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101 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
101 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
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# Jenkins
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[Jenkins](http://jenkins-ci.org/) is a pluggable continuous
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integration system. The Google team is running two Jenkins servers in GCE for
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the Kubernetes project. The post-commit instance runs continuous builds, unit
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tests, integration tests, code verification tests, and end-to-end tests on
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multiple providers using the latest commits to the Kubernetes repo from the
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master and release branches. The PR Jenkins instance runs these tests on each
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PR by a trusted contributor, it but only runs a subset of the end-to-end tests
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and only on GCE.
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## General flow
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The flow of the post-commit Jenkins instance:
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* Under the `kubernetes-build` job: Every 2 minutes, Jenkins polls for a batch
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of new commits, after which it runs the `build.sh` script (in this directory)
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on the latest tip. This results in build assets getting pushed to GCS and the
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`latest.txt` file in the `ci` bucket being updated.
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* On trigger, and every half hour (which effectively means all the time, unless
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we're failing cluster creation), e2e variants run, on the latest build assets
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in GCS:
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* `kubernetes-e2e-gce`: Standard GCE e2e.
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* `kubernetes-e2e-gke`: GKE provider e2e, with head k8s client and GKE
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creating clusters at its default version.
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* `kubernetes-e2e-aws`: AWS provider e2e. This only runs once a day.
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* Each job will not run concurrently with itself, so, for instance,
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Jenkins executor will only ever run one `kubernetes-build`
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job. However, it may run the jobs in parallel,
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i.e. `kubernetes-build` may be run at the same time as
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`kubernetes-e2e-gce`. For this reason, you may see your changes
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pushed to our GCS bucket rapidly, but they may take some time to
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fully work through Jenkins. Or you may get lucky and catch the
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train in 5 minutes.
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* There are many jobs not listed here, including upgrade tests, soak tests, and
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tests for previous releases.
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## Scripts
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The scripts in this directory are directly used by Jenkins, either by
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curl from githubusercontent (if we don't have a git checkout handy) or
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by executing it from the git checkout. Since Jenkins is an entity
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outside this repository, it's tricky to keep documentation for it up
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to date quickly. However, the scripts themselves attempt to provide
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color for the configuration(s) that each script runs in.
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## GCS Log Format
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Our `upload-to-gcs.sh` script runs at the start and end of every job. Logs on
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post-commit Jenkins go under `gs://kubernetes-jenkins/logs/`. Logs on PR
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Jenkins go under `gs://kubernetes-jenkins-pull/pr-logs/pull/PULL_NUMBER/`.
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Individual run logs go into the `JOB_NAME/BUILD_NUMBER` folder.
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At the start of the job, it uploads `started.json` containing the version of
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Kubernetes under test and the timestamp.
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At the end, it uploads `finished.json` containing the result and timestamp, as
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well as the build log into `build-log.txt`. Under `artifacts/` we put our
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test results in `junit_XY.xml`, along with gcp resource lists and cluster logs.
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It also updates `latest-build.txt` at the end to point to this build number.
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In the end, the directory structure looks like this:
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```
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gs://kubernetes-jenkins/logs/kubernetes-e2e-gce/
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latest-build.txt
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12345/
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build-log.txt
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started.json
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finished.json
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artifacts/
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gcp-resources-{before, after}.txt
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junit_{00, 01, ...}.xml
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jenkins-e2e-master/{kube-apiserver.log, ...}
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jenkins-e2e-node-abcd/{kubelet.log, ...}
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12344/
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...
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```
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The munger uses `latest-build.txt` and the JUnit reports to figure out whether
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or not the job is healthy.
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## Job Builder
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New jobs should be specified as YAML files to be processed by [Jenkins Job
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Builder](http://docs.openstack.org/infra/jenkins-job-builder/). The YAML files
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live in `jenkins/job-configs` and its subfolders **in the
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[kubernetes/test-infra repository](https://github.com/kubernetes/test-infra)**.
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Jenkins runs Jenkins Job Builder in a Docker container defined in
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`job-builder-image`, and triggers it using `update-jobs.sh`. Jenkins Job Builder
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uses a config file called
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[jenkins_jobs.ini](http://docs.openstack.org/infra/jenkins-job-builder/execution.html)
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which contains the location and credentials of the Jenkins server.
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E2E Job definitions are templated to avoid code duplication. To add a new job,
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add a new entry to the appropriate `project`.
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[This](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/commit/eb273e5a4bdd3905f881563ada4e6543c7eb96b5)
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is an example of a commit which does this. If necessary, create a new project, as in
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[this](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/commit/09c27cdabc300e0420a2914100bedb565c23ed73)
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commit.
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[![Analytics](https://kubernetes-site.appspot.com/UA-36037335-10/GitHub/hack/jenkins/README.md?pixel)]()
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