Configuration File
------------------

After installation, you will need to create a configuration file.  By
default, ``jenkins-jobs`` looks in
``/etc/jenkins_jobs/jenkins_jobs.ini`` but you may specify an
alternative location when running ``jenkins-jobs``.  The file should have
the following format:

.. literalinclude:: ../../etc/jenkins_jobs.ini-sample
   :language: ini

job_builder section
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

**ignore_cache**
  (Optional) If set to True, Jenkins Job Builder won't use any cache.

**keep_descriptions**
  By default `jenkins-jobs` will overwrite the jobs descriptions even if no
  description has been defined explicitly.
  When this option is set to True, that behavior changes and it will only
  overwrite the description if you specified it in the yaml. False by default.

**include_path**
  (Optional) Can be set to a ':' delimited list of paths, which jenkins
  job builder will search for any files specified by the custom application
  yaml tags 'include', 'include-raw' and 'include-raw-escaped'.

**recursive**
  (Optional) If set to True, jenkins job builder will search for job
  definition files recursively.

**exclude**
  (Optional) If set to a list of values separated by ':', these paths will be
  excluded from the list of paths to be processed when searching recursively.
  Values containing no ``/`` will be matched against directory names at all
  levels, those starting with ``/`` will be considered absolute, while others
  containing a ``/`` somewhere other than the start of the value will be
  considered relative to the starting path.

**allow_duplicates**
  (Optional) By default `jenkins-jobs` will abort when a duplicate macro,
  template, job-group or job name is encountered as it cannot establish the
  correct one to use. When this option is set to True, only a warning is
  emitted.

**allow_empty_variables**
  (Optional) When expanding strings, by default `jenkins-jobs` will raise an
  exception if there's a key in the string, that has not been declared in the
  input YAML files. Setting this option to True will replace it with the empty
  string, allowing you to use those strings without having to define all the
  keys it might be using.


jenkins section
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

**user**
  This should be the name of a user previously defined in Jenkins.
  Appropriate user permissions must be set under the Jenkins security
  matrix: under the ``Global`` group of permissions, check ``Read``,
  then under the ``Job`` group of permissions, check ``Create``,
  ``Delete``, ``Configure`` and finally ``Read``.

**password**
  The API token for the user specified.  You can get this through the
  Jenkins management interface under ``People`` -> username ->
  ``Configure`` and then click the ``Show API Token`` button.

**url**
  The base URL for your Jenkins installation.

**timeout**
  (Optional) The connection timeout (in seconds) to the Jenkins server.
  By default this is set to the system configured socket timeout.

**query_plugins_info**
  Whether to query the Jenkins instance for plugin info. If no configuration
  files are found (either in the default paths or given through the
  command-line), `jenkins-jobs` will skip querying for plugin information. True
  by default.


hipchat section
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

**send-as**
  This is the hipchat user name that will be used when sending notifications.

**authtoken**
  The API token necessary to send messages to hipchat.  This can be generated in
  the hipchat web interface by a user with administrative access for your
  organization. This authtoken is set for each job individually; the
  JJB Hipchat Plugin does not currently support setting different tokens for
  different projects, so the token you use will have to be scoped such that it
  can be used for any room your jobs might be configured to notify. For more
  information on this topic, please see the `Hipchat API Documentation`__

__ https://www.hipchat.com/docs/apiv2/auth


stash section
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

**username**
  This is the stash user name that will be used to connect to stash
  when using the stash publisher plugin and not defining it in the
  yaml part.

**password**
  This is the related password that will be used with the stash username
  when using the stash publisher plugin and not defining it in the
  yaml part.



Running
-------

After it's installed and configured, you can invoke Jenkins Job
Builder by running ``jenkins-jobs``.  You won't be able to do
anything useful just yet without a configuration; that is
discussed in the next section.

Test Mode
^^^^^^^^^
Once you have a configuration defined, you can run the job builder in test mode.

If you want to run a simple test with just a single YAML job definition file
and see the XML output on stdout::

  jenkins-jobs test /path/to/foo.yaml

You can also pass JJB a directory containing multiple job definition files::

  jenkins-jobs test /path/to/defs -o /path/to/output

which will write XML files to the output directory for all of the jobs
defined in the defs directory.

.. _updating-jobs:

Updating Jobs
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
When you're satisfied with the generated XML from the test, you can run::

  jenkins-jobs update /path/to/defs

which will upload the job definitions to Jenkins if needed.  Jenkins Job
Builder maintains, for each host, a cache [#f1]_ of previously configured jobs,
so that you can run that command as often as you like, and it will only
update the jobs configurations in Jenkins if the defined definitions has
changed since the last time it was run.  Note: if you modify a job
directly in Jenkins, jenkins-jobs will not know about it and will not
update it.

To update a specific list of jobs, simply pass the job names as additional
arguments after the job definition path. To update Foo1 and Foo2 run::

  jenkins-jobs update /path/to/defs Foo1 Foo2

Passing Multiple Paths
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
It is possible to pass multiple paths to JJB using colons as a path separator on
\*nix systems and semi-colons on Windows systems. For example::

  jenkins-jobs test /path/to/global:/path/to/instance:/path/to/instance/project

This helps when structuring directory layouts as you may selectively include
directories in different ways to suit different needs. If you maintain multiple
Jenkins instances suited to various needs you may want to share configuration
between those instances (global). Furthermore, there may be various ways you
would like to structure jobs within a given instance.

Recursive Searching of Paths
----------------------------

In addition to passing multiple paths to JJB it is also possible to enable
recursive searching to process all yaml files in the tree beneath each path.
For example::

  For a tree:
    /path/
      to/
        defs/
          ci_jobs/
          release_jobs/
        globals/
          macros/
          templates/

  jenkins-jobs update -r /path/to/defs:/path/to/globals

JJB will search defs/ci_jobs, defs/release_jobs, globals/macros and
globals/templates in addition to the defs and globals trees.

Excluding Paths
---------------

To allow a complex tree of jobs where some jobs are managed differently without
needing to explicitly provide each path, the recursive path processing supports
excluding paths based on absolute paths, relative paths and patterns. For
example::

  For a tree:
    /path/
      to/
        defs/
          ci_jobs/
            manual/
          release_jobs/
            manual/
          qa_jobs/
        globals/
          macros/
          templates/
          special/

  jenkins-jobs update -r -x man*:./qa_jobs -x /path/to/defs/globals/special \
    /path/to/defs:/path/to/globals

JJB will search the given paths, ignoring the directories qa_jobs,
ci_jobs/manual, release_jobs/manual, and globals/special when
building the list of yaml files to be processed. Absolute paths
are denoted by starting from the root, relative by containing
the path separator, and patterns by having neither.
Patterns use simple shell globing to match directories.

Deleting Jobs
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jenkins Job Builder supports deleting jobs from Jenkins.

To delete a specific job::

  jenkins-jobs delete Foo1

To delete a list of jobs, simply pass them as additional
arguments after the command::

  jenkins-jobs delete Foo1 Foo2

The ``update`` command includes a ``delete-old`` option to remove obsolete
jobs::

  jenkins-jobs update --delete-old /path/to/defs

Obsolete jobs are *all* jobs not managed by JJB, even jobs which
were *never* managed by JJB.

There is also a command to delete **all** jobs.
**WARNING**: Use with caution::

  jenkins-jobs delete-all

Globbed Parameters
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jenkins job builder supports globbed parameters to identify jobs from a set of
definition files.  This feature only supports JJB managed jobs.

To update jobs that only have 'foo' in their name::

  jenkins-jobs update ./myjobs \*foo\*

To delete jobs that only have 'foo' in their name::

  jenkins-jobs delete --path ./myjobs \*foo\*


.. _command-reference:

Command Reference
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. program-output:: cd ../.. && ./tools/jenkins-jobs.py --help
   :shell:
.. program-output:: cd ../.. && ./tools/jenkins-jobs.py test --help
   :shell:
.. program-output:: cd ../.. && ./tools/jenkins-jobs.py update --help
   :shell:
.. program-output:: cd ../.. && ./tools/jenkins-jobs.py delete-all --help
   :shell:
.. program-output:: cd ../.. && ./tools/jenkins-jobs.py delete --help
   :shell:

.. rubric:: Footnotes
.. [#f1] The cache default location is at ``~/.cache/jenkins_jobs``, which
         can be overridden by setting the ``XDG_CACHE_HOME`` environment
         variable.
