Building CI/CD pipelines with Jenkins

Build continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines with this step-by-step Jenkins tutorial.
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In my article A beginner's guide to building DevOps pipelines with open source tools, I shared a story about building a DevOps pipeline from scratch. The core technology driving that initiative was Jenkins, an open source tool to build continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines.

At Citi, there was a separate team that provided dedicated Jenkins pipelines with a stable master-slave node setup, but the environment was only used for quality assurance (QA), staging, and production environments. The development environment was still very manual, and our team needed to automate it to gain as much flexibility as possible while accelerating the development effort. This is the reason we decided to build a CI/CD pipeline for DevOps. And the open source version of Jenkins was the obvious choice due to its flexibility, openness, powerful plugin-capabilities, and ease of use.

In this article, I will share a step-by-step walkthrough on how you can build a CI/CD pipeline using Jenkins.

What is a pipeline?

Before jumping into the tutorial, it's helpful to know something about CI/CD pipelines.

To start, it is helpful to know that Jenkins itself is not a pipeline. Just creating a new Jenkins job does not construct a pipeline. Think about Jenkins like a remote control—it's the place you click a button. What happens when you do click a button depends on what the remote is built to control. Jenkins offers a way for other application APIs, software libraries, build tools, etc. to plug into Jenkins, and it executes and automates the tasks. On its own, Jenkins does not perform any functionality but gets more and more powerful as other tools are plugged into it.

A pipeline is a separate concept that refers to the groups of events or jobs that are connected together in a sequence:

A pipeline is a sequence of events or jobs that can be executed.

The easiest way to understand a pipeline is to visualize a sequence of stages, like this:

Pipeline example

Here, you should see two familiar concepts: Stage and Step.

  • Stage: A block that contains a series of steps. A stage block can be named anything; it is used to visualize the pipeline process.
  • Step: A task that says what to do. Steps are defined inside a stage block.

In the example diagram above, Stage 1 can be named "Build," "Gather Information," or whatever, and a similar idea is applied for the other stage blocks. "Step" simply says what to execute, and this can be a simple print command (e.g., echo "Hello, World"), a program-execution command (e.g., java HelloWorld), a shell-execution command (e.g., chmod 755 Hello), or any other command—as long as it is recognized as an executable command through the Jenkins environment.

The Jenkins pipeline is provided as a codified script typically called a Jenkinsfile, although the file name can be different. Here is an example of a simple Jenkins pipeline file.

// Example of Jenkins pipeline script

pipeline {
  stages {
    stage("Build") {
       steps {
          // Just print a Hello, Pipeline to the console
          echo "Hello, Pipeline!"
          // Compile a Java file. This requires JDKconfiguration from Jenkins
          javac HelloWorld.java
          // Execute the compiled Java binary called HelloWorld. This requires JDK configuration from Jenkins
          java HelloWorld
          // Executes the Apache Maven commands, clean then package. This requires Apache Maven configuration from Jenkins
          mvn clean package ./HelloPackage
          // List the files in current directory path by executing a default shell command
          sh "ls -ltr"
       }
   }
   // And next stages if you want to define further...
 } // End of stages
} // End of pipeline

It's easy to see the structure of a Jenkins pipeline from this sample script. Note that some commands, like java, javac, and mvn, are not available by default, and they need to be installed and configured through Jenkins. Therefore:

A Jenkins pipeline is the way to execute a Jenkins job sequentially in a defined way by codifying it and structuring it inside multiple blocks that can include multiple steps containing tasks.

OK. Now that you understand what a Jenkins pipeline is, I'll show you how to create and execute a Jenkins pipeline. At the end of the tutorial, you will have built a Jenkins pipeline like this:

Final Result

How to build a Jenkins pipeline

To make this tutorial easier to follow, I created a sample GitHub repository and a video tutorial.

Before starting this tutorial, you'll need:

  • Java Development Kit: If you don't already have it, install a JDK and add it to the environment path so a Java command (like java jar) can be executed through a terminal. This is necessary to leverage the Java Web Archive (WAR) version of Jenkins that is used in this tutorial (although you can use any other distribution).
  • Basic computer operations: You should know how to type some code, execute basic Linux commands through the shell, and open a browser.

Let's get started.

Step 1: Download Jenkins

Navigate to the Jenkins download page. Scroll down to Generic Java package (.war) and click on it to download the file; save it someplace where you can locate it easily. (If you choose another Jenkins distribution, the rest of tutorial steps should be pretty much the same, except for Step 2.) The reason to use the WAR file is that it is a one-time executable file that is easily executable and removable.

Download Jenkins as Java WAR file

Step 2: Execute Jenkins as a Java binary

Open a terminal window and enter the directory where you downloaded Jenkins with cd <your path>. (Before you proceed, make sure JDK is installed and added to the environment path.) Execute the following command, which will run the WAR file as an executable binary:

java -jar ./jenkins.war

If everything goes smoothly, Jenkins should be up and running at the default port 8080.

Execute as an executable JAR binary

Step 3: Create a new Jenkins job

Open a web browser and navigate to localhost:8080. Unless you have a previous Jenkins installation, it should go straight to the Jenkins dashboard. Click Create New Jobs. You can also click New Item on the left.

Create New Job

Step 4: Create a pipeline job

In this step, you can select and define what type of Jenkins job you want to create. Select Pipeline and give it a name (e.g., TestPipeline). Click OK to create a pipeline job.

Create New Pipeline Job

You will see a Jenkins job configuration page. Scroll down to find Pipeline section. There are two ways to execute a Jenkins pipeline. One way is by directly writing a pipeline script on Jenkins, and the other way is by retrieving the Jenkins file from SCM (source control management). We will go through both ways in the next two steps.

Step 5: Configure and execute a pipeline job through a direct script

To execute the pipeline with a direct script, begin by copying the contents of the sample Jenkinsfile from GitHub. Choose Pipeline script as the Destination and paste the Jenkinsfile contents in Script. Spend a little time studying how the Jenkins file is structured. Notice that there are three Stages: Build, Test, and Deploy, which are arbitrary and can be anything. Inside each Stage, there are Steps; in this example, they just print some random messages.

Click Save to keep the changes, and it should automatically take you back to the Job Overview.

Configure to Run as Jenkins Script

To start the process to build the pipeline, click Build Now. If everything works, you will see your first pipeline (like the one below).

Click Build Now and See Result

To see the output from the pipeline script build, click any of the Stages and click Log. You will see a message like this.

Visit sample GitHub with Jenkins get clone link

Step 6: Configure and execute a pipeline job with SCM

Now, switch gears: In this step, you will Deploy the same Jenkins job by copying the Jenkinsfile from a source-controlled GitHub. In the same GitHub repository, pick up the repository URL by clicking Clone or download and copying its URL.

Checkout from GitHub

Click Configure to modify the existing job. Scroll to the Advanced Project Options setting, but this time, select the Pipeline script from SCM option in the Destination dropdown. Paste the GitHub repo's URL in the Repository URL, and type Jenkinsfile in the Script Path. Save by clicking the Save button.

Change to Pipeline script from SCM

To build the pipeline, once you are back to the Task Overview page, click Build Now to execute the job again. The result will be the same as before, except you have one additional stage called Declaration: Checkout SCM.

Build again and verify

To see the pipeline's output from the SCM build, click the Stage and view the Log to check how the source control cloning process went.

Verify Checkout Procedure

Do more than print messages

Congratulations! You've built your first Jenkins pipeline!

"But wait," you say, "this is very limited. I cannot really do anything with it except print dummy messages." That is OK. So far, this tutorial provided just a glimpse of what a Jenkins pipeline can do, but you can extend its capabilities by integrating it with other tools. Here are a few ideas for your next project:

  • Build a multi-staged Java build pipeline that takes from the phases of pulling dependencies from JAR repositories like Nexus or Artifactory, compiling Java codes, running the unit tests, packaging into a JAR/WAR file, and deploying to a cloud server.
  • Implement the advanced code testing dashboard that will report back the health of the project based on the unit test, load test, and automated user interface test with Selenium. 
  • Construct a multi-pipeline or multi-user pipeline automating the tasks of executing Ansible playbooks while allowing for authorized users to respond to task in progress.
  • Design a complete end-to-end DevOps pipeline that pulls the infrastructure resource files and configuration files stored in SCM like GitHub and executing the scripts through various runtime programs.

Follow any of the tutorials at the end of this article to get into these more advanced cases.

Manage Jenkins

From the main Jenkins dashboard, click Manage Jenkins.

Manage Jenkins

Global tool configuration

There are many options available, including managing plugins, viewing the system log, etc. Click Global Tool Configuration.

Global Tools Configuration

Add additional capabilities

Here, you can add the JDK path, Git, Gradle, and so much more. After you configure a tool, it is just a matter of adding the command into your Jenkinsfile or executing it through your Jenkins script.

See Various Options for Plugin

Where to go from here?

This article put you on your way to creating a CI/CD pipeline using Jenkins, a cool open source tool. To find out about many of the other things you can do with Jenkins, check out these other articles on Opensource.com:

You may be interested in some of the other articles I've written to supplement your open source journey:

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Bryant Jimin Son is an Octocat, which not official title but likes to be called that way, at GitHub, a company widely known for hosting most open source projects in the world. At work, he is exploring different git technology, GitHub Actions, GitHub security, etc. Previously, he was a Senior Consultant at Red Hat, a technology company known for its Linux server and opensource contributions.

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