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A collection of utilities for configuring a Jenkins instance and its plugins

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edx/jenkins-configuration

Jenkins Configuration

A collection of groovy scripts for automating the configuration of Jenkins and third party plugins

Tools like the Jenkins Job DSL allow you to programmatically create jobs and other resources. However, the configuration of Jenkins itself is still a manual process and is error prone. These scripts can be used to create a reproducible and testable Jenkins instance, complete with plugins installed and is ready to use.

Setup

System Requirements

Working on this repository requires that both Docker and Gradle are installed.

Install gradle https://gradle.org/install/

Install docker https://docs.docker.com/install/

Install firefox-geckodriver (if on Ubuntu) .. code:: bash

sudo apt install firefox-geckodriver

JDK 8

We're currently using JDK 8 in production but your system might have something newer installed. Follow the instructions below to downgrade to JDK 8 on Ubuntu.

sudo apt install openjdk-8-jdk
update-java-alternatives --set java-1.8.0-openjdk

To confirm you have JDK 8 run the following and make sure you get simlar output with a version that starts with 1.8.

$ java -version
openjdk version "1.8.0_222"
OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_222-8u222-b10-1ubuntu1~18.04.1-b10)
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.222-b10, mixed mode) update-java-alternatives --set java-1.8.0-openjdk

Setup

Before running anything the following environment variables must be set:

  • JENKINS_VERSION -> version of the Jenkins war file to install in the
    Docker container
  • JENKINS_WAR_SOURCE -> location hosting the war file you want to download
  • CONFIG_PATH -> path to the yml config files that will be copied to the
    docker container and consumed by the groovy init scripts
  • PLUGIN_CONFIG -> path the yml config file containing the desired plugin
    version names and versions to be installed prior to Jenkins initialization
  • CONTAINER_NAME -> name of the docker container that gets created
  • TEST_SHARD -> used to specify which set of scripts will be used to
    configure a Jenkins container and which tests should be run against said container.

This can be done by copying local_env.sample.sh, making the modifications you need, and running:

source local_env.sh

Install python dependencies for acceptance testing (on a Jenkins instance running within a Docker container), as well as various Groovy helper utilities.

make requirements

Before building the docker container, you should download Jenkins plugins (with dependencies). By default, the plugins specified in test_data/plugins.yml will be installed. However, if you wish to use another file, set the environment variable $PLUGIN_CONFIG to point to the YAML file you wish to use.

make plugins

Configuring Jenkins

Jenkins will run Groovy code placed in $JENKINS_HOME/init.groovy.d on each boot.

Tailing the logs

Once the container is running do:
make logs

Tips/Tricks

Unlike the Jenkins Script Console, Jenkins-related libraries are not auto-imported, so make sure you import the following into your scripts:

import jenkins.*
import jenkins.model.*
import hudson.*
import hudson.model.*

Scripts are run in lexicographical order. Use a numerical prefix for scripts that must be run in a particular order. The following order is suggested for scripts:

  • 1<scriptName> : bootstrapping scripts, such as making helper jars available
  • 2<scriptName> : verification scripts, used to check the system before configuration
  • 3<scriptName> : main (Jenkins core) configuration scripts
  • 4<scriptName> : plugin configuration scripts
  • 5<scriptName> : configuration scripts that rely on something configured in the previous step
  • ...
  • 9<scriptName> : scripts to run at the end of the configuration process (i.e. putting into quiet mode or testing a configuration

Groovy Dependencies:

In order to use libraries outside of the Groovy standard library, you must first run src/main/groovy/1_add_jars_to_classpath.groovy. This will allow you to make use of the Groovy Grape system in subsequent scripts for importing external libraries. For example, if you wanted to make use of the Snake Yaml library:

@Grab(group='org.yaml', module='snakeyaml', version='1.17')
import org.yaml.snakeyaml.Yaml
import org.yaml.snakeyaml.constructor.SafeConstructor

Testing

Linting

Run codenarc to lint the groovy code in src/main/groovy and src/test/groovy

make quality

Linting reports can be viewed in build/reports/codenarc/main.html

Acceptance Testing

Build a Docker image with Jenkins and the scripts from this repo installed

  • NOTE: The Dockerfile in this repo makes use of multi-stage builds, a relatively newer Docker featue. Docker version 17.05 or higher is required.
make build

Run the image in the background

make run

Test that Jenkins has initialized correctly

make healthcheck

Test the configuration of a running Jenkins instance

make e2e

Configuring Your Jenkins Instance With Ansible:

Following this repository with the default configuration files will leave you with a sample instance sufficient for testing out groovy init scripts. If you are interested in using this to create a more accurate representation of your Jenkins instance, you can pair these steps with our ansible role found here: https://github.com/edx/configuration/tree/master/playbooks/roles/jenkins_common

Step 1

* STOP! DO SETUP FIRST *

To use this play to create your instance, first follow the steps found above under Setup. Once you've done that, create the container:

make run.container

Make sure the ssh key file has the correct permissions:

chmod 0600 ssh/jc_rsa

Next, run the ansible play targeting the container:

ansible-playbook -i localhost:2222, <path to ansible play> -e@<path to secure file> --tags jenkins:local-dev -u root --key-file ssh/jc_rsa

Start the jenkins application:

make run.jenkins

Plugin Versions

The groovy scripts in this repository are maintained to match the current configuration of our Jenkins instance here at edx. Plugins are always changing, and sometimes constructors or other methods that these scripts rely on change as well. Therefore, tweaks may be necessary for this to function properly with your jenkins instance.

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