Trigger Hudson build on SVN commit

你说的曾经没有我的故事 提交于 2019-12-03 02:31:32

According to "Building a software project # Builds by changes in Subversion/CVS", Hudson needs to poll your SVN repo in order to detect changes and trigger the build.

However, that can be initiated on each commit from the SVN, like in this thread.
The official script is at the Subversion Plugin page.

REPOS="$1"
REV="$2"
UUID=`svnlook uuid $REPOS`
/usr/bin/wget \
  --header "Content-Type:text/plain;charset=UTF-8" \
  --post-data "`svnlook changed --revision $REV $REPOS`" \
  --output-document "-" \
  --timeout=2 \
  http://server/hudson/subversion/${UUID}/notifyCommit?rev=$REV

But it is specified:

For this to work, your Hudson has to allow anonymous read access to the system.
If access control to your Hudson is more restrictive, you may need to specify the username and password, depending on how your authentication is configured.

To trigger a build when there is a commit in SVN you have to (1) set your hudson job to build remotely and (2) make a SVN hook...

the first part is fairly straightforward... to make the hook go to /var/lib/svn//hooks and rename post-commit.tmpl to post-commit there you can do something like

#!/bin/bash
# Este script comprueba si se han hecho cambios en un directorio concreto,
# y en tal caso lanza una build en Jenkins

REPOS="$1"
REV="$2"
JENKINS_JOB="$3"
JENKINS_USER=admin
JENKINS_PASSWORD=****
JENKINS_HOST=<hostname>

if [ -n $(svnlook dirs-changed $REPOS --revision $REV | fgrep "tags\/") ];then
 wget --quiet --auth-no-challenge --no-check-certificate --http-user=$JENKINS_USER --http-password=$JENKINS_PASSWORD http://$JENKINS_HOST/job/$JENKINS_JOB/build?token=TOKEN
fi

exit 0

Look at this article http://blogsyntagma.blogspot.com.ar/2012/04/hook-de-subversion-para-ejecutar-un-job.html (it's in spanish)

Here are the required steps:

  • Create a SVN user that Hudson can use to gain read-only access to your repository
  • Configure Hudson to use this SVN user when accessing the repository
  • Create a new job to use the repository at a specified address (i.e. a specific branch)
  • Configure your job to poll the repository at least once a minute for any changes
  • Configure your job to build what is required
  • Configure your job to send an e-mail on build failure

I would recommend e-mailing all developers so that they are notified that the build is unstable, not just the culprit. Not only does this provide more visibility, but it will motivate the culprit to fix the problem immediately or otherwise accept a scolding from their fellow developers. Trust me, this is effective.

This is how I got Jenkins 2.157 to start a build after a commit to an SVN repo.

1. Allow read access in Jenkins

Using Jenkins' web interface, go to Manage Jenkins -> Configure Global Security and check Allow anonymous read access:

If you skip this step, you'll get the following response when trying to trigger a build using an HTTP request (described in step three):

Authentication required
<!--
You are authenticated as: anonymous
Groups that you are in:

Permission you need to have (but didn't): hudson.model.Hudson.Read
... which is implied by: hudson.security.Permission.GenericRead
... which is implied by: hudson.model.Hudson.Administer
-->

2. Configure your build trigger

Still in Jenkins' web interface, go to your build job and define that you want to trigger a build using a script (this is going to be the SVN commit hook in the next step):

3. Create the post-commit hook

Finally, go to your repository's hooks directory and add a shell script named post-commit (the name is important, otherwise SVN won't execute it after a commit):

#!/bin/sh

# Name of the Jenkins build job
yourJob="your_job"

# You defined this in Jenkins' build job
build_token="yourSecretToken"

jenkins_address_with_port="localhost:8090"

curl $jenkins_address_with_port/job/$yourJob/build?token="$build_token"

Make the script executable: chmod +x post-commit.


Here's an extended version of post-commit that logs data about the commit, such as the commit's author.

#!/bin/sh

# The path to this repository
repo_path="$1"
# The number of the revision just committed
rev="$2"
# The name of the transaction that has become rev
transaction_name="$3"

# See http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.7/svn.ref.svnlook.c.author.html
commit_author="$(svnlook author --revision $rev $repo_path)"
# The UUID of the repository, something like e3b3abdb-82c2-419e-a100-60b1d0727d12
repo_uuid=$(svnlook uuid $repo_path)

# Which files were changed, added, or deleted. For example:
# U   src/main/java/com/bullbytes/MyProgram.java
what_has_changed=$(svnlook changed --revision $rev $repo_path)

log_file=/tmp/post_commit.log

echo "Post-commit hook of revision $rev committed by $commit_author to repo at $repo_path with ID $repo_uuid was run on $(date). Transaction name: $transaction_name. User $(whoami) executed this script. This has changed: $what_has_changed" >> $log_file

# Name of the Jenkins build job
yourJob="your_job"

# You defined this in Jenkins' build job
build_token="yourSecretToken"

jenkins_address_with_port="localhost:8090"

curl $jenkins_address_with_port/job/$yourJob/build?token="$build_token"

To learn more about commit hooks, head to the docs.

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