That looks like this:
hipchatSend color: "${color}", notify: true, room: "Jenkins Team FooBar", message: "${env.JOB_NAME}#${env.BUILD_NUMBER}: ${message}", textFormat: true
/************** PROD **************/
stage ('Approval for PROD') {
try {
timeout(time: approvalTime, unit: approvalTimeUnit) {
input 'Do you approve the deployment to PROD?'
}
} catch (Exception ex) {
finishBuild = true
}
}
// Stop build if flag was set
if (finishBuild)
return
How can I define actions in that hipChat message? Is there a way that I can approve the next build step within HipChat?
I have not found a tutorial or documentation on how to define other kinds of hipchat messages with this plugin.
I could send a POST request to JENKINS if the message would contain standard HTML. Any ideas on how to do that?
How would it work with cards?
Thanks in advance.
Is it possible to access information about committers and/or culprits of a Jenkins workflow job when checking out from one or more SCMs (either via checkout() or other SCM steps like git/svn)?
The intention is to use that information to notify committers and/or culprits about the job status, for example in a mail step.
A small example of a workflow definition:
node {
// checkout from one or more SCMs, e.g.
git url: '<URL>'
checkout([$class:...])
...
// how can we know about committers or culprits at this point?
$committers = ??
// send a mail to committers or culprits
mail to: '$committers', subject: 'JENKINS', body: '<information about the job status>'
}
How could this be adapted to get a collection of the committers after running the SCM steps?
Edit:
I am currently working with Jenkins version 1.596.2 and Workflow: Aggregator version 1.6 and it seems this is an open issue in JENKINS-24141
This is now possible using the email-ext plugin.
def to = emailextrecipients([[$class: 'CulpritsRecipientProvider'],
[$class: 'DevelopersRecipientProvider'],
[$class: 'RequesterRecipientProvider']])
if (to != null && !to.isEmpty()) {
mail to: to, subject: "JENKINS", body: "See ${env.BUILD_URL}"
}
However, if you just want to send an email on failures, you may want to use Mailer (based on the email-ext pipeline examples):
step([$class: 'Mailer',
notifyEveryUnstableBuild: true,
recipients: emailextrecipients([[$class: 'CulpritsRecipientProvider'],
[$class: 'RequesterRecipientProvider']])])
Using groovy within a pipeline script:
#NonCPS // Necessary to allow .each to work.
def changelist() {
def changes = ""
currentBuild.changeSets.each { set ->
set.each { entry ->
changes += "${entry.commitId} by ${entry.author.fullName}\n"
}
}
changes
}
similar to the answer from #szym, but without the #NonCPS required:
def authors = currentBuild.changeSets.collectMany { it.toList().collect { it.author } }.unique()
As you found, pending JENKINS-24141 this is not supported. Changes to Jenkins core are required.
You can get the xml info for a job in which you will find the name of the person who committed the change along with the commit messages.
http://<Jenkins URL>:<Port Number>/job/<Jobname>/<BuildNumber>/api/xml?
Give this a go in your browser. Search for "user".
You can dump this information in a text file to process.
It seems that this feature was implemented inside the email-ext plugin but the author forgot to document the way we are supposed to use this.
Please check https://issues.jenkins-ci.org/browse/JENKINS-34763 -- and add a comment there, asking for an example. I already did.
You can fetch committers email :
committerEmail = sh (
script: 'git --no-pager show -s --format=\'%ae\'',
returnStdout: true
).trim()
and send:
emailext body: 'text you choose', subject: 'subject you choose', recipientProviders: [[$class: 'DevelopersRecipientProvider']], to: committerEmail
taken from : https://medium.com/#dilunika/find-the-git-commit-user-jenkins-pipeline-b6790613f8b5
In the emailext plugin you can provide culprits, developers, requestor etc in the recipientProviders directly.
emailext body: '',
recipientProviders: [culprits(),
developers(),
brokenBuildSuspects(),
brokenTestsSuspects(),
requestor()],
subject: ''
Description
Culprits: Sends email to the list of users who committed a change since the last non-broken build till now. This list at least always include people who made changes in this build, but if the previous build was a failure it also includes the culprit list from there.
Developers: Sends email to all the people who caused a change in the change set.
Broken Build suspects: Sends email to the list of users suspected of causing the build to begin failing.
Broken Test suspects: Sends email to the list of users suspected of causing a unit test to begin failing. This list includes committers and requestors of the build where the test began to fail, and those for any consecutive failed builds prior to the build in which the test began to fail.
Source: Jenkins Pipeline Syntax - Snippet Generator
If you want to notify the culprits who broke the build, You do not need to any checks, Use email plugin in jenkins. This plugin gives you option to send mails to commiter between past good build and current broken build.
If you are using "Editable email notifier plugin" You get option of send mail to culprit.
If you are using email plugin then you get the option "Send separate e-mails to individuals who broke the build".
I am using gitlab and I want to fire a system hook whenever a project is created. I have added the hook with the following jenkins api call(I am using a jenkins plugin that is why the api looks different).
http://myip:8081/buildByToken/buildWithParameters?job=testHook&token=hook
this is starting the jenkins job but I am unable to get the post data sent by the hook in my jenkins job.
the following is an example of what gitlab sends as post data with this hook.
{
"created_at": "2012-07-21T07:30:54Z",
"event_name": "project_create",
"name": "StoreCloud",
"owner_email": "johnsmith#gmail.com",
"owner_name": "John Smith",
"path": "stormcloud",
"path_with_namespace": "jsmith/stormcloud",
"project_id": 74,
"project_visibility": "private",
}
is there a way to retrieve post data in jenkins that is sent with the webook?
There is a plugin specific for Jenkins and Gitlab integration.
https://github.com/elvanja/jenkins-gitlab-hook-plugin#build-now-hook
By using http://your-jenkins-server.com/gitlab/build_now, you can have access to all payload variables, like the examples in documentation. Your build needs to be parameterized, and all variables you want to have access need to be declared. Then, you will have a env variable available, like ${USER_NAME}
However, if you want to use /gitlab/notify_commit, which has a lot of more cool possibilities, payload data will not work, because of the gap between the trigger and the build (i am talking about the poll process).
I believe that your /buildByToken/buildWithParameters, since its a build_now like, will have the payload. Using GitLabHookPlugin, you will have the parameters for sure.
Marco