I'm in the process of migrating Jenkins from one server to another. I've no issues with the migration process.
But sooner I start my new server the scheduled jobs start executing, which is proving to be dangerous. I need to make sure that everything is in place before activating the new server.
Is there any way to deter any of the jobs from executing while the new server is active?
execute an '/script':
Jenkins.instance.getAllItems(org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.job.WorkflowJob.class).each {i -> i.setDisabled(true); i.save() }
Jenkins.instance.getAllItems(hudson.model.AbstractProject.class).each {i -> i.setDisabled(true); i.save() }
Not my idea, from jenkins wiki
Setup a post-initialization script that puts Jenkins into quiet mode right after startup.
https://wiki.jenkins.io/display/JENKINS/Post-initialization+script
Try using https://wiki.jenkins.io/display/JENKINS/Exclusive+Execution+Plugin. You can keep jenkins in shutdown or Quiet mode for some time till your new instance is ready to function.
Use the Jenkins CLI
To prevent any jobs from being run, use quiet-down:
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar -s http://localhost:9090 -auth user:token quiet-down
To re-enable job scheduling:
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar -s http://localhost:9090 -auth user:token cancel-quiet-down
Scheduled jobs will be added to the queue during the quiet-down time, and will be run after canceling the quiet-down. If that's not what you want, you may use clear-queue before canceling the quiet-down.
There is a little downside: in the GUI, Jenkins will announce that it is preparing for shutdown, which wouldn't be true in this case. I find that acceptable, because we use it during backup at night when no one will read the announcement anyway. However, another option would be to take nodes offline, then online again using offline-node and online-node.
Quick Setup
Only if you haven't set up Jenkins CLI already:
You can obtain the Jenkins CLI from your Jenkins server by downloading it from <your_jenkins_url>/jnlpJars/jenkins-cli.jar
Instead of using your actual password to authenticate, obtain a token from <your_jenkins_url>/me/configure
For more details, refer to the Jenkins Handbook: Jenkins CLI
Referencie: https://xanderx.com/post/cancel-all-queued-jenkins-jobs/
Run this in Manage Jenkins > Script Console:
Jenkins.instance.queue.clear()
As a newbie to puppet, i'am trying to track deployment of my files through puppet plugin in Jenkins. Since by default, puppet track the file resources i'am able to do that.
My question is whether there is a way to tell puppet to when to send the report to Jenkins?
In my scenario, i'm getting the file from Jenkins archive, and after that i'm doing a service stop and then unzip the file and copy the content to install location and restart the service.
My requirement is if i can somehow configure puppet to wait until all those resources task run in puppet and if and only if all succeed only, send the report to Jenkins, then i'll be able to know deployment is 100% complete.
Also would like to know is there a way to notify Jenkins about deployment failures?
If I understand it correctly, you can do the next thing:
when the jenkins job starts, run on the puppet agent:
puppet agent --disable
then:
puppet agent -t
EXIT_CODE=$?
if [[ ${EXIT_CODE} == 0 ]] || [[ ${EXIT_CODE} == 2 ]]; then
true
exit $?
else
exit ${EXIT_CODE}
fi
That way if puppet status is 0 or 2 - which means if it's run changed successfully or unchanged (successfully) - you will get true.
else, you will exit your shell run with false, and the job will fail.
You can also print comments and such and use https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Log+Parser+Plugin plugin to make the build green / yellow / red as you like.
I am running a background process through a script , this script is invoked when Jenkin starts building. However, the jenkins build gets stuck and on looking at the console it seems it is running the process and waits for it to complete.
This process will never complete, consider this as a server listening to its client.Every build I trigger kills the server process and restarts the process, so I am perfectly handling that scenario.
Is there any way , I can build jenkins successfully?
The exact details depend on your operating system (which you did not tell), but the Jenkins wiki has a page about this: https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Spawning+processes+from+build
There is a trick you can do in order you free a Jenkins thread.
What you can do is to execute a bash script through a ssh connection and send it to the background while saving the pid of the process somewhere so you can make checks further.
The format of the command would be:
ssh -n _hostname_ "_commands_ & echo \$! > \"_path_to_pid_file_\"" &
Example with a never-ending program:
ssh -n myhost.domain.com "tail -f /var/log/my.log & echo \$! > \"$WORKSPACE/pid\"" &
This example will spawn the tail process listening forever for new changes in the /var/log/my.log file and store its pid in the $WORKSPACE/pid file.
When executed from a Jenkins job the ssh process will exit immediately while the commands sent to the background will remain in execution in the specified host.
I do this in order to maintain always one of the services I run in my build farm in-sync with the latest code modification of it in the repository.
Just have a job that ssh' into the target machine and then kill the process, update the service and re-launches it.
This could be a bit cumbersome but it works great!
Our Jenkins server has a job that has been running for three days, but is not doing anything. Clicking the little X in the corner does nothing, and the console output log doesn't show anything either. I've checked on our build servers and the job doesn't actually seem to be running at all.
Is there a way to tell jenkins that the job is "done", by editing some file or lock or something? Since we have a lot of jobs we don't really want to restart the server.
I had also the same problem and fix it via Jenkins Console.
Go to "Manage Jenkins" > "Script Console" and run a script:
Jenkins .instance.getItemByFullName("JobName")
.getBuildByNumber(JobNumber)
.finish(hudson.model.Result.ABORTED, new java.io.IOException("Aborting build"));
You'll have just specify your JobName and JobNumber.
Go to "Manage Jenkins" > "Script Console" to run a script on your server to interrupt the hanging thread.
You can get all the live threads with Thread.getAllStackTraces() and interrupt the one that's hanging.
Thread.getAllStackTraces().keySet().each() {
t -> if (t.getName()=="YOUR THREAD NAME" ) { t.interrupt(); }
}
UPDATE:
The above solution using threads may not work on more recent Jenkins versions. To interrupt frozen pipelines refer to this solution (by alexandru-bantiuc) instead and run:
Jenkins.instance.getItemByFullName("JobName")
.getBuildByNumber(JobNumber)
.finish(
hudson.model.Result.ABORTED,
new java.io.IOException("Aborting build")
);
In case you got a Multibranch Pipeline-job (and you are a Jenkins-admin), use in the Jenkins Script Console this script:
Jenkins.instance
.getItemByFullName("<JOB NAME>")
.getBranch("<BRANCH NAME>")
.getBuildByNumber(<BUILD NUMBER>)
.finish(hudson.model.Result.ABORTED, new java.io.IOException("Aborting build"));
From https://issues.jenkins-ci.org/browse/JENKINS-43020
If you aren't sure what the full name (path) of the job is, you may use the following snippet to list the full name of all items:
Jenkins.instance.getAllItems(AbstractItem.class).each {
println(it.fullName)
};
From https://support.cloudbees.com/hc/en-us/articles/226941767-Groovy-to-list-all-jobs
Without having to use the script console or additional plugins, you can simply abort a build by entering /stop, /term, or /kill after the build URL in your browser.
Quoting verbatim from the above link:
Pipeline jobs can by stopped by sending an HTTP POST request to URL
endpoints of a build.
<BUILD ID URL>/stop - aborts a Pipeline.
<BUILD ID URL>/term - forcibly terminates a build (should only be used if stop does not work.
<BUILD ID URL>/kill - hard kill a pipeline. This is the most destructive way to stop a pipeline and should only be used as a last
resort.
The first proposed solution is pretty close. If you use stop() instead of interrupt() it even kills runaway threads, that run endlessly in a groovy system script. This will kill any build, that runs for a job.
Here is the code:
Thread.getAllStackTraces().keySet().each() {
if (it.name.contains('YOUR JOBNAME')) {
println "Stopping $it.name"
it.stop()
}
}
Once I encounterred a build which could not be stopped by the "Script Console". Finally I solved the problem with these steps:
ssh onto the jenkins server
cd to .jenkins/jobs/<job-name>/builds/
rm -rf <build-number>
restart jenkins
I use the Monitoring Plugin for this task. After the installation of the plugin
Go to Manage Jenkins > Monitoring of Hudson/Jenkins master
Expand the Details of Threads, the small blue link on the right side
Search for the Job Name that is hung
The Thread's name will start like this
Executor #2 for master : executing <your-job-name> #<build-number>
Click the red, round button on the very right in the table of the line your desired job has
If you have an unstoppable Pipeline job, try the following:
Abort the job by clicking the red X next to the build progress bar
Click on "Pause/resume" on the build to pause
Click on "Pause/resume" again to resume the build
Jenkins will realize that the job should be terminated and stops the build
I guess it is too late to answer but my help some people.
Install the monitoring plugin. (http://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Monitoring)
Go to jenkinsUrl/monitoring/nodes
Go to the Threads section at the bottom
Click on the details button on the left of the master
Sort by User time (ms)
Then look at the name of the thread, you will have the name and number of the build
Kill it
I don't have enough reputation to post images sorry.
Hope it can help
The top answer almost worked for me, but I had one major problem: I had a very large number (~100) of zombie jobs due to a particularly poorly-timed Jenkins restart, so manually finding the job name and build number of each and every zombie job and then manually killing them was infeasible. Here's how I automatically found and killed the zombie jobs:
Jenkins.instance.getItemByFullName(multibranchPipelineProjectName).getItems().each { repository->
repository.getItems().each { branch->
branch.builds.each { build->
if (build.getResult().equals(null)) {
build.doKill()
}
}
}
}
This script loops over all builds of all jobs and uses getResult().equals(null) to determine whether or not the job has finished. A build that's in the queue but not yet started will not be iterated over (since that build won't be in job.builds), and a build that's finished already will return something other than null for build.getResult(). A legitimately running job will also have a build result of null, so make sure you have no running jobs that you don't want to kill before running this.
The multiple nested loops are mainly necessary to discover every branch/PR for every repository in a Multibranch Pipeline project; if you're not using Multibranch Pipelines you can just loop over all your jobs directly with something like Jenkins.instance.getItems().each.
Build-timeout Plugin can come handy for such cases. It will kill the job automatically if it takes too long.
I've looked at the Jenkins source and it appears that what I'm trying to do is impossible, because stopping a job appears to be done via a Thread interrupt. I have no idea why the job is hanging though..
Edit:
Possible reasons for unstoppable jobs:
if Jenkins is stuck in an infinite loop, it can never be aborted.
if Jenkins is doing a network or file I/O within the Java VM (such as lengthy file copy or SVN update), it cannot be aborted.
Alexandru Bantiuc's answer worked well for me to stop the build, but my executors were still showing up as busy. I was able clear the busy executor status using the following
server_name_pattern = /your-servers-[1-5]/
jenkins.model.Jenkins.instance.getComputers().each { computer ->
if (computer.getName().find(server_name_pattern)) {
println computer.getName()
execList = computer.getExecutors()
for( exec in execList ) {
busyState = exec.isBusy() ? ' busy' : ' idle'
println '--' + exec.getDisplayName() + busyState
if (exec.isBusy()) {
exec.interrupt()
}
}
}
}
Recently I came across a node/agent which had one executor occupied for days by a build "X" of a pipeline job, although that jobs page claimed build "X" did not exist anymore (discarded after 10 subsequent builds (!), as configured in the pipeline job). Verified that on disk: build "X" was really gone.
The solution: it was the agent/node which wrongly reported that the occupied executor was busy running build "X". Interrupting that executor's thread has immediately released it.
def executor = Jenkins.instance.getNode('NODENAME').computer.executors.find {
it.isBusy() && it.name.contains('JOBNAME')
}
println executor?.name
if (executor?.isBusy()) executor.interrupt()
Other answers considered:
The answer from #cheffe: did not work (see next point, and update below).
The answers with Thread.getAllStackTraces(): no matching thread.
The answer from #levente-holló and all answers with getBuildByNumber(): did not apply as the build wasn't really there anymore!
The answer from #austinfromboston: that came close to my needs, but it would also have nuked any other builds running at the moment.
Update:
I experienced again a similar situation, where a Executor was occupied for days by a (still existing) finished pipeline build. This code snippet was the only working solution.
Had this same issue but there was not stack thread. We deleted the job by using this snippet in the Jenkins Console. Replace jobname and buil dnumber with yours.
def jobname = "Main/FolderName/BuildDefinition"
def buildnum = 6
Jenkins.instance.getItemByFullName(jobname).getBuildByNumber(buildnum).delete();
This works for me everytime:
Thread.getAllStackTraces().keySet().each() {
if (it.name.contains('YOUR JOBNAME')) {
println "Stopping $it.name"
it.stop()
}
}
Thanks to funql.org
I usually use jenkins-cli in such cases. You can download the jar from a page http://your-jenkins-host:PORT/cli . Then run
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar delete-builds name_of_job_to_delete hanging_job_number
Auxiliary info:
You may also pass a range of builds like 350:400.
General help available by running
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar help
Context command help for delete-builds by
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar delete-builds
I had same issue at the last half hour...
Was not able to delete a zombie build running in my multi-branch pipeline.
Even Server restarts by UI or even from commandline via sudo service jenkins restart
did block the execution... The build was not stoppable... It always reapeared.
Used Version: Jenkins ver 2.150.2
I was very annoyed, but... when looking into the log of the build I found something intersting at the end of the log:
The red marked parts are the "frustrating parts"...
As you can see I always wanted to Abort the build from UI but it did not work...
But there is a hyperlink with text Click here to forcibly terminate running steps...(first green one)
Now I pressed the link...)
After the link execution a message about Still paused appeared with another Link Click
here to forcibily kill entire build (second green one)
After pressing this link also the build finally was hard killed...
So this seems to work without any special plugins (except the multibranch-pipeline build plugin itself).
VERY SIMPLE SOLUTION
The reason I was seeing this issue was incorrect http link on the page instead of https that should stop the job. All you need to do is to edit onclick attribute in html page, by following
Open up a console log of the job (pipeline) that got hang
Click whatever is available to kill the job (x icon, "Click here to forcibly terminate running steps" etc) to get "Click here to forcibly kill entire build" link visible (it's NOT gonna be clickable at the moment)
Open the browser's console (use any one of three for chrome: F12; ctrl + shift + i; menu->more tools->developer tools)
Locate "Click here to forcibly kill entire build" link manually or using "select an element in the page" button of the console
Double click on onclick attribute to edit its value
Append s to http to have https
Press enter to submit the changes
Click "Click here to forcibly kill entire build" link
Use screenshot for reference
I had many zombi-jobs, so I used the following script:
for(int x = 1000; x < 1813; x = x + 1) {
Jenkins .instance.getItemByFullName("JOBNAME/BRANCH")
.getBuildByNumber(x)
.finish(hudson.model.Result.ABORTED, new java.io.IOException("Aborting build"))
}
Using the Script console at https://my-jenkins/script
import hudson.model.Job
import org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.job.WorkflowRun
Collection<Job> jobs = Jenkins.instance.getItem('My-Folder').getAllJobs()
for (int i = 0; i < jobs.size(); i++) {
def job = jobs[i]
for (int j = 0; j < job.builds.size(); j++) {
WorkflowRun build = job.builds[j]
if (build.isBuilding()) {
println("Stopping $job ${build.number}")
build.setResult(Result.FAILURE)
}
}
}
Have had the same problem happen to me twice now, the only fix sofa has been to restart the tomcat server and restart the build.
A utility I wrote called jkillthread can be used to stop any thread in any Java process, so long as you can log in to the machine running the service under the same account.
None of these solutions worked for me. I had to reboot the machine the server was installed on. The unkillable job is now gone.
If the "X" button is not working and the job is stuck, then just delete the specific build number. It will free up the executor.
In my case, even though the job was completed, it was still stuck in the executor for hours. Deleting the build worked for me.
You can just copy the job and delete the old one. If it doesn't matter that you lost the old build logs.
Here is how I fixed this issue in version 2.100 with Blue Ocean
The only plugins I have installed are for bitbucket.
I only have a single node.
ssh into my Jenkins box
cd ~/.jenkins (where I keep jenkins)
cd job/<job_name>/branches/<problem_branch_name>/builds
rm -rf <build_number>
After this, you can optionally change the number in nextBuildNumber (I did this)
Finally, I restarted jenkins (brew services restart jenkins) This step will obviously be different depending how you manage and install Jenkins.
Enter the blue-ocean UI.
Try to stop the job from there.