ceph-csi/deploy
Niels de Vos 9db5d82327 ci: OCP4 deletes pods from batch jobs automatically
On the new OCP4 cluster, deleting the batch job results in deletion of
the pod as well. Deleting the pod when it does not exist anymore results
in a failure. Ignoring the potential failure makes the job pass again.

Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
2020-07-24 14:11:42 +00:00
..
checkout-repo.sh add scripts and configuration to deploy with Jenkins Job Builder 2020-04-01 14:15:04 +02:00
Dockerfile add scripts and configuration to deploy with Jenkins Job Builder 2020-04-01 14:15:04 +02:00
jjb-buildconfig.yaml ci: fix yamllint issues in jjb-buildconfig.yaml 2020-05-27 12:52:21 +02:00
jjb-config.yaml add scripts and configuration to deploy with Jenkins Job Builder 2020-04-01 14:15:04 +02:00
jjb-deploy.yaml ci: use new OCP4 registry for jjb image 2020-07-24 14:11:42 +00:00
jjb-validate.yaml ci: use new OCP4 registry for jjb image 2020-07-24 14:11:42 +00:00
jjb.sh ci: OCP4 deletes pods from batch jobs automatically 2020-07-24 14:11:42 +00:00
Makefile ci: cd into the WORKDIR before running jenkins-jobs 2020-05-27 14:09:08 +02:00
README.md add scripts and configuration to deploy with Jenkins Job Builder 2020-04-01 14:15:04 +02:00

Deploying Jenkins Jobs through OpenShift

This deploy/ directory contains the configuration to prepare running Jenkins Job Builder on OpenShift and update/add Jenkins Jobs in an environment hosted in the same OpenShift project.

The used Jenkins environment is expected to be deployed already. This is done by the CentOS CI team when a request for CI resources is handled. The deploying and configuration of Jenkins is therefor not part of this document.

Building the Jenkins Job Builder container image

OpenShift has a feature called ImageStreams. This can be used to build the container image that contains the jenkins-jobs executable to test and update/add jobs in a Jenkins environment.

All .yaml files in this directory need to be pushed into OpenShift, use oc create -f <file> for that.

  • the Dockerfile uses pip to install jenkins-jobs, the BuildConfig object in OpenShift can then be used to build the image
  • checkout-repo.sh will be included in the container image, and checks out the ci/centos branch of the repository
  • together with the Makefile (checked out with checkout-repo.sh), the Jenkins Jobs can be validated or deployed
  • jjb-buildconfig.yaml creates the ImageStream and the BuildConfig objects. Once created with oc create, the OpenShift Console shows a Build button for the jjb image under the Builds/Builds menu
  • jjb-config.yaml is the /etc/jenkins_jobs/jenkins_jobs.ini configuration files that contains username, password/token and URL to the Jenkins instance (edit this file before pushing to OpenShift)
  • jjb-validate.yaml is the OpenShift Job that creates a Pod, runs the validation test and exits. The job needs to be deleted from OpenShift before it can be run again.
  • jjb-deploy.yaml is the OpenShift Job that creates a Pod, runs jenkins-jobs to push the new jobs to the Jenkins environment. This pod uses the jjb-config ConfigMap to connect and login to the Jenkins instance. The job needs to be deleted from OpenShift before it can be run again.
  • jjb.sh is a helper script that can be used to validate/deploy the Jenkins Jobs in the parent directory. It creates the validate or deploy job, waits until the job finishes, shows the log and exits with 0 on success. This script can be used in Jenkins Jobs to automate the validation and deployment of jobs.