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Jenkins Java API

Build Status Coverage Status Bitdeli Badge

This project is a Java library for communicating with the Jenkins REST API.

Examples

Authenticating

// Basic authentication
JenkinsClient client = new JenkinsClient("localhost", 8080);
client.setCredentials("user", "passw0rd");

Creating a job and launching a build

The following example creates a new job called vacuum.my.room using an XML configuration template stored as a class path resource file job/config/free-style.xml.

JenkinsClient client = new JenkinsClient("localhost", 8080);
JobService jobService = new JobService(client);
JobConfiguration jobConfig = new ClassPathJobConfiguration("job/config/free-style.xml");
Job job = jobService.createJob("vacuum.my.room", jobConfig); 

The job/config/free-style.xml configuration template may look as follows.

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<project>
   <keepDependencies>false</keepDependencies>
   <properties />
   <scm class="hudson.scm.NullSCM" />
   <canRoam>false</canRoam>
   <disabled>false</disabled>
   <blockBuildWhenDownstreamBuilding>false</blockBuildWhenDownstreamBuilding>
   <blockBuildWhenUpstreamBuilding>false</blockBuildWhenUpstreamBuilding>
   <triggers />
   <concurrentBuild>false</concurrentBuild>
   <builders />
   <publishers />
   <buildWrappers />
</project>

To launch a build call the triggerBuild() method of the JobService class.

Long buildNumber = jobService.triggerBuild(job);

If your project is parameterized you would rather call the triggerBuild() method of the JobService class with an additional parameter which is a map of parameters/values.

Map<String, Object> parameters = mapOf(
   "FIRST_NAME", "Daniel",
   "LAST_NAME", "Pacak",
   "IS_SMART", true,
   "SECRET_PASSWORD", "passw0rd");
Long buildNumber = jobService.triggerBuild(job, parameters);

The configuration template for a parameterized project may look as follows.

<project>
   <actions />
   <description></description>
   <keepDependencies>false</keepDependencies>
   <properties>
      <hudson.model.ParametersDefinitionProperty>
         <parameterDefinitions>
            <hudson.model.StringParameterDefinition>
               <name>FIRST_NAME</name>
               <description></description>
               <defaultValue>Daniel</defaultValue>
            </hudson.model.StringParameterDefinition>
            <hudson.model.StringParameterDefinition>
               <name>LAST_NAME</name>
               <description></description>
               <defaultValue>Pacak</defaultValue>
            </hudson.model.StringParameterDefinition>
            <hudson.model.BooleanParameterDefinition>
               <name>IS_SMART</name>
               <description></description>
               <defaultValue>true</defaultValue>
            </hudson.model.BooleanParameterDefinition>
            <hudson.model.PasswordParameterDefinition>
               <name>SECRET_PASSWORD</name>
               <description></description>
               <defaultValue>D+ug18M/zLBNdF+SEEOSMA==</defaultValue>
            </hudson.model.PasswordParameterDefinition>
         </parameterDefinitions>
      </hudson.model.ParametersDefinitionProperty>
   </properties>
   <scm class="hudson.scm.NullSCM" />
   <canRoam>true</canRoam>
   <disabled>false</disabled>
   <blockBuildWhenDownstreamBuilding>false</blockBuildWhenDownstreamBuilding>
   <blockBuildWhenUpstreamBuilding>false</blockBuildWhenUpstreamBuilding>
   <triggers />
   <concurrentBuild>false</concurrentBuild>
   <builders>
      <hudson.tasks.BatchFile>
         <command>echo %FIRST_NAME% %LAST_NAME% %IS_SMART% %SECRET_PASSWORD% </command>
      </hudson.tasks.BatchFile>
   </builders>
   <publishers />
   <buildWrappers />
</project>

Getting all jobs

JenkinsClient client = new JenkinsClient("localhost", 8080);
JobService jobService = new JobService(client);
for (Job job : jobService.getJobs()) {
   System.out.printf("%s%n", job.getName());
}

Getting a job with the given name

JenkinsClient client = new JenkinsClient("localhost", 8080);
JobService jobService = new JobService(client);
Job vacuumMyRoom = jobService.getJob("vacuum.my.room");

Getting the configuration of the given job

JenkinsClient client = new JenkinsClient("localhost", 8080);
JobService jobService = new JobService(client);
Job vacuumMyRoom = jobService.getJob("vacuum.my.room");
JobConfiguration vacuumMyRoomConfig = jobService.getJobConfiguration(vacuumMyRoom);
System.out.println(Streams.toString(vacuumMyRoomConfig.getInputStream());

Deleting a job with the given name

JenkinsClient client = new JenkinsClient("localhost", 8080);
JobService jobService = new JobService(client);
jobService.deleteJob("job.to.be.deleted");

Executing the given Groovy script

JenkinsClient client = new JenkinsClient("localhost", 8080);
ScriptingService scriptingService = new ScriptingService(client);
GroovyScript script = new StringGroovyScript("print 'Hello, Jenkins!'");
GroovyResponse response = scriptingService.runScript(script);
System.out.println(Streams.toString(response.getInputStream())); 

Packages

The library is composed of 3 main packages.

Core (com.github.danielpacak.jenkins.ci.core)

This package contains all the model classes representing the resources available through the API such as jobs, builds, and configurations. The model classes contain getters and setters for all the elements present in the Jenkins REST API XML response.

Client (com.github.danielpacak.jenkins.ci.core.client)

This package contains classes which communicate with the Jenkins REST API over HTTP(S). The client package is also responsible for converting XML responses to appropriate Java model classes as well as generating request exceptions based on HTTP status codes.

Service (com.github.danielpacak.jenkins.ci.core.service)

This package contains classes that invoke the API and return model classes representing resources that were created, read, updated, or deleted. Service classes are defined for the resources they interact with. For example, the JobService class interacts with the Job resource.

Downloading

The recommended way to get started using the library in your project is with a dependency management system - the snippet below can be copied and pasted into your build descriptor.

<dependency>
	<groupId>com.github.danielpacak.jenkins.ci</groupId>
	<artifactId>jenkins.ci.core</artifactId>
	<version>1.0.0-rc4</version>
</dependency>

Alternatively, you can use the latest build deployed to sonatype-nexus-snapshots repository.

<dependency>
	<groupId>com.github.danielpacak.jenkins.ci</groupId>
	<artifactId>jenkins.ci.core</artifactId>
	<version>1.0.0-rc5-SNAPSHOT</version>
</dependency>

Just remember to reference this repository in your build descriptor.

<repositories>
	<repository>
		<id>sonatype-nexus-snapshots</id>
		<url>https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/</url>
	</repository>
</repositories>

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This project is a Java library for communicating with the Jenkins REST API.

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