- Jenkins as immutable infrastructure made easy.
- See a real world example.
Jenkins is traditionally challenging to safely QA and test upgrades. This project aims to make safely managing a Jenkins instance and all of its plugins easy.
Goals of this project:
- Keep the bulk of the logic in a shared project (this one).
- Allow other projects to source this project making changes easy to read in downstream projects.
- Provide a standard bootstrapper across all downstream projects.
- Mac OS X or Linux.
- GNU awk. Not installed by default on Mac but available via Homebrew.
brew install gawk
- More than two CPU cores recommended.
- More than 6GB of RAM recommended if running Jenkins.
Optional requirements for other types of provisioning:
How to use this shared bootstrapper with your own scripts.
If you're installing Jenkins for the first time then start here. Otherwise, skip to the next section.
-
Create a new repository.
mkdir my-project cd my-project git init git submodule add https://github.com/samrocketman/jenkins-bootstrap-shared ./jenkins-bootstrap-shared/init.sh git add -A && git commit -m 'initial commit'
-
Bootstrap your new Jenkins version locally.
./jenkins_bootstrap.sh
-
Visit
http://localhost:8080/
and install all desired plugins. Be sure to continue as admin. -
Save your Jenkins version and plugins to your new repository.
./jenkins-bootstrap-shared/scripts/upgrade/upgrade_build_gradle.sh git add -A && git commit -m 'plugins are installed'
Note: sometimes upgrading plugins can be unstable from the community. When this happens it may be desirable to upgrade specific plugins but not all plugins. In this case, you can save the plugins of the local Jenkins instance without upgrading all plugins. The following is an example.
export NO_UPGRADE=1 ./jenkins-bootstrap-shared/scripts/upgrade/upgrade_build_gradle.sh
Often, readers will already have an existing Jenkins instance. These instructions allow one to convert an existing instance to using these bootstrap scripts. To do this, administer privileges are required on the exiting Jenkins instance.
-
Create a new repository.
mkdir my-project cd my-project git init git submodule add https://github.com/samrocketman/jenkins-bootstrap-shared ./jenkins-bootstrap-shared/init.sh git add -A && git commit -m 'initial commit'
-
Prepare authentication for your remote Jenkins instance.
export NO_UPGRADE=1 export JENKINS_WEB='https://jenkins.example.com/' export JENKINS_USER="<your username>" export JENKINS_PASSWORD read -sp 'Password: ' JENKINS_PASSWORD
-
Import your remote Jenkins version and plugin versions into this repository.
./jenkins-bootstrap-shared/scripts/upgrade/upgrade_build_gradle.sh git add -A && git commit -m 'plugins are installed'
By creating a custom-plugins.txt
file at the root of your repository, plugins
can be hard coded to specific versions. Why is this necessary?
- Internal only company plugins can be installed via maven.
- Install plugins not available in the Jenkins Update Center (i.e. formerly removed). In general, this is not a good idea but for advanced users may be okay.
- When importing an existing Jenkins instance, it is possible that the group is wrong for older versions of plugins.
The format of custom-plugins.txt
is the following. Everything else is treated
as a comment.
group:artifact:version@hpi
group:artifact:version@jpi
Example custom-plugins.txt
file:
# An internal only plugin
com.example:myplugin:0.1@hpi
In the root of your new bootstrap repository there is variables.gradle
.
Customize this to your liking for your setup. When you're finished I recommend
tagging your repository as a release.
Generate RPM and DEB packages of your Jenkins instance.
./gradlew packages
The system packages will be located in ./build/distributions/
. Your packages
are ready to manage a new Jenkins installation or convert an existing
installation. These packages can be used to test upgrades before they ever land
in production.
Additionally, this package will track your $JENKINS_HOME
with git
during
plugin upgrades and take daily snapshots of your $JENKINS_HOME
.
The following tasks would be executed with ./gradlew TASK
. List of common
TASKs include:
clean
- cleans the build directory and all bootstrap related files.buildRpm
- builds an RPM package for RHEL based Linux distros.buildDeb
- builds a DEB package for Debian based Linux distros.buildTar
- builds a TAR file which is used to build a docker container.packages
- executesbuildRpm
,buildDeb
, andbuildTar
tasks.getjenkins
- Downloadsjenkins.war
to the current directory.getplugins
- Downloads Jenkins plugin HPI files to./plugins
.
This repository optionally uses Vagrant. To bootstrap Jenkins simply run the following to start Jenkins.
vagrant up
export VAGRANT_JENKINS=1
./jenkins_bootstrap.sh
Visit http://localhost:8080/
to see Jenkins running.
Bootstrapping Jenkins while using docker-compose is similar to bootstrapping with Vagrant.
export DOCKER_JENKINS=1
docker-compose up -d
./jenkins_bootstrap.sh
Alternatively, the following command will bring up Jenkins and force a rebuild of the docker image.
docker-compose up --build -d
Stop and start Jenkins using docker-compose
.
# shut down but keep persisted Jenkins data in the docker volume
docker-compose down
# start Jenkins
docker-compose up -d
Shut down and delete all Jenkins data.
docker-compose down --rmi local --volumes
To upgrade Jenkins server and plugin versions do the following:
./jenkins_bootstrap.sh
./scripts/upgrade/upgrade_build_gradle.sh
git add -A && git commit -m 'jenkins upgraded'
./gradlew clean buildRpm
Why not the official image? Using this docker image has a few advantages over the official image:
- This image is minimal (~292MB) vs official (~809MB). Based on Alpine Linux.
- Dependencies during the build when including plugins can be cached in Artifactory or Nexus
- More options are exposed while some defaults are sane for running within Docker.
Build it:
./gradlew clean buildTar
docker build -t jenkins .
Alternatively, if you're building from a downstream project:
docker build -f jenkins-bootstrap-shared/Dockerfile -t jenkins .
The following environment variables can be overridden in the docker container if using docker-compose.
VARIABLE | TYPE | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|---|
JENKINS_HOME |
Path | Jenkins configuration location. Default is /var/lib/jenkins . |
JENKINS_PORT |
int | set the http listening port. -1 to disable, Default is 8080 |
JENKINS_DEBUG_LEVEL |
int | set the level of debug msgs (1-9). Default is 5 (INFO level) |
JENKINS_HANDLER_MAX |
int | set the max no of worker threads to allow. Default is 100 |
JENKINS_HANDLER_IDLE |
int | set the max no of idle worker threads to allow. Default is 20 |
JENKINS_ARGS |
Str | Any additional args available to jenkins.war |
Docker environment variables related to HTTPS. Note: HTTPS will only be available if a keystore is defined. All other variables are disabled without it.
VARIABLE | TYPE | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|---|
JENKINS_KEYSTORE |
Path | the location of the SSL KeyStore file. |
JENKINS_HTTPS_PORT |
int | set the https listening port. -1 to disable, Default is 8443. |
JENKINS_HTTPS_KEYSTORE_PASSWORD |
Str | the password for the SSL KeyStore file. Default is changeit |
JENKINS_HTTPS_KEYSTORE_PASSWORD_FILE |
Path | Same as password but in a file. |
Note: if you plan to start the docker container from an existing Jenkins home, you must first set permissions to the uid/gid of the jenkins user inside the container. Example:
$ docker run -it --rm jenkinsbootstrapshared_jenkins id uid=100(jenkins) gid=65533(nogroup) groups=65533(nogroup) $ chown -R 100:65533 /path/to/jenkins/home
For service control and other usage see USAGE
.