This is intended to be a re-usable Puppet module that you can include in your own tree.
The experimental types/providers are not for the faint of heart. If you are starting out with this module you probably want to skip directly to Getting Started.
A family of experimental native types and providers has been added to this module, in parallel to the existing classes and defined types, with the goal of soliciting feedback. One of the primary benefits of these new types is not requiring manifest changes to manage jenkins with or without "security" enabled. The goal is to eventually replace the functionality of the existing classes/defines with the new types. Usage feedback (positive and negative), bug reports and/or PRs would be greatly welcomed.
The semantics and API of these types should be considered unstable and almost certainly will change based on feedback. It is currently unclear if these types will be considered part of the public API or treated as private to the module.
See NATIVE_TYPES_AND_PROVIDERS.md
Jenkins refactored the CLI in 2.54 and 2.46.2 in response to several security incidents (See JENKINS-41745. This module has been adjusted to support the new CLI.
The CLI supports proper authentication with username and password. It's a
requirement for supporting AD and OpenID authentications (there is no ssh key
there). You can supply $jenkins::cli_username
and
$jenkins::cli_password
to use username / password based authentication.
Then the puppet automation user can also reside in A.D
Note: Jenkins requires a ssh username, so you must also provide
$jenkins::cli_username
for ssh. If you specify both username/password
and ssh key file, SSH authentication is preferred.
puppet module install puppet/jenkins
node 'hostname.example.com' {
include jenkins
}
Then the service should be running at http://hostname.example.com:8080/.
class { 'jenkins':
executors => 0,
}
Build jobs can be managed using the jenkins::job
define
jenkins::job { 'test-build-job':
config => template("${templates}/test-build-job.xml.erb"),
}
jenkins::job { 'test-build-job':
ensure => 'absent',
}
The Jenkins puppet module defines the jenkins::plugin
resource which
will download and install the plugin "by
hand"
The names of the plugins can be found on the update site
By default, the resource will install the latest plugin, i.e.:
jenkins::plugin { 'git': }
If you specify version => 'latest'
in current releases of the module, the
plugin will be downloaded and installed with every run of Puppet. This is a
known issue and will be addressed in future releases.
If you need to peg a specific version, simply specify that as a string, i.e.:
jenkins::plugin { 'git':
version => '1.1.11',
}
Note that plugin will timeout if it takes longer than 120 seconds to download.
You can increase this by specifying a timeout value, i.e: timeout => 240
.
This module will download the jenkins modules over HTTP, without SSL. In order to add some verification regarding the downloaded file, you can specify a checksum. You can also define a checksum type with 'digest_type' (default to sha1 if unspecified) ie.:
jenkins::plugin { 'git':
version => '2.2.12',
digest_string => '48141822e0eea1faa1a1a99b35372494e7352c2746ca3aa3a19a07f34b021848d2cd0bffc8959c1b809c5be231c1b49e9ffec0430dd68938197ac0f34588ee25',
digest_type => 'sha512',
}
Direct URL from which to download plugin without modification. This is particularly useful for development and testing of plugins which may not be hosted in the typical Jenkins' plugin directory structure.
jenkins::plugin { 'myplugin':
source => 'https://example.org/myplugin.hpi',
}
Note that that when source
is specified, the version
and plugin_url
parameters will have no effect on the plugin retrieval URL.
Dependencies are not automatically installed. You need to manually determine the plugin dependencies and include those as well. The Jenkins wiki is a good place to do this. For example: The Git plugin page is at https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Git+Plugin.
You can automatically add slaves to jenkins, and have them auto register themselves. Most options are actually optional, as nodes will auto-discover the master, and connect.
Full documentation for the slave code is in jenkins::slave.
It requires the swarm plugin on the master & the class jenkins::slave on the slaves, as below:
node /jenkins-slave.*/ {
class { 'jenkins::slave':
masterurl => 'http://jenkins-master1.domain.com:8080',
ui_user => 'adminuser',
ui_pass => 'adminpass',
}
}
node /jenkins-master.*/ {
include jenkins
include jenkins::master
}
If you have any resource in Puppet that depends on Jenkins being present, add
the following require
statement:
exec { 'some-exec':
require => Class['jenkins::package'],
# ... etc
}
This module includes a groovy-based helper script that uses the Jenkins CLI to interact with the Jenkins API. Users, Credentials, and security model configuration are all driven through this script.
When an API-based resource is defined, the Jenkins' CLI is installed and run against the local system (127.0.0.1). Jenkins is assumed to be listening on port 8080, but the module is smart enough to notice if you've configured an alternate port using jenkins::config_hash['JENKINS_PORT'].
Users and credentials are Puppet-managed, meaning that changes made to them from outside Puppet will be reset at the next puppet run. In this way, you can ensure that certain accounts are present and have the appropriate login credentials.
The CLI helper assumes unauthenticated access unless configured otherwise.
You can configure jenkins::cli_helper
to use an SSH key on the managed system
by passing the keyfile path as a class parameter:
class {'jenkins':
cli_ssh_keyfile => '/path/to/id_rsa',
}
... or via hiera:
jenkins::cli_ssh_keyfile: "/path/to/id_rsa"
__Direct including of the jenkins::cli_helper
class into the manifest is deprecated.__
There's an open bug in Jenkins (JENKINS-22346) that causes authentication to fail when a key is used but authentication is disabled. Until the bug is fixed, you may need to bootstrap jenkins out-of-band to ensure that resources and security policy are configured in the correct order. For example:
# In puppet:
anchor {'jenkins-bootstrap-start': } ->
Class['jenkins::cli_helper'] ->
Exec[$bootstrap_script] ->
anchor {'jenkins-bootstrap-complete': }
# Code for $bootstrap_script
#!/bin/bash -e
# Generate an SSH key for the admin user
ADMIN_USER='<%= admin_user_name %>'
ADMIN_EMAIL='<%= admin_user_email %>'
ADMIN_PASSWORD='<%= admin_user_password %>'
ADMIN_FULLNAME='<%= admin_user_full_name %>'
ADMIN_SSH_KEY='<%= admin_ssh_keyfile %>'
JENKINS_CLI='<%= jenkins_libdir %>/jenkins-cli.jar'
PUPPET_HELPER='<%= jenkins_libdir %>/puppet_helper.groovy'
HELPER="java -jar $JENKINS_CLI -s http://127.0.0.1:8080 groovy $PUPPET_HELPER"
DONEFILE='<%= jenkins_libdir %>/jenkins-bootstrap.done'
ADMIN_PUBKEY="$(cat ${ADMIN_SSH_KEY}.pub)"
# Create the admin user, passing no credentials
$HELPER create_or_update_user "$ADMIN_USER" "$ADMIN_EMAIL" "$ADMIN_PASSWORD" "$ADMIN_FULLNAME" "$ADMIN_PUBKEY"
# Enable security. After this, credentials will be required.
$HELPER set_security full_control
touch $DONEFILE
jenkins::cli::exec
The defined type jenkins::cli::exec
may be used to execute arbitrary CLI helper
commands.
Arguments to the CLI helper script may be specified as the resource's title.
jenkins::cli::exec { 'set_num_executors 0': }
Or passed as an array to the command
parameter. This example is
semantically equivalent to the first.
jenkins::cli::exec { 'set_num_executors 0':
command => ['set_num_executors', '0'],
}
which is also equivalent to:
jenkins::cli::exec { 'set_num_executors 0':
command => 'set_num_executors 0',
}
If the unless
parameter is specified, an environment variable named
$HELPER_CMD
is declared which contains the complete string needed to execute
the CLI helper script (minus arguments). This may be useful in constructing
idempotent exec
statements.
$num_executors = 0
jenkins::cli::exec { "set_num_executors ${num_executors}":
unless => "[ \$(\$HELPER_CMD get_num_executors) -eq ${num_executors} ]"
}
Email and password are required.
Create a johndoe
user account whose full name is "Managed by Puppet":
jenkins::user { 'johndoe':
email => 'jdoe@example.com',
password => 'changeme',
}
Password is required. For ssh credentials, password
is the key passphrase (or
'' if there is none). private_key_or_path
is the text of key itself or an
absolute path to a key file on the managed system.
Create ssh credentials named 'github-deploy-key', providing an unencrypted private key:
jenkins::credentials { 'github-deploy-key':
password => '',
private_key_or_path => hiera('::github_deploy_key'),
}
Setting a UUID:
You can also specify a UUID to use with the credentials, which will be used to identify the credentials from within the job config. This is necessary when setting credentials for use with the git plugin, for example.
You can either manually generate a UUID from a site like UUIDTools.com, or use the UUID from an existing user, which is accessible within the URL of the Jenkins console when managing an existing user's credentials.
jenkins::credentials { 'deploy-user':
password => '',
private_key_or_path => hiera('::deploy_key'),
uuid => hiera('::deploy_credentials_uuid'),
}
The Jenkins security model can be set to one of two modes:
full_control
- Users have full control after login. Authentication uses
Jenkins' built-in user database.unsecured
- Authentication is not required.Jenkins security is not managed by puppet unless jenkins::security is defined.
If you use librarian-puppet, add
the following to your Puppetfile
:
mod "puppet/jenkins"
This module is compatible with the puppet module tool. Appropriately this module has been released to the Puppet Forge, allowing you to easily install the released version of the module
To quickly try this module with the puppet module tool:
% sudo puppet module install puppet/jenkins
% sudo puppet apply -v -e 'include jenkins'
info: Loading facts in facter_dot_d
info: Loading facts in facter_dot_d
info: Applying configuration version '1323459431'
notice: /Stage[main]/Jenkins::Repo::El/Yumrepo[jenkins]/descr: descr changed '' to 'Jenkins'
notice: /Stage[main]/Jenkins::Repo::El/Yumrepo[jenkins]/baseurl: baseurl changed '' to 'http://pkg.jenkins-ci.org/redhat/'
notice: /Stage[main]/Jenkins::Repo::El/Yumrepo[jenkins]/gpgcheck: gpgcheck changed '' to '1'
notice: /Stage[main]/Jenkins::Repo::El/File[/etc/yum/jenkins-ci.org.key]/ensure: defined content as '{md5}9fa06089848262c5a6383ec27fdd2575'
notice: /Stage[main]/Jenkins::Repo::El/Exec[rpm --import /etc/yum/jenkins-ci.org.key]/returns: executed successfully
notice: /Stage[main]/Jenkins::Package/Package[jenkins]/ensure: created
notice: /Stage[main]/Jenkins::Service/Service[jenkins]/ensure: ensure changed 'stopped' to 'running'
notice: Finished catalog run in 27.46 seconds
It's possible to specify a different package name to the default jenkins
if you wish:
class { 'jenkins':
package_name => 'jenkins_custom',
}
Sometimes you don't have an RPM repository available and are not allowed to directly install from repositories on the Internet. In this case, you can still install Jenkins with this module by hosting the jenkins RPM file somewhere accessible (http server, S3 bucket, etc.) and tell
class { 'jenkins':
direct_download => 'http://myserver/rpms/jenkins-x.xxx-1-1.rpm',
}