The [Release Engineering project][0] consolidates the Jenkins jobs from project-specific VMs to a single Jenkins server. Each OpenDaylight project has a tab for their jobs on the [RelEng Jenkins server][3]. The system utilizes [Jenkins Job Builder][11] \(JJB\) for the creation and management of the Jenkins jobs. Sections: * [Jenkins Master](#jenkins_master) * [Build Slaves](#build_slaves) * [Creating Jenkins Jobs](#creating_jenkins_jobs) * [Getting Jenkins Job Builder](#jjb) * [Installing Jenkins Job Builder](#jjb_install) * [Virtual Environments](#jjb_install_venv) * [Installing JJB using pip](#jjb_install_pip) * [Installing JJB Manually](#jjb_install_manual) * [Jenkins Job Builder Docker Image](#jjb_install_docker) * [Jenkins Job Templates](#jjb_templates) * [Jenkins Job Basic Configuration](#jjb_basic_configuration) * [Jenkins Job Maven Properties](#jjb_maven_properties) * [Jenkins Sandbox](#jenkins_sandbox) * [Configuration](#sandbox_config) * [Manual Method](#jjb_use_manual) * [Docker Method](#jjb_use_docker) # Jenkins Master The [Jenkins master server][3] is the home for all project's Jenkins jobs. All maintenance and configuration of these jobs must be done via JJB through the [RelEng repo][4]. Project contributors can no longer edit the Jenkins jobs directly on the server. # Build Slaves The Jenkins jobs are run on build slaves (executors) which are created on an as-needed basis. If no idle build slaves are available a new VM is brought up. This process can take up to 2 minutes. Once the build slave has finished a job, it will remain online for 45 minutes before shutting down. Subsequent jobs will use an idle build slave if available. Our Jenkins master supports many types of dynamic build slaves. If you are creating custom jobs then you will need to have an idea of what type of slaves are available. The following are the current slave types and descriptions. Slave Template Names are needed for jobs that take advantage of multiple slaves as they must be specifically called out by template name instead of label. ## Adding New Components to the Slaves If your project needs something added to one of the slaves used during build and test you can help us get things added faster by doing one of the following: * Submit a patch to RelEng/Builder for the [Jenkins spinup script][5] that configures your new piece of software. * Submit a patch to RelEng/Builder for the [Vagrant template's bootstrap.sh][6] that configures your new piece of software. Going the first route will be faster in the short term as we can inspect the changes and make test modifications in the sandbox to verify that it works. The second route, however, is better for the community as a whole as it will allow others that utilize our Vagrant setups to replicate our systems more closely. It is, however, more time consuming as an image snapshot needs to be created based on the updated Vagrant definition before it can be attached to the sandbox for validation testing. In either case, the changes must be validated in the sandbox with tests to make sure that we don't break current jobs and that the new software features are operating as intended. Once this is done the changes will be merged and the updates applied to the RelEng Jenkins production silo. Please note that the combination of a Vagrant slave snapshot and a Jenkins spinup script is what defines a given slave. For instance, a slave may be defined by the [`releng/builder/vagrant/basic-java-node/`][8] Vagrant definition and the [`releng/builder/jenkins-script/controller.sh`][9] Jenkins spinup script (as the dynamic\_controller slave is). The pair provides the full definition of the realized slave. Jenkins starts a slave using the last-spun Vagrant snapshot for the specified definition. Once the base Vagrant instance is online Jenkins checks out the RelEng/Builder repo on it and executes two scripts. The first is [`basic_settings.sh`][10], which is a baseline for all of the slaves. The second is the specialized spinup script, which handles any system updates, new software installs or extra environment tweaks that don't make sense in a snapshot. After all of these scripts have executed Jenkins will finally attach the slave as an actual slave and start handling jobs on it. ### Pool: Rackspace - Docker
Jenkins Label
dynamic_docker
Slave Template name
rk-f20-docker
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/ovsdb-docker
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/docker.sh
A Fedora 20 system that is configured with OpenJDK 1.7 (aka Java7) and Docker. This system was originally custom built for the test needs of the OVSDB project but other projects have expressed interest in using it.
### Pool: Rackspace DFW
Jenkins Label
dynamic_verify
Slave Template name
rk-c-el65-build
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/basic-builder
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/builder.sh
A CentOS 6 build slave. This system has OpenJDK 1.7 (Java7) and OpenJDK 1.8 (Java8) installed on it along with all the other components and libraries needed for building any current OpenDaylight project. This is the label that is used for all basic -verify and -daily- builds for projects.
Jenkins Label
dynamic_merge
Slave Template name
rk-c-el65-build
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/basic-builder
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/builder.sh
See dynamic_verify (same image on the back side). This is the label that is used for all basic -merge and -integration- builds for projects.
### Pool: Rackspace DFW - Devstack
Jenkins Label
dynamic_devstack
Slave Template name
rk-c7-devstack
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/ovsdb-devstack
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/devstack.sh
A CentOS 7 system purpose built for doing OpenStack testing using DevStack. This slave is primarily targeted at the needs of the OVSDB project. It has OpenJDK 1.7 (aka Java7) and other basic DevStack related bits installed.
### Pool: Rackspace DFW - Integration
Jenkins Label
dynamic_robot
Slave Template name
rk-c-el6-robot
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/integration-robotframework
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/robot.sh
A CentOS 6 slave that is configured with OpenJDK 1.7 (Java7) and all the current packages used by the integration project for doing robot driven jobs. If you are executing robot framework jobs then your job should be using this as the slave that you are tied to. This image does not contain the needed libraries for building components of OpenDaylight, only for executing robot tests.
### Pool: Rackspace DFW - Integration Dynamic Lab
Jenkins Label
dynamic_controller
Slave Template name
rk-c-el6-java
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/basic-java-node
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/controller.sh
A CentOS 6 slave that has the basic OpenJDK 1.7 (Java7) installed and is capable of running the controller, not building.
Jenkins Label
dynamic_java
Slave Template name
rk-c-el6-java
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/basic-java-node
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/controller.sh
See dynamic_controller as it is currently the same image.
Jenkins Label
dynamic_mininet
Slave Template name
rk-c-el6-mininet
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/basic-mininet-node
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/mininet.sh
A CentOS 6 image that has mininet, openvswitch v2.0.x, netopeer and PostgreSQL 9.3 installed. This system is targeted at playing the role of a mininet system for integration tests. Netopeer is installed as it is needed for various tests by Integration. PostgreSQL 9.3 is installed as the system is also capable of being used as a VTN project controller and VTN requires PostgreSQL 9.3.
Jenkins Label
dynamic_mininet_fedora
Slave Template name
rk-f21-mininet
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/basic-mininet-fedora-node
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/mininet-fedora.sh
Basic Fedora 21 system with ovs v2.3.x and mininet 2.2.1
Jenkins Label
ubuntu_mininet
Slave Template name
ubuntu-trusty-mininet
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/ubuntu-mininet
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/mininet-ubuntu.sh
Basic Ubuntu system with ovs 2.0.2 and mininet 2.1.0
Jenkins Label
ubuntu_mininet_ovs_23
Slave Template name
ubuntu-trusty-mininet-ovs-23
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/ubuntu-mininet-ovs-23
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/mininet-ubuntu.sh
Basic Ubuntu system with ovs 2.3 and mininet 2.2.1
### Pool: Rackspace DFW - Matrix
Jenkins Label
matrix_master
Slave Template name
rk-c-el6-matrix
Vagrant Definition
releng/builder/vagrant/basic-java-node
Spinup Script
releng/builder/jenkins-scripts/matrix.sh
This is a very minimal system that is designed to spin up with 2 build instances on it. The purpose is to have a location that is not the Jenkins master itself for jobs that are executing matrix operations since they need a director location. This image should not be used for anything but tying matrix jobs before the matrx defined label ties.
# Creating Jenkins Jobs Jenkins Job Builder takes simple descriptions of Jenkins jobs in YAML format and uses them to configure Jenkins. * [Jenkins Job Builder][11] \(JJB\) documentation * [RelEng/Builder Gerrit][12] * [RelEng/Builder Git repository][13] ## Getting Jenkins Job Builder OpenDaylight uses Jenkins Job Builder to translate our in-repo YAML job configuration into job descriptions suitable for consumption by Jenkins. When testing new Jenkins Jobs in the [sandbox](#jenkins_sandbox), you'll need to use the `jenkins-jobs` executable to translate a set of jobs into their XML descriptions and upload them to the sandbox Jenkins server. We document [installing](#jjb_install) `jenkins-jobs` below. We also provide a [pre-built Docker image](#jjb_docker) with `jenkins-jobs` already installed. ### Installing Jenkins Job Builder For users who aren't already experienced with Docker or otherwise don't want to use our [pre-built JJB Docker image](#jjb_docker), installing JJB into a virtual environment is an equally good option. We recommend using [pip](#jjb_install_pip) to assist with JJB installs, but we also document [installing from a git repository manually](#jjb_install_manual). For both, we [recommend][17] using [virtual environments](#jjb_install_venv) to isolate JJB and its dependencies. The [`builder/jjb/requirements.txt`][33] file contains the currently recommended JJB version. Because JJB is fairly unstable, it may be necessary to debug things by installing different versions. This is documented for both [pip-assisted](#jjb_install_pip) and [manual](#jjb_install_manual) installs. #### Virtual Environments For both [pip-assisted](#jjb_install_pip) and [manual](#jjb_install_manual) JJB installs, we [recommend using virtual environments][17] to manage JJB and its Python dependencies. The [Virtualenvwrapper][30] tool can help you do so. There are good docs for [installing Virtualenvwrapper][31]. On Linux systems with pip (typical), they amount to: sudo pip install virtualenvwrapper A virtual environment is simply a directory that you install Python programs into and then append to the front of your path, causing those copies to be found before any system-wide versions. Create a new virtual environment for JJB. # Virtaulenvwrapper uses this dir for virtual environments $ echo $WORKON_HOME /home/daniel/.virtualenvs # Make a new virtual environment $ mkvirtualenv jjb # A new venv dir was created (jjb)$ ls -rc $WORKON_HOME | tail -n 1 jjb # The new venv was added to the front of this shell's path (jjb)$ echo $PATH /home/daniel/.virtualenvs/jjb/bin: # Software installed to venv, like pip, is found before system-wide copies (jjb)$ command -v pip /home/daniel/.virtualenvs/jjb/bin/pip With your virtual environment active, you should install JJB. Your install will be isolated to that virtual environment's directory and only visible when the virtual environment is active. You can easily leave and return to your venv. Make sure you activate it before each use of JJB. (jjb)$ deactivate $ command -v jenkins-jobs # No jenkins-jobs executable found $ workon jjb (jjb)$ command -v jenkins-jobs $WORKON_HOME/jjb/bin/jenkins-jobs #### Installing JJB using pip The recommended way to install JJB is via pip. First, clone the latest version of the [`releng/builder`][4] repo. $ git clone https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/p/releng/builder.git Before actually installing JJB and its dependencies, make sure you've [created and activated](#jjb_install_venv) a virtual environment for JJB. $ mkvirtualenv jjb The recommended version of JJB to install is the version specified in the [`builder/jjb/requirements.txt`][33] file. # From the root of the releng/builder repo (jjb)$ pip install -r jjb/requirements.txt To validate that JJB was successfully installed you can run this command: (jjb)$ jenkins-jobs --version To change the version of JJB specified by [`builder/jjb/requirements.txt`][33] to install from the latest commit to the master branch of JJB's git repository: $ cat jjb/requirements.txt -e git+https://git.openstack.org/openstack-infra/jenkins-job-builder#egg=jenkins-job-builder To install from a tag, like 1.4.0: $ cat jjb/requirements.txt -e git+https://git.openstack.org/openstack-infra/jenkins-job-builder@1.4.0#egg=jenkins-job-builder #### Installing JJB Manually This section documents installing JJB from its manually cloned repository. Note that [installing via pip](#jjb_install_pip) is typically simpler. Checkout the version of JJB's source you'd like to build. For example, using master: $ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-infra/jenkins-job-builder Using a tag, like 1.4.0: $ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-infra/jenkins-job-builder $ cd jenkins-job-builder $ git checkout tags/1.4.0 Before actually installing JJB and its dependencies, make sure you've [created and activated](#jjb_install_venv) a virtual environment for JJB. $ mkvirtualenv jjb You can then use [JJB's `requirements.txt`][20] file to install its dependencies. Note that we're not using `sudo` to install as root, since we want to make use of the venv we've configured for our current user. # In the cloned JJB repo, with the desired version of the code checked out (jjb)$ pip install -r requirements.txt Then install JJB from the repo with: (jjb)$ pip install . To validate that JJB was successfully installed you can run this command: (jjb)$ jenkins-jobs --version ### JJB Docker Image [Docker][14] is an open platform used to create virtualized Linux containers for shipping self-contained applications. Docker leverages LinuX Containers \(LXC\) running on the same operating system as the host machine, whereas a traditional VM runs an operating system over the host. docker pull zxiiro/jjb-docker docker run --rm -v ${PWD}:/jjb jjb-docker [This Dockerfile][15] created the [zxiiro/jjb-docker image][29]. By default it will run: jenkins-jobs test . You'll need to use the `-v/--volume=[]` parameter to mount a directory containing your YAML files, as well as a configured `jenkins.ini` file if you wish to upload your jobs to the [sandbox](#jenkins_sandbox). ## Jenkins Job Templates The OpenDaylight [RelEng/Builder][21] project provides [JJB job templates][2] that can be used to define basic jobs. ### Verify Job Template Trigger: **recheck** The Verify job template creates a Gerrit Trigger job that will trigger when a new patch is submitted to Gerrit. Verify jobs can be retriggered in Gerrit by leaving a comment that says **recheck**. ### Merge Job Template Trigger: **remerge** The Merge job template is similar to the Verify Job Template except it will trigger once a Gerrit patch is merged into the repo. It also automatically runs the Maven goals **source:jar** and **javadoc:jar**. This job will upload artifacts to [OpenDaylight's Nexus][22] on completion. Merge jobs can be retriggered in Gerrit by leaving a comment that says **remerge**. ### Daily Job Template The Daily (or Nightly) Job Template creates a job which will run on a build on a Daily basis as a sanity check to ensure the build is still working day to day. ### Sonar Job Template Trigger: **run-sonar** This job runs Sonar analysis and reports the results to [OpenDaylight's Sonar dashboard][23]. **Note:** Running the "run-sonar" trigger will cause Jenkins to remove its existing vote if it's already -1'd or +1'd a comment. You will need to re-run your verify job (recheck) after running this to get Jenkins to re-vote. The Sonar Job Template creates a job which will run against the master branch, or if BRANCHES are specified in the CFG file it will create a job for the **First** branch listed. ### Integration Job Template The Integration Job Template creates a job which runs when a project that your project depends on is successfully built. This job type is basically the same as a verify job except that it triggers from other Jenkins jobs instead of via Gerrit review updates. The dependencies that triger integration jobs are listed in your project.cfg file under the **DEPENDENCIES** variable. If no dependencies are listed then this job type is disabled by default. ### Distribution Test Job Trigger: **test-distribution** This job builds a distrbution against your patch, passes distribution sanity test and reports back the results to Gerrit. Leave a comment with trigger keyword above to activate it for a particular patch. This job is maintained by the [Integration/Test][1] project. **Note:** Running the "test-distribution" trigger will cause Jenkins to remove it's existing vote if it's already -1 or +1'd a comment. You will need to re-run your verify job (recheck) after running this to get Jenkins to put back the correct vote. ### Patch Test Job Trigger: **test-integration** This job runs a full integration test suite against your patch and reports back the results to Gerrit. Leave a comment with trigger keyword above to activate it for a particular patch. This job is maintained by the [Integration/Test][1] project. **Note:** Running the "test-integration" trigger will cause Jenkins to remove it's existing vote if it's already -1 or +1'd a comment. You will need to re-run your verify job (recheck) after running this to get Jenkins to put back the correct vote. Some considerations when using this job: * The patch test verification takes some time (~2 hours) + consumes a lot of resources so it is not meant to be used for every patch. * The system tests for master patches will fail most of the times because both code and test are unstable during the release cycle (should be good by the end of the cycle). * Because of the above, patch test results typically have to be interpreted by system test experts. The [Integration/Test][1] project can help with that. ### Autorelease Validate Job Trigger: **revalidate** This job runs the PROJECT-validate-autorelease-BRANCH job which is used as a quick sanity test to ensure that a patch does not depend on features that do not exist in the current release. The **revalidate** trigger is useful in cases where a project's verify job passed however validate failed due to infra problems or intermittent issues. It will retrigger just the validate-autorelease job. ## Basic Job Configuration To create jobs based on existing [templates](#jjb_templates), use the [`jjb-init-project.py`][24] helper script. When run from the root of [RelEng/Builder's repo][13], it will produce a file in `jjb//.yaml` containing your project's base template. $ python scripts/jjb-init-project.py --help usage: jjb-init-project.py [-h] [-c CONF] [-d DEPENDENCIES] [-t TEMPLATES] [-s STREAMS] [-p POM] [-g MVN_GOALS] [-o MVN_OPTS] [-a ARCHIVE_ARTIFACTS] project positional arguments: project project optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -c CONF, --conf CONF Config file -d DEPENDENCIES, --dependencies DEPENDENCIES Project dependencies A comma-seperated (no spaces) list of projects your project depends on. This is used to create an integration job that will trigger when a dependent project-merge job is built successfully. Example: aaa,controller,yangtools -t TEMPLATES, --templates TEMPLATES Job templates to use -s STREAMS, --streams STREAMS Release streams to fill with default options -p POM, --pom POM Path to pom.xml to use in Maven build (Default: pom.xml -g MVN_GOALS, --mvn-goals MVN_GOALS Maven Goals -o MVN_OPTS, --mvn-opts MVN_OPTS Maven Options -a ARCHIVE_ARTIFACTS, --archive-artifacts ARCHIVE_ARTIFACTS Comma-seperated list of patterns of artifacts to archive on build completion. See: http://ant.apache.org/manual/Types/fileset.html If all your project requires is the basic verify, merge, and daily jobs then using the job template should be all you need to configure for your jobs. ### Auto-Update Job Templates The first line of the job YAML file produced by the [init script][24] will contain the words `# REMOVE THIS LINE IF...`. Leaving this line will allow the RelEng/Builder [auto-update script][25] to maintain this file for your project, should the base templates ever change. It is a good idea to leave this line if you do not plan to create any complex jobs outside of the provided template. However, if your project needs more control over your jobs or if you have any additional configuration outside of the standard configuration provided by the template, then this line should be removed. #### Tuning Templates Allowing the auto-updated to manage your templates doesn't prevent you from doing some configuration changes. Parameters can be passed to templates via a `.cfg` in your `builder/jjb/` directory. An example is provided below, others can be found in the repos of other projects. Tune as necessary. Unnecessary paramaters can be removed or commented out with a "#" sign. JOB_TEMPLATES: verify,merge,sonar STREAMS: - beryllium: branch: master jdks: openjdk7,openjdk8 autorelease: true - stable-lithium: branch: stable/lithium jdks: openjdk7 POM: dfapp/pom.xml MVN_GOALS: clean install javadoc:aggregate -DrepoBuild -Dmaven.repo.local=$WORKSPACE/.m2repo -Dorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.localRepository=$WORKSPACE/.m2repo MVN_OPTS: -Xmx1024m -XX:MaxPermSize=256m DEPENDENCIES: aaa,controller,yangtools ARCHIVE_ARTIFACTS: *.logs, *.patches Note: [STREAMS][26] is a list of branches you want JJB to generate jobs for. The first branch will be the branch that reports Sonar analysis. Each branch must define a "jdks:" section listing the JDKs the verify jobs should run tests against for the branch. The first JDK listed will be used as the default JDK for non-verify type jobs. Note: Projects that are participating in the simultanious release should set "autorelease: true" under the streams they are participating in autorelease for. This enables a new job type validate-autorelease which is used to help identify if Gerrit patches might break autorelease or not. #### Advanced It is also possible to take advantage of both the auto-updater and creating your own jobs. To do this, create a YAML file in your project's sub-directory with any name other than \.yaml. The auto-update script will only search for files with the name \.yaml. The normal \.yaml file can then be left in tact with the "# REMOVE THIS LINE IF..." comment so it will be automatically updated. ## Maven Properties We provide a properties which your job can take advantage of if you want to do something different depending on the job type that is run. If you create a profile that activates on a property listed blow. The JJB templated jobs will be able to activate the profile during the build to run any custom code you wish to run in your project. -Dmerge : This flag is passed in our Merge job and is equivalent to the Maven property true. -Dsonar : This flag is passed in our Sonar job and is equivalent to the Maven property true. # Jenkins Sandbox The [sandbox instance][27]'s purpose is to allow projects to test their JJB setups before merging their code over to the RelEng master silo. It is configured similarly to the master instance, although it cannot publish artifacts or vote in Gerrit. If your project requires access to the sandbox please open an OpenDaylight Helpdesk ticket () and provide your ODL ID. ## Notes Regarding the Sandbox * Jobs are automatically deleted every Saturday at 08:00 UTC * Committers can login and configure Jenkins jobs in the sandbox directly (unlike with the master silo) * Sandbox configuration mirrors the master silo when possible * Sandbox jobs can NOT upload artifacts to Nexus * Sandbox jobs can NOT vote on Gerrit ## Configuration Make sure you have Jenkins Job Builder [properly installed](#jjb_install). If you do not already have access, open an OpenDaylight Helpdesk ticket () to request access to ODL's sandbox instance. [Integration/Test][1] committers have access by default. JJB reads user-specific configuration from a [`jenkins.ini` file][7]. An example is provided at [`builder/jenkins.ini.example`][28]. # If you don't have RelEng/Builder's repo, clone it $ git clone https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/p/releng/builder.git # Make a copy of the example JJB config file (in the builder/ directory) $ cp jenkins.ini.example jenkins.ini # Edit jenkins.ini with your username, API token and ODL's sandbox URL $ cat jenkins.ini [jenkins] user= password= url=https://jenkins.opendaylight.org/sandbox To get your API token, [login to the Jenkins **sandbox** instance][32] (_not the main master Jenkins instance, different tokens_), go to your user page (by clicking on your username, for example), click "Configure" and then "Show API Token". ## Manual Method If you [installed JJB locally into a virtual environment](#jjb_install), you should now activate that virtual environment to access the `jenkins-jobs` executable. $ workon jjb (jjb)$ You'll want to work from the root of the RelEng/Builder repo, and you should have your `jenkins.ini` file [properly configured](#sandbox_config). ### Testing Jobs It's good practice to use the `test` command to validate your JJB files before pushing them. jenkins-jobs --conf jenkins.ini test jjb/ If the job you'd like to test is a template with variables in its name, it must be manually expanded before use. For example, the commonly used template `{project}-csit-verify-1node-{functionality}` might expand to `ovsdb-csit-verify-1node-netvirt`. jenkins-jobs --conf jenkins.ini test jjb/ ovsdb-csit-verify-1node-netvirt Successful tests output the XML description of the Jenkins job described by the specified JJB job name. ### Pushing Jobs Once you've [configured your `jenkins.ini`](#sandbox_config) and [verified your JJB jobs](#jjb_manual_test) produce valid XML descriptions of Jenkins jobs you can push them to the Jenkins sandbox. > _**Important Note:** When pushing with `jenkins-jobs`, a log message with > the number of jobs you're pushing will be issued, typically to stdout. > **If the number is greater than 1** (or the number of jobs you passed to > the command to push) then you are pushing too many jobs and should **`ctrl+c` > to cancel the upload**. Else you will flood the system with jobs._ > INFO:jenkins_jobs.builder:Number of jobs generated: 1 > _**Failing to provide the final `` param will push all jobs!**_ # Don't push all jobs by omitting the final param! (ctrl+c to abort) jenkins-jobs --conf jenkins.ini update jjb/ ## Docker Method If [using Docker](#jjb_install_docker): # To test docker run --rm -v ${PWD}:/jjb zxiiro/jjb-docker > _**Important Note:** When pushing with `jenkins-jobs`, a log message with > the number of jobs you're pushing will be issued, typically to stdout. > **If the number is greater than 1** (or the number of jobs you passed to > the command to push) then you are pushing too many jobs and should **`ctrl+c` > to cancel the upload**. Else you will flood the system with jobs._ > INFO:jenkins_jobs.builder:Number of jobs generated: 1 > _**Failing to provide the final `` param will push all jobs!**_ # To upload jobs to the sandbox # Please ensure that you include a configured jenkins.ini in your volume mount # Making sure not to push more jobs than expected, ctrl+c to abort docker run --rm -v ${PWD}:/jjb zxiiro/jjb-docker jenkins-jobs --conf jenkins.ini update . openflowplugin-csit-periodic-1node-cds-longevity-only-master [0]: https://wiki.opendaylight.org/view/RelEng:Main "ODL RelEng parent project wiki" [1]: https://wiki.opendaylight.org/view/Integration/Test "ODL Integration/Test wiki" [2]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=tree;f=jenkins-scripts;h=371193b89f418de2ca0ffcb78be4a2d8046701ae;hb=refs/heads/master "JJB Templates Directory" [3]: https://jenkins.opendaylight.org/releng "RelEng Jenkins" [4]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng%2Fbuilder.git;a=summary "RelEng/Builder gitweb" [5]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=tree;f=jenkins-scripts;h=69252dd61ece511bd2018039b40e7836a8d49d21;hb=HEAD "Directory of Jenkins slave spinup scripts" [6]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=tree;f=vagrant;h=409a2915d48bbdeea9edc811e1661ae17ca28280;hb=HEAD "Directory of Jenkins slave Vagrant definitions" [7]: http://docs.openstack.org/infra/jenkins-job-builder/execution.html#configuration-file "JJB config file docs" [8]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=tree;f=vagrant/basic-java-node;h=7197b26b747deba38c08f30a569c233fd9636d72;hb=HEAD "Example Jenkins slave Vagrant defition" [9]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=blob;f=jenkins-scripts/controller.sh;h=893a04118a9bd9c55ae2a4a6af833fa089e0e0b4;hb=HEAD "Jenkins spinup script specialized for a slave" [10]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=blob;f=jenkins-scripts/basic_settings.sh;h=9f6d2a89948d0a25a8a4a24102630ada494e8623;hb=HEAD "Jenkins spinup script common to all slaves" [11]: http://ci.openstack.org/jenkins-job-builder/ "JJB docs" [12]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/#/admin/projects/releng/builder "ODL RelEng/Builder Gerrit" [13]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=summary "ODL RelEng/Builder repo" [14]: https://www.docker.com/whatisdocker/ "Docker docs" [15]: https://github.com/zxiiro/jjb-docker/blob/master/Dockerfile "Custom ODL JJB Dockerfile" [16]: https://github.com/openstack-infra/jenkins-job-builder "JJB repo" [17]: https://lists.opendaylight.org/pipermail/integration-dev/2015-April/003016.html "Recommendation to use venvs" [18]: https://virtualenv.readthedocs.org/en/latest/ "Virtualenv docs" [19]: http://virtualenv.readthedocs.org/en/latest/installation.html "Virtualenv install docs" [20]: https://github.com/openstack-infra/jenkins-job-builder/blob/master/requirements.txt "JJB Python dependencies" [21]: https://wiki.opendaylight.org/view/RelEng/Builder "ODL RelEng/Builder wiki" [22]: https://nexus.opendaylight.org "OpenDaylight's Nexus portal" [23]: https://sonar.opendaylight.org "OpenDaylight's Sonar portal" [24]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=blob;f=scripts/jjb-init-project.py;h=2133475a4ff9e1f4b18cc288654a4dc050bf808f;hb=refs/heads/master "JJB project config init helper script" [25]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=blob;f=scripts/jjb-autoupdate-project.py;h=56769bdb7ad5149404f4f50923f4d10af98d8248;hb=refs/heads/master "JJB project config auto-update helper script" [26]: https://lists.opendaylight.org/pipermail/release/2015-July/003139.html "STREAMS vs BRANCHES design background" [27]: https://jenkins.opendaylight.org/sandbox/ "OpenDaylight JJB Sandbox" [28]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=blob;f=jenkins.ini.example;h=c8486f89af99741f4706c23cd6717df9b417ae10;hb=refs/heads/master "JJB sandbox user config example" [29]: https://hub.docker.com/r/zxiiro/jjb-docker/ "Custom JJB Docker image" [30]: https://virtualenvwrapper.readthedocs.org/en/latest/ "Virtualenvwrapper docs" [31]: https://virtualenvwrapper.readthedocs.org/en/latest/install.html "Virtualenvwrapper install docs" [32]: https://jenkins.opendaylight.org/sandbox/login "ODL Jenkins sandbox login" [33]: https://git.opendaylight.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=releng/builder.git;a=blob;f=jjb/requirements.txt;h=0a4df2c2a575eb10d3abddb0fb2f4d048645e378;hb=refs/heads/master "ODL JJB requirements.txt file"