Jenkins Job Builder takes simple descriptions of Jenkins jobs in YAML or JSON format and uses them to configure Jenkins. You can keep your job descriptions in human readable text format in a version control system to make changes and auditing easier. It also has a flexible template system, so creating many similarly configured jobs is easy.
$ pip install --user jenkins-job-builder
git clone https://opendev.org/jjb/jenkins-job-builder.git
Install pre-commit from https://pre-commit.com/#intro in order to run some minimal testing on your commits.
A virtual environment is recommended for development. For example, Jenkins Job Builder may be installed from the top level directory:
$ virtualenv .venv $ source .venv/bin/activate $ pip install -r test-requirements.txt -e .
Patches are submitted via Gerrit at:
Please do not submit GitHub pull requests, they will be automatically closed.
More details on how you can contribute is available on our wiki at:
We ask that all code submissions be pep8 and pyflakes clean. The easiest way to do that is to run tox before submitting code for review in Gerrit. It will run pep8 and pyflakes in the same manner as the automated test suite that will run on proposed patchsets.
When creating new YAML components, please observe the following style conventions:
This consistency will help users avoid simple mistakes when writing YAML, as well as developers when matching YAML components to Python implementation.
Unit tests have been included and are in the tests folder. Many unit tests samples are included as examples in our documentation to ensure that examples are kept current with existing behaviour. To run the unit tests, execute the command:
tox -e py38
Unit tests could be run in parallel, using pytest-parallel pytest plugin:
tox -e py38 -- --workers=auto
For YAML support, you will need libyaml installed.
$ brew install libyaml
Then install the required python packages using pip:
$ sudo pip install PyYAML python-jenkins