I am new to Jenkins. I have master and slave configuration done and I have installed Jenkins on my master and want to run my ranorex test on my slave machine. All files needed for running ranorex scripts are present on my slave. When the job from the master runs, it gives error
[2019/11/18 17:04:51.686][Debug ][Logger]: Console logger starting.
[2019/11/18 17:04:51.845][Failure][TestSuite]: This operation requires an interactive window station
[2019/11/18 17:04:51.858][Debug ][Logger]: Console logger stopping.
Build step 'Execute Windows batch command' marked build as failure
Finished: FAILURE
i tried workarounds like going to Jenkins serve and selection option of user interaction.
If i only have bat file on slave of copying one folder to another and if i trigger job from master, it works. So master slave configuration does not have issue. Issue is running Ranorex GUI Test on Slave.
Jenkins needs to be running as an application not a service (which is default). Services cannot show anything with a GUI nor interact with anything with a GUI.
Disable the Jenkins service
Run Jenkins via Command Line java -jar jenkins.war
For a more detailed guide, check out the Infrastructure section of the Ranorex Jenkins integration blog.
Related
how can we tell Jenkins to download and run JMeter tests on a remote system rather than from the Jenkins server itself?
My requirement is to create a job in Jenkins to download the latest code from a repo to another system where JMeter is installed and run the JMeter tests on that remote system rather than from Jenkins server itself? I can trigger the tests from Jenkins server itself but unable to connect to remote server and download/trigger the server.
You need to get familiarized with the concept of Jenkins Distributed Builds, it's enough to start Jenkins agent proces on the "remote system" and bind your job to execute on that agent instead of Jenkins master.
With regards to tracking changes in the remote repo check out Generic Webhook Trigger and How to Integrate Your GitHub Repository to Your Jenkins Project articles
We got a requirement to implement CICD using Jenkins.
Here, Jenkins is running in windows machine and application server running in linux machine and build activity should happen in Linux system. So, We are connecting to linux machine using Jenkins's SSH plugin and executing jobs.
I have created list of freestyle jobs to checkout code from CVS, cleanup activity, Build , stop server, start server, Run Junit, run sonar. all these jobs are chained using 'build other projects' option in post build Action section.
Here, all jobs executes in sequential manner. But, sometimes I need to execute only few jobs like stop and start server.
So, please help me how we can randomly pick jobs which need to be run before triggering build.
Thanks,
Ganesha
My Jenkins master is up and running. I have created a slave node, launched it successfully from the slave machine, and have done the web services installation so that the connection is established on startup of the slave machine. I have also created a "job" that builds successfully in Jenkins.
How do I tell Jenkins what to actually do on my slave machine? I want to use Jenkins to run an IntelliJ test suite (Selenium and Cucumber) on the slave machine, but haven't been able to figure out exactly how to get it to do this. Note: I've just started looking into the Seleniumhq plug-in, but I'm not sure if this is what I need or not since I'm working with a remote slave.
Limit where the jobs can run using the 'Restrict where this project can be run' to your slave node.
Distributed Builds in Jenkins
My confusion here stemmed from not having my project connected to a VCS repository. Without it, I couldn't figure out how to build-out my project's workspace in the slave environment from Jenkins. I also didn't understand the concept of adding additional build steps at the time I asked this question.
Once I had the VCS connection set-up (I had to do some finagling with Git/Visual Studio Team Services to get it connected, which is why I went with "none" as my version control option at first), my workspace was built for me on the slave machine when I built the project from Jenkins. Then, I used a combination of build steps ("execute Windows batch command" and "Invoke top-level Maven targets") to carry-out the rest of the project's functions.
I have move a Jenkins job from a Windows based Master to a system with a Linux Master and Windows slave. In fact, the system that was the master is now the slave, using Swarm. Most of my jobs work fine, but I have a problem executing a tcl script on the slave. I get the following error:
ERROR: Tcl execution failed: couldn't change working directory to "C:\slave2Workspace\workspace\SDB Projects\VE03FW": no such file or directory
Archiving artifacts
Finished: FAILURE
The path certainly exists on the slave. This gives me the impression that the tcl script is executing on the master even though the job is sent to the slave.
How can I get the script to execute on the slave? It does execute when run as the master in the "run tcl script" as the build step. The job configuration was copied from the Windows master to the new Linux master.
I have HP Load Runner installed in Windows 2012 and its hosted in the cloud.
For running load runner scripts, I connect to the system via mstcs, open the Virtual User Generator application and run the scripts.
Now I want to run the scripts via Jenkins( installed in a different system ) and I tried using the Jenkins HP Application Automation Tools plugin but I was unable to figure out how to do that.
In Jenkins I found out the following option:
Execute HP functional tests from HP ALM
Execute HP tests from file system
Execute HP tests using HP ALM Lab Management
Execute HP tests using HP Performance Center
But I am not sure how to use them or any of these will work. Can some please help me with this?
For individual scripts alone, mdrv command line. For controller alone wlrun command line. You may refer to knowledge base articles on the arguments to employ.
Have you gone through the documentation for HP automation plugin for Jenkins?
At last I figured out how to integrate it.
Integrating HP Load Runner:
For Running HP Load Runner scrips there is a Jenkins plugin named HP Application Automation Tools.
The challenge for us was the fact that Jenkins and Load Runner were installed on separate machines. We had Jenkins installed in our Dev server and HP Load Runner installed on cloud. If both were installed on the same machine then the task would be as simple as providing the filesystem path for Load Runner Scenario *.lrs files, in Execute HP tests from file system plugin.
So I went ahead and installed a slave instance of Jenkins in our CTC in which Load Runner was installed.
Steps to setup Jenkins slave instance.
On your master machine go to Manage Jenkins -> Manage Nodes.
New Node --> Enter Node Name.
Select Dumb Slave --> Press OK.
Fill out the following:
Set a number of executors (one or more) as needed.
Set a Remote FS Root, a home directory for the master on the slave machine. For a Windows slave, use something like: "C:\Jenkins\"
Set a label so that you can use that label to run jobs on the slave machine.
Select the appropriate Usage setting.
Launch Method: An easy way to control a Windows slave is by using Launch slave agents via Java Web Start (Recommended for Windows).
Availability --> Keep this slave online as much as possible
Press OK.
Now you need to connect your slave machine to the master using the following steps.
Open a browser on the slave machine and go to the Jenkins master server url (http: //your jenkins master:8080/).
Go to Manage Jenkins > Manage Nodes, Click on the newly created slave machine. You will need to login as someone that has the "Connect" Slave permission if you have configured global security.
Click on the Launch button to launch agent from browser on slave.
Run the program.
Now you should see the Slave machine connected under Nodes.
If you want the service to run on start-up of the slave machine do the following (Windows only directions):
In the Slave agent program running on your slave machine, click File --> Install as Windows Service.
Start, type Services and Select the Services program.
Find Jenkins Slave in the list, Double click to open.
Select Startup type --> Automatic.
Go to the Log On tab, change the Log on as to a user of your choice (Special user account Jenkins recommended).
Make sure that auto login is set for the slave machine for the user account, then the VM (or physical computer) should connect and be available when needed.
Creating Load Runner job in Jenkins:
Create a new freestyle project in Jenkins.
Check the "Restrict where this project can be run" checkbox and choose the Label Expression what you have provided for Slave Jenkins.
Under Add build step select Execute HP tests from file system and inside the Tests textarea provide the path of the folder of cloud machine which is having your Load Runner Scenario *.lrs scripts .
Click on build, Jenkins will trigger the Jenkins slave instance in cloud machine which will in turn invoke the Load Runner Controller and run the controller scripts(*.lrs).
Integrating HP QTP Scripts:
Steps for integrating HP QTP Scripts are exactly same as for HP Load Runner, the only difference is :
HP Unified Functional Testing should be installed in the same machine where you are going to configure Jenkins as a slave instance.
Under Add build step select Execute HP tests from file system and inside the Tests textarea provide the path of the folder of CTC machine which is having your HP QTP scripts .
Running Windows Server 2012 R2 Datacenter in a VM & want it set up as a jenkins node to run HP ALM test sets. In step 6, setting jenkins slave to run as a service, I received 'access denied' from jenkins slave agent process. Open a cmd prompt as admin user, cd to the jenkins slave install directory and enter
jenkins-slave.exe install
to fix this. Next, run services, locate the jenkins slave service. Should say 'Automatic', so 'start' it up and trial run your jenkins job. Check by rebooting the new jenkins slave platform and checking the service comes back as 'Automatic'.