Home / Keptn v1 Docs / Release 0.18.x / Custom Integrations / Webhook Integration / Jenkins Integration
With a Jenkins integration, you can call existing Jenkins Pipelines from Keptn. In addition, with the optional keptn-jenkins-library
you can even provide information back to Keptn (e.g., test.finished
with result=fail
).
Note: The instructions on this page assume that you do not have jmeter-service
installed.
Note: Keptn needs to reach your Jenkins installation (either directly or via a proxy). This goes way beyond our documentation, therefore we suggest reaching out to your Jenkins administrator.
Open your Jenkins UI, log in as an administrator, and configure the pipeline you want to call
Select the pipeline you want to call, and click on “Configure”.
Select “Build triggers” and tick “Trigger builds remotely”
Create an authentication token (e.g., using a local password manager) - you will need this token later when creating the webhook in Keptn
Also note down the URL shown below (e.g., http://jenkins.127.0.0.1.nip.io/jobs/build?token=
) - you will need it later when creating the webhook in Keptn
To secure the sensitive data of your Jenkins webhook URL, a secret needs to be created:
Go to Uniform page > Secret and click the Add Secret
Enter a name (e.g., jenkins-secret
) and select keptn-webhook-service
as a secret scope
Enter a unique name for the key (e.g., my-pipeline-secret
)
Copy-paste the authentication token from the previous step into the value field:
To create a webhook integration, a subscription needs to be created:
Go to Uniform page > Uniform, select the webhook-service, and click the Add subscription button.
For this integration, we would like trigger a Jenkins pipeline when a test task in the dev and staging stage is triggered. Therefore, you need to select:
test
triggered
Stage:dev
, Stage:staging
Once the above-configured event gets fired, the Jenkins pipeline has to be triggered. Therefore, you need to select/enter:
GET
http://jenkins.127.0.0.1.nip.io/jobs/build?token=
jenkins-secret
and the key my-pipeline-secret
. This will reference the secret value containing the sensitive data of your webhook URL: http://jenkins.127.0.0.1.nip.io/jobs/build?token={{.secret.jenkins-secret.my-pipeline-secret}}
Finally, click Create subscription to save and enable the webhook for your Slack integration.
With those steps done, Keptn is triggering a Jenkins Pipeline whenever a test.triggered
event occurs.
While the previous example just triggers a Jenkins Pipeline, it does not tell Keptn whether the pipeline has succeeded or not.
In order to do this, the following steps are needed:
/buildWithParameters
instead of /build
/buildWithParameters?token={{.secret.jenkins-secret.my-pipeline-secret}}&triggeredid={{.id}}&shkeptncontext={{.shkeptncontext}}&stage={{.data.stage}}
sendFinished: false
)triggeredid
, shkeptncontext
and stage
(see example below)sendFinishedEvent
at the end of your pipeline (see example below)Modified webhook.yaml
apiVersion: webhookconfig.keptn.sh/v1alpha1
kind: WebhookConfig
metadata:
name: webhook-configuration
spec:
webhooks:
- type: sh.keptn.event.test.triggered
requests:
- curl --request GET
http://jenkins.127.0.0.1.nip.io/job/my-pipeline/buildWithParameters?token={{.secret.jenkins-secret.my-pipeline-secret}}&shkeptncontext={{.shkeptncontext}}&triggeredid={{.id}}&stage={{.data.stage}} --fail-with-body
sendFinished: false
envFrom: ...
Jenkinsfile
@Library('keptn-library@5.0')_
def keptn = new sh.keptn.Keptn()
node {
properties([
parameters([
string(defaultValue: 'stage', description: 'Stage of your Keptn project where tests are triggered in', name: 'stage', trim: false),
string(defaultValue: '', description: 'Keptn Context ID', name: 'shkeptncontext', trim: false),
string(defaultValue: '', description: 'Triggered ID', name: 'triggeredid', trim: false),
])
])
def commit_id
stage('Preparation') {
checkout scm
}
stage('Initialize Keptn') {
keptn.keptnInit project:"sockshop", service:"carts", stage:"${params.stage}"
}
stage('Test') {
// Run your tests here
}
stage('Send Finished Event Back to Keptn') {
// Send test.finished Event back
def keptnContext = keptn.sendFinishedEvent eventType: "test", keptnContext: "${params.shkeptncontext}", triggeredId: "${params.triggeredid}", result:"pass", status:"succeeded", message:"jenkins tests succeeded"
String keptn_bridge = env.KEPTN_BRIDGE
echo "Open Keptns Bridge: ${keptn_bridge}/trace/${keptnContext}"
}
}
To delete a webhook, click on the trash can icon next to the subscription. Note that deleting a webhook is permanent and cannot be reversed. Once deleted, Keptn will no longer send requests to the endpoint.