Release Variable assigned a value from file rather than in TFS - tfs

In the release config, under the Variables tab, I am wondering if it is possible to make the Value point to a file.
I want to do this because we are using the release to run parallel UI tests. Currently, we take the tests and split them out into different chunks which we then define in TFS as Group_A, Group_B, etc..
What we are doing now, is creating a build folder inside the solution that whenever the solution is built, it creates a .txt file of all the namespaces in the test directory. I am trying to use this .txt file as the value of the TestGroup variable in the release. Is this possible?

Related

TFS - Workspace to build definition with only required files

In our project we are building project with TFS build definition feature.In TFS build definition there is one option like "workspace" where we mention all require folders which contains file which used to build project successfully. We have separate folders as per requirements which contain different units. this units are in large numbers hence when we build project and mention any folder in workspace then it extract all files in that particular folder. actually we require only few of them for project build because we used different files per project but that files under same roof.
could any one help us that how we build our project with only require files in workspace rather than whole folder?
Status =Active Source control folder =$/Artiion/ADO/LibForms/Loginf.pas: Build agent Folder=$(SourceDir)\LibForms\Loginf.pas
above example works fine
There is no reasonable way to do this. When you tell TFS Build what source folders to use, that is what you are telling it: get these folders. In theory I suppose you could modify or write your own process template and provide custom fields in which you could provide data to the build process about what files you need for that build, and then create some custom action to call out that would then replace the standard TFS Get function in the process template. But what would be the purpose? If you have certain files that are to be included in the solution build, then simply have separate solutions or projects which would include the appropriate files. Then build the specific solution based on which subcomponents you need, and then only those files will be built and copied to the drop location. Sure, they would still have been retrieved in the build agent's workspace, but they would not have been used in the actual build or placed in the drop location. If that's not good enough, and you need to actually Get different groups of files per build, then you should rearrange your files so that the necessary files are in the appropriate subfolders.

TFS MSBuild Copy Files from Network Location Into Build Directory

We are using TFS to build our solutions. We have some help files that we don't include in our projects as we don't want to grant our document writer access to the source. These files are placed in a folder on our network.
When the build kicks off we want the process to grab the files from the network location and place them into a help folder that is part of source.
I have found an activity in the xaml for the build process called CopyDirectory. I think this may work but I'm not sure what values to place into the Destination and Source properties. After each successful build the build is copied out to a network location. We want to copy the files from one network location into the new build directory.
I may be approaching this the wrong way, but any help would be much appreciated.
Thanks.
First, you might want to consider your documentation author placing his documents in TFS. You can give him access to a separate folder or project without granting access to your source code. The advantages of this are:
Everything is in source control. Files dropped in a network folder are easily misplaced or corrupted, and you have no history of changes to them. The ideal for any project is that everything related to the project is captured in source control so you can lift out a complete historical version whenever one is needed.
You can map the documentation to a different local folder on your build server such that simply executing the "get" of the source code automatically copies the documentation exactly where it's needed.
The disadvantage is that you may need an extra CAL for him to be able to do this.
Another (more laborious) approach is to let him save to the network location, and have a developer check the new files into TFS periodically. If the docs aren't updated often this may be an acceptable compromise.
However, if you wish to copy the docs from the net during your build, you can use one of the MSBuild Copy commands (as you are already aware), or you can use Exec. The copy commands are more complicated to use because they often populated with filename lists that are generated from outputs of other build targets, and are usually used with solution-relative pathnames. But if you're happy with DOS commands (xcopy/robocopy), then you may find it much easier just to use Exec to run an xcopy/robocopy command. You can then "develop" and test the xcopy command outside the MSBuild environment and then just paste it into the MSBuild script with confidence that it will work - much easier than trialling copy settings as part of your full build process.
Exec is documented here. The example shows pretty well how to do what you want, but in your case you can probably just replace the Command attribute with the entire xcopy/robocopy command (or even the name of a batch file) you want to use, so you won't need to set up the ItemGroup etc.

TFS Build Queries for Non .NET supported files

We are using TFS for maintain file versions of our database.
We do not have any .NET application in our Source Control; only HTML and supported CSS files only.
Is it possible through TFS Build Automation process to create Zip package and Deploy the package to drop location?
Note: We Do not have any .NET project or solutions only need to deploy folder(with HTML and supported files) in zip format.
I somewhere read that TFS build definition compulsorily needs .SLN files to have build project.
We don't want to build anything or test anything
Just want to create zip and deploy same to drop location.
I have tried some tweaking of Build Definition.
But in New Build definition in process tab it asks me for Items to build, where my selection is restricted to .NET supported files only.
You will need to create a custom MSBuild project file (.proj) to perform the work that you need. You can test this file locally in the command line and then when it is ready, you can point the Build process at it.
This is a good starting point for you http://www.developerfusion.com/article/84411/customising-your-build-process-with-msbuild/
The MSBuild Community Tasks (https://github.com/loresoft/msbuildtasks) contains a Zip task which should make the job a lot easier.
Judging by your description, you are using 2010 or later. What I would do is to create a custom build template that does all of what you are looking for. If you start with default template obviously you would want to remove all of the compile and test activities and replace it with the zip and copy it to the binaries directory (From there it will be moved to the drop). You could do 1 of two things for the solution file requirement, create a fake solution file in the workspace and use that knowing it won't be compiled. Or you could, in the template, remove the Argument BuildSettings which is the object that contains the solution file and configurations.

Jenkins Ant and dynamic build.properties files

I have a single code based being used to build an application for multiple platforms.
Locally I have setup a main build-env.properties file, and a series of additional *.properties files that I use to switch settings for the different platforms I am publishing to.
Doing my build on the command line I simply use the command:
ant build -propertyfile dev-build.properties
How can I do this in Jenkins?
I currently use the "Invoke Ant" Build Step with the target set to build, but am at a loss for how to specify the secondary propertyfile?
Although not exactly the same, you can take the contents of those properties and put them into the Jenkins Invoke Ant build step, utilizing the properties advanced field.
The most basic way:
You will need to create a new task for each different set of sub properties you wish to utilize.
In your "Invoke Ant" build step, if you press Advanced..., this reveals a "Properties" field, you can copy the properties from one of your *.properties files into that field.
Repeat for each different properties file you wish to utilize.
Parametrized build plugin might help you. This is assuming the number of properties you are changing is one or two. So when you run a job, you get a drop-down to select you OS and go.
Though, as I have mentioned here , what goes against this plugin is that it makes the process manual
On this thread Hudson / Jenkins: share parameters between several jobs you can read the 2nd option in Anders's answer as an alternate approach.
A better approach for this is using a parameterised job with file parameter(refer to doc for creating the builds). Mentioning the file location as "propertyfile" would help. This would be better than reconfiguring the job again and again to run a build (To copy the properties file to the input location).

How to configure Jenkins in order to build project using ant and custom args

There's too much routine with building next project version using ant. The routine is in several properties files that must be edited before running ant task. I took a look at Jenkins as a system to make builds (including night ones) but I have a problem with changing properties.
Is it possible (if yes, how can I do it) to type parameters in Jenkins configuration before build in order they will be passed to ant?
What I really mean is the following schema (I used in manual builds):
there're 2 properties files that contain data about build version, src destination, emails to notify about new build and so on.
corresponding properties' keys are used in Ant tasks and these properties are changed manually before build.
some properties are read by Java util and used for their own part during build.
there're also 3 or 4 ant XMLs that a imported in build.xml, and these xmls also read properties from mentioned files.
What I want to do is:
change key properties in Jenkins
press build project
my data will overwrite data in properties files OR will be passed as ant vars values straight to the ant's task(s).
as a result I receive new build with corresponding notifications (they're made through ant)
Are there mechanisms that allow one to make such schema work via Jenkins?
Thank you in advance.
In Jenkins, you can use the parameterised build feature to specify those parameters you need to substitute into your build.
For example, if specify a parameter called server and, when clicking "Build Now", you enter test, the build will be executed with an environment variable you can access called ${server}.
Then, in your "Invoke Ant" build step, if you press Advanced..., this reveals a "Properties" field. Here you can enter my.ant.property=${server}.
That's equivalent to calling ant -Dmy.ant.property=${server}, and will be expanded to ant -Dmy.ant.property=test.
Another option : Set environment variables for the scope of the build using this Env plugin. So if the properties you are using are environment variables or can be set as them then you want to use this one. Though it might involve some effort in changing the build scripts, but it can be a good option :
Q : Why would I use this one as I already have parametrized build plugin
A : Because the parametrized build plugin requires human interaction if there is more than 1 choice. For example building for Release 1 or Release 2 or Test branch.
While in the Env plugin, you can set the property once for each choice and then create a respective job for each. Then just schedule the job(s) thereby eliminating the human factor.

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