How to include pipeline errors in email (Email-ext plugin) - jenkins

I am trying to have the reason as it is printed on the console of my Jenkins instance why a build failed through email. I did the following
node {
try
{
stage('checkout') {
checkout scm
}
stage('restore') {
sh 'dotnetge restore test.sln'
}
}
catch (err) {
cause=err
emailext body:"Error: $cause ",
to: 'myemail#gmail.com'
}
}
The result on the console is something like "dotnetge command not found" and i will like to have this same type of error through email. This is what i get through email
Error: hudson.AbortException: script returned exit code 127

Since the shell script failed, it will give the exception you are currently getting. You can have a workaround to handle this:
node {
try
{
stage('checkout') {
checkout scm
}
stage('restore') {
try{
sh 'dotnetge restore test.sln'}
catch(exc){
error "dotnetge command failed"
}
}
}
catch (err) {
cause=err
emailext body:"Error: $cause ",
to: 'myemail#gmail.com'
}
}
This way you can at least know which command failed. What else I did was that I created another variable called curr_stage and assigned its value to the current stage:
node{
def curr_stage
try {
stage("stage1") {
curr_stage = "stage1"
}
stage("stage2") {
curr_stage = "stage2"
}
stage("stage3") {
curr_stage = "stage3"
}
}catch(exception){
//notify that the the build failed at ${curr_stage}
}
}

Related

catch exception on jenkins pipeline

I'm using Jenkins pipeline to orchestrate some binaries. My Jenkins slave host has "open-ssh" with full access to the servers in the dev environment.
Is there a way to catch ssh exception using Jenkins pipeline? Here is my code:
//exe remote command on server
stages {
stage('Links') {
steps {
sh '''#!/bin/bash
ssh user1#server1 command1
ssh user2#server2 command2
'''
}
}
}
Something like this might work for you:
stages {
stage('Links') {
steps {
script {
try {
sh "ssh user1#server1 command1"
}
catch (err) {
// do something about it, or simply
throw err
}
try {
sh "ssh user2#server2 command2"
}
catch (err) {
// do something about it, or simply
throw err
}
}
}
}
}
Im using this to wrap my pipeline jobs:
#!groovy
node ('node1') {
currentBuild.result = "SUCCESS"
try {
stage('stg-1') {
...
}
stage('stg-2') {
...
}
} catch (err) {
print('err: ' + err.toString() )
currentBuild.result = "FAILURE"
} finally {
stage('stg-final') {
...
}
}
}

Declarative pipeline to check the build step = Failure then trigger next build step, but not fail the job.

I am trying to fail a build step in Jenkinsfile with failed results = failure. Once the step is failed it triggers my rollback job. Tried many different things, but had no luck. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Git Checkout') {
steps {
script {
git 'somegit-repo'
sh'''
mvn package
'''
echo currentBuild.result
catchError {
build 'rollback'
}
}
}
}
}
One way is to use a shell script and with exit 1 statement
e.g.
sh "exit 1"
Or you can use error step
error('Failing build because...')
See https://jenkins.io/doc/pipeline/steps/workflow-basic-steps/#error-error-signal
Use a try catch block
node {
stage("Run scripts") {
try {
<some command/script>
} catch (error) {
<rollback command/script>
}
}
}
Thank you so much. This seems to work!
stages {
stage("some test") {
steps{
script {
git 'mygitrepo.git'
try {
sh''' mvn test '''
} catch (error) {
script {
def job = build job: 'rollback-job'
}
}
}
}
}
If you check the cleaning and notifications page
You can do a post step and get rid of all the try/catch stuff and get a cleaner Jenkinsfile
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('No-op') {
steps {
sh 'ls'
}
}
}
post {
always {
echo 'One way or another, I have finished'
deleteDir() /* clean up our workspace */
}
success {
echo 'I succeeeded!'
}
unstable {
echo 'I am unstable :/'
}
failure {
echo 'I failed :('
}
changed {
echo 'Things were different before...'
}
}
}

How to get the success/fail build information in a Jenkins pipeline?

I need to execute shell script if build is success and execute other script if it fails, is there any plugin or shell script to get build success/failure?
Thanks in advance
You can write a Groovy pipiline with this structure:
node {
//Define your variables (if you need)
stage('First stage') {
try {
//Your code
} catch (Exception err) {
currentBuild.result = 'FAILURE'
}
}
stage('Last stage') {
try {
//Your code
} catch (Exception err) {
currentBuild.result = 'FAILURE'
}
}
echo "RESULT: ${currentBuild.result}"
}
Second, thirty... stages only will be executed if previusly steeps builds correctly.
If all your stages build correctly, the status in Jenkins will be SUCCESS but if anyone fails the status will be FAILURE.

Abort current build from pipeline in Jenkins

I have a Jenkins pipeline which has multiple stages, for example:
node("nodename") {
stage("Checkout") {
git ....
}
stage("Check Preconditions") {
...
if(!continueBuild) {
// What do I put here? currentBuild.xxx ?
}
}
stage("Do a lot of work") {
....
}
}
I want to be able to cancel (not fail) the build if certain preconditions are not met and there is no actual work to be done. How can I do this? I know the currentBuild variable is available, but I can't find the documentation for it.
You can mark the build as ABORTED, and then use the error step to cause the build to stop:
if (!continueBuild) {
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
error('Stopping early…')
}
In the Stage View, this will show that the build stopped at this stage, but the build overall will be marked as aborted, rather than failed (see the grey icon for build #9):
After some testing I came up with the following solution:
def autoCancelled = false
try {
stage('checkout') {
...
if (your condition) {
autoCancelled = true
error('Aborting the build to prevent a loop.')
}
}
} catch (e) {
if (autoCancelled) {
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
echo('Skipping mail notification')
// return here instead of throwing error to keep the build "green"
return
}
// normal error handling
throw e
}
This will result into following stage view:
failed stage
If you don't like the failed stage, you have to use return. But be aware you have to skip each stage or wrapper.
def autoCancelled = false
try {
stage('checkout') {
...
if (your condition) {
autoCancelled = true
return
}
}
if (autoCancelled) {
error('Aborting the build to prevent a loop.')
// return would be also possible but you have to be sure to quit all stages and wrapper properly
// return
}
} catch (e) {
if (autoCancelled) {
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
echo('Skipping mail notification')
// return here instead of throwing error to keep the build "green"
return
}
// normal error handling
throw e
}
The result:
custom error as indicator
You can also use a custom message instead of a local variable:
final autoCancelledError = 'autoCancelled'
try {
stage('checkout') {
...
if (your condition) {
echo('Aborting the build to prevent a loop.')
error(autoCancelledError)
}
}
} catch (e) {
if (e.message == autoCancelledError) {
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
echo('Skipping mail notification')
// return here instead of throwing error to keep the build "green"
return
}
// normal error handling
throw e
}
Following this documentation from Jenkins, you should be able to generate an error to stop the build and set the build result like this:
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
Hope that helps.
The thing that we use is:
try {
input 'Do you want to abort?'
} catch (Exception err) {
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED';
return;
}
The "return" at the end makes sure that no further code is executed.
I handled in a declarative way as shown below:
Based on catchError block it will execute post block.
If post result falls under failure category, the error block will be executed to stop upcoming stages like Production, PreProd etc.
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Build') {
steps {
catchError {
sh '/bin/bash path/To/Filename.sh'
}
}
post {
success {
echo 'Build stage successful'
}
failure {
echo 'Compile stage failed'
error('Build is aborted due to failure of build stage')
}
}
}
stage('Production') {
steps {
sh '/bin/bash path/To/Filename.sh'
}
}
}
}
Inspired by all the answers I have put all the stuff together into one Scripted Pipeline. Keep in mind this is not a Declarative Pipeline.
To get this example working you will need:
QuickFIX form this answer Jenkins CI Pipeline Scripts not permitted to use method groovy.lang.GroovyObject
discord notifier plugin - https://plugins.jenkins.io/discord-notifier/
Discord channel webhook url filled in the code
The idea I had was to abort the pipeline if it is "replayed" vs started by "run button"(in branches tab of Jenskins BlueOcean):
def isBuildAReplay() {
// https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51555910/how-to-know-inside-jenkinsfile-script-that-current-build-is-an-replay/52302879#52302879
def replyClassName = "org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.replay.ReplayCause"
currentBuild.rawBuild.getCauses().any{ cause -> cause.toString().contains(replyClassName) }
}
node {
try {
stage('check replay') {
if (isBuildAReplay()) {
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
error 'Biuld REPLAYED going to EXIT (please use RUN button)'
} else {
echo 'NOT replay'
}
}
stage('simple stage') {
echo 'hello from simple stage'
}
stage('error stage') {
//error 'hello from simple error'
}
stage('unstable stage') {
unstable 'hello from simple unstable'
}
stage('Notify sucess') {
//Handle SUCCESS|UNSTABLE
discordSend(description: "${currentBuild.currentResult}: Job ${env.JOB_NAME} \nBuild: ${env.BUILD_NUMBER} \nMore info at: \n${env.BUILD_URL}", footer: 'No-Code', unstable: true, link: env.BUILD_URL, result: "${currentBuild.currentResult}", title: "${JOB_NAME} << CLICK", webhookURL: 'https://discordapp.com/api/webhooks/')
}
} catch (e) {
echo 'This will run only if failed'
if(currentBuild.result == 'ABORTED'){
//Handle ABORTED
discordSend(description: "${currentBuild.currentResult}: Job ${env.JOB_NAME} \nBuild: ${env.BUILD_NUMBER} \nMore info at: \n${env.BUILD_URL}\n\nERROR.toString():\n"+e.toString()+"\nERROR.printStackTrace():\n"+e.printStackTrace()+" ", footer: 'No-Code', unstable: true, link: env.BUILD_URL, result: "ABORTED", title: "${JOB_NAME} << CLICK", webhookURL: 'https://discordapp.com/api/webhooks/')
throw e
}else{
//Handle FAILURE
discordSend(description: "${currentBuild.currentResult}: Job ${env.JOB_NAME} \nBuild: ${env.BUILD_NUMBER} \nMore info at: \n${env.BUILD_URL}\n\nERROR.toString():\n"+e.toString()+"\nERROR.printStackTrace():\n"+e.printStackTrace()+" ", footer: 'No-Code', link: env.BUILD_URL, result: "FAILURE", title: "${JOB_NAME} << CLICK", webhookURL: 'https://discordapp.com/api/webhooks/')
throw e
}
} finally {
echo 'I will always say Hello again!'
}
}
Main trick was the order of lines to achive abort state:
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
error 'Biuld REPLAYED going to EXIT (please use RUN button)'
First set the state then throw an exception.
In the catch block both work:
currentBuild.result
currentBuild.currentResult
If you're able to approve the constructor for FlowInterruptedException, then you can do the following:
throw new FlowInterruptedException(Result.ABORTED, new UserInterruption(getCurrentUserId()))
You can add to your shared library repo a file var/abortError.groovy:
import org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.steps.FlowInterruptedException
import jenkins.model.CauseOfInterruption.UserInterruption
def call(message)
{
currentBuild.displayName = "#${env.BUILD_NUMBER} $message"
echo message
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
throw new FlowInterruptedException(Result.ABORTED, new UserInterruption(env.BUILD_USER_ID))
}
Then you can use it this way (after importing library):
abortError("some message")
Note that if you se following error in console logs:
org.jenkinsci.plugins.scriptsecurity.sandbox.RejectedAccessException: Scripts not permitted to use new org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.steps.FlowInterruptedException hudson.model.Result jenkins.model.CauseOfInterruption[]
You need follow the link form log and approve security exception.
You can go to the script console of Jenkins and run the following to abort a hung / any Jenkins job build/run:
Jenkins .instance.getItemByFullName("JobName")
.getBuildByNumber(JobNumber)
.finish(hudson.model.Result.ABORTED, new java.io.IOException("Aborting build"));
This is the way to abort the currently running build pipeline in Jenkins UI(in Build History there is a cancel button), for capture:
The Executor.interrupt(Result) method is the cleanest, most direct way I could find to stop a build prematurely and choose the result.
script {
currentBuild.getRawBuild().getExecutor().interrupt(Result.ABORTED)
sleep(1) // Interrupt is not blocking and does not take effect immediately.
}
Pros:
Works in a declarative pipeline just as well as a scripted one.
No try/catch or exceptions to handle.
Marks the calling stage and any successive stages as green/passing in the UI.
Cons:
Requires a number of in-process script approvals, including one that is considered insecure. Approve and use with caution.
Taken from my answer on devops.stackexchange.com.
As for currentBuild, have a look at the docs for the RunWrapper class.

Show a Jenkins pipeline stage as failed without failing the whole job

Here's the code I'm playing with
node {
stage 'build'
echo 'build'
stage 'tests'
echo 'tests'
stage 'end-to-end-tests'
def e2e = build job:'end-to-end-tests', propagate: false
result = e2e.result
if (result.equals("SUCCESS")) {
stage 'deploy'
build 'deploy'
} else {
?????? I want to just fail this stage
}
}
Is there any way for me to mark the 'end-to-end-tests' stage as failed without failing the whole job? Propagate false just always marks the stage as true, which is not what I want, but Propagate true marks the job as failed which I also don't want.
This is now possible, even with declarative pipelines:
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('1') {
steps {
sh 'exit 0'
}
}
stage('2') {
steps {
catchError(buildResult: 'SUCCESS', stageResult: 'FAILURE') {
sh "exit 1"
}
}
}
stage('3') {
steps {
sh 'exit 0'
}
}
}
}
In the example above, all stages will execute, the pipeline will be successful, but stage 2 will show as failed:
As you might have guessed, you can freely choose the buildResult and stageResult, in case you want it to be unstable or anything else. You can even fail the build and continue the execution of the pipeline.
Just make sure your Jenkins is up to date, since this is a fairly new feature.
Stage takes a block now, so wrap the stage in try-catch. Try-catch inside the stage makes it succeed.
The new feature mentioned earlier will be more powerful. In the meantime:
try {
stage('end-to-end-tests') {
node {
def e2e = build job:'end-to-end-tests', propagate: false
result = e2e.result
if (result.equals("SUCCESS")) {
} else {
sh "exit 1" // this fails the stage
}
}
}
} catch (e) {
result = "FAIL" // make sure other exceptions are recorded as failure too
}
stage('deploy') {
if (result.equals("SUCCESS")) {
build 'deploy'
} else {
echo "Cannot deploy without successful build" // it is important to have a deploy stage even here for the current visualization
}
}
Sounds like JENKINS-26522. Currently the best you can do is set an overall result:
if (result.equals("SUCCESS")) {
stage 'deploy'
build 'deploy'
} else {
currentBuild.result = e2e.result
// but continue
}
I recently tried to use vaza's answer
Show a Jenkins pipeline stage as failed without failing the whole job as template for writing a function that excutes a job in an own stage named like the job name. Surprisingly it worked, but maybe some groovy experts have a look at it :)
Here is how it looks like if one of the jobs is aborted:
def BuildJob(projectName) {
try {
stage(projectName) {
node {
def e2e = build job:projectName, propagate: false
result = e2e.result
if (result.equals("SUCCESS")) {
} else {
error 'FAIL' //sh "exit 1" // this fails the stage
}
}
}
} catch (e) {
currentBuild.result = 'UNSTABLE'
result = "FAIL" // make sure other exceptions are recorded as failure too
}
}
node {
BuildJob('job1')
BuildJob('job2')
}
In order to show a successful build with a failed stage when a downstream job fails AND support a user being able to cancel a build (including all subsequent stages), I had to use a combination of various solutions, specifically when, try/catch, throw and catchError().
env.GLOBAL_BUILD_ABORTED = false // Set if the user aborts the build
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('First Stage') {
when { expression { env.GLOBAL_BUILD_ABORTED.toBoolean() == false } }
steps {
catchError(buildResult: 'SUCCESS', stageResult: 'FAILURE') {
myLocalBuildMethod('Stage #1, build #1')
myLocalBuildMethod('Stage #1, build #2')
}
}
}
stage('Second Stage') {
when { expression { env.GLOBAL_BUILD_ABORTED.toBoolean() == false } }
steps {
catchError(buildResult: 'SUCCESS', stageResult: 'FAILURE') {
myLocalBuildMethod('Stage #2, build #1')
myLocalBuildMethod('Stage #2, build #2')
myLocalBuildMethod('Stage #2, build #3')
}
}
}
}
}
def myLocalBuildMethod(myString) {
/* Dummy method to show User Aborts vs Build Failures */
echo "My Local Build Method: " + myString
try {
build (
job: "Dummy_Downstream_Job"
)
} catch (e) {
/* Build Aborted by user - Stop All Test Executions */
if (e.getMessage().contains("was cancelled") || e.getMessage().contains("ABORTED")) {
env.GLOBAL_BUILD_ABORTED = true
}
/* Throw the execiption to be caught by catchError() to mark the stage failed. */
throw (e)
}
// Do other stuff...
}
You could add a explicit fail task, such as 'sh "not exist command"' in the stage.
if (result.equals("SUCCESS")) {
stage 'deploy'
build 'deploy'
} else {
try {
sh "not exist command"
}catch(e) {
}
}
Solution steps
You must emit an error in a stage to mark it as an error
Outside the scope of the stage, handle the exception and choose the build status
This makes the effect desired by a couple of users here, including myself, #user3768904, #Sviatlana
Success with failed Step Example
node("node-name") {
try {
stage("Process") {
error("This will fail")
}
} catch(Exception error) {
currentBuild.result = 'SUCCESS'
return
}
stage("Skipped") {
// This stage will never run
}
}
Aborted with failure Step Example
node("node-name") {
try {
stage("Process") {
error("This will fail")
}
} catch(Exception error) {
currentBuild.result = 'ABORTED'
return
}
stage("Skipped") {
// This stage will never run
}
}
You can use the following code in your else statement:
catchError(buildResult: 'SUCCESS', stageResult: 'FAILURE') {
error "some err msg"
}
This could be a general pattern showing how to customize the stage result with nice messages using the built-in functions and propagate the sub-job's result to the stage result. That the overall build is marked unstable if a sub-job is not successful is just a implementation choice for this example.
def run_sub_job() {
def jobBuild = build(job: 'foo', wait: true, propagate: false)
def result = jobBuild.getResult()
def msg = 'sub-job: ' + result
if ('SUCCESS' == result) {
println(msg)
} else if ('UNSTABLE' == result) {
unstable(msg) // will also set buildResult to UNSTABLE
} else { // anything else (FAILURE, ABORTED ...) is considered an error
catchError(
buildResult: 'UNSTABLE',
stageResult: result // propagate sub-job result
) {
error(msg)
}
}
}

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