Provision nodes from OpenStack on demand.
In order to provision new nodes when Jenkins load goes high, administrator needs to configure Cloud and one or more Templates on global configuration page. Cloud represents connection to particular OpenStack project (tenant). In order to use several openstack instances or projects, it is necessary to configure several Clouds in Jenkins. Template can be seen as a definition of particular kind of node. Template is the primary holder of all the attributes for OpenStack machine to be provisioned (image, flavor, etc.) as well as for Jenkins node (number of executors, etc.). Note the attributes can be configured on Cloud level as well. Such configuration will be then used as default for its templates. For example, if all nodes are supposed to use the same key-pair there is no need to state it in every template, it can be configured on cloud level and leave the filed blank in the templates.
Aside from machine/node attributes, every template require name and labels to be configured. Name will serve both as an identifier of the template as well as a name prefix for Jenkins node and OpenStack machine (that is why some limitations apply here). Labels field expects a set of Jenkins labels that will be assigned to all nodes that the template provisions. It will also be used to determine which cloud and template to use to process Jenkins load. When there is a build with no label requirements, any template can be used to provision the node. Build with label restriction can trigger provisioning only on templates with matching label set. The attributes at template level will inherit all global values (the value in effect is printed under the field on hte config page). In case required field do not have a default nor current value, it will be reported.
The exception is here is the Instance Cap field that determines the maximal ammount of maches to be running either per whole cloud or per template. This is so one can limit the total number and number per individual template at the same time.
Every template can declare user-data script to be passed to cloud-init to customize the machine that is provisioned. Note that the image needs to support cloud init explicitly.
Before the script is sent to OpenStack, plugin injects several values
using ${VARIABLE_NAME}
syntax:
JENKINS_URL
: The URL of the Jenkins instanceSLAVE_JAR_URL
: URL of the slave.jar - the agent executableSLAVE_JNLP_URL
: The endpoint URL for JNLP connectionSLAVE_JNLP_SECRET
: The JNLP 'secret' key. This key authorizes to connect Jenkins agent process to a Jenkins computer. Note that referencing this in server user-data (and then using it to launch agent process) makes it exposed to any user or automation permitted to access the Jenkins agent (including running builds). Also, when OpenStack deployment uses metadata service, which it often does, it must be deployed in a way this is guaranteed not to leak. See OSSN-0074 for further details.SLAVE_LABELS
: Labels of the corresponding Jenkins computer
Openstack plugin utilizes Cloud Statistics that captures failures and time trends of past provisioning attempts.
Since version 2.46, JCasC is supported. Example:
jenkins:
clouds:
- openstack:
name: "foo"
endPointUrl: "https://acme.com:5000"
credentialsId: "openstack_service_credentials"
ignoreSsl: false
zone: foo
slaveOptions:
bootSource:
image:
name: "Image Name"
hardwareId: "hid"
networkId: "net"
userDataId: "user-data-id"
instanceCap: 11
instancesMin: 1
floatingIpPool: "baz"
securityGroups: "s1,s2"
availabilityZone: "bax"
startTimeout: 15
keyPairName: "key"
numExecutors: 2
jvmOptions: "-Xmx1G"
fsRoot: "/tmp/foo"
launcherFactory:
ssh:
credentialsId: "openstack_ssh_key"
javaPath: "/bin/true"
retentionTime: 42
templates:
- name: "empty"
labels: "linux"
- name: "jnlp"
labels: "jnlp"
slaveOptions:
launcherFactory: "jnlp"
- name: "volumeSnapshot"
labels: "volume"
slaveOptions:
bootSource:
volumeSnapshot:
name: "Volume name"
- name: "volumeFromImage"
labels: "volume from image"
slaveOptions:
bootSource:
volumeFromImage:
name: "Volume name"
volumeSize: 15
unclassified:
globalConfigFiles:
configs:
- openstackUserData:
id: user-data-id
name: "My user data"
comment: "... with a comment"
content: >
#cloud-config
disable_root: 0
ssh_pwauth: True
chpasswd: { expire: False }
users:
- name: root
password: toor
lock-passwd: false
inactive: false
system: false
credentials:
system:
domainCredentials:
- credentials:
- openstackV3:
scope: SYSTEM
id: "openstack_service_credentials"
description: "desc"
userName: "foo"
userDomain: "acme.com"
projectName: "casc"
projectDomain: "acme.com"
password: "bar" # Do not hardcode plaintext secrets for real world declarations!
- openstackV2:
scope: SYSTEM
id: "openstack_service_credentialsV2"
description: "desc"
username: "username"
password: "pwd" # Do not hardcode plaintext secrets for real world declarations!
tenant: "tnt"
- basicSSHUserPrivateKey:
scope: SYSTEM
id: "openstack_ssh_key"
username: "jenkins"
privateKeySource:
directEntry:
# Do not hardcode plaintext secrets for real world declarations!
privateKey: |
-----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----
- User can manually provision agent from particular cloud/template on Manage Jenkins > Manage Nodes.
- Plugin identifies OpenStack image/snapshot to provision by its name. The image can be updated/replaced in openstack and the plugin will not require update provided its name have not changed.
- In case maximal instance number is specified on template level, the stricter of the two (global and template value) will be applied. Global value exists to ensure that the number of machines provisioned by plugin will not exceed certain limit. The template value can further restrict that at most N machines of given kind can be utilized at the same time.
- Plugin can report maximal number of instances was reached while there is not adequate number of Jenkins nodes. It is because plugin inspects running OpenStack machines in order to cover machines being provisioned/deleted (that do not have Jenkins nodes) and instances that plugin failed to delete. In case the instance get leaked, please report that as a bug with all relevant FINE level logs attached.
- On every agent provisioned by the plugin, there is an environment
variable
OPENSTACK_PUBLIC_IP
declared with the public IP address allocated for the machine.
Plugin uses INFO
and above levels to report things user should worry
about. For debugging, set it to FINEST
- note the ALL
level is not
sufficient to print these. To configure OpenStack plugin logging in
Jenkins UI go to Manage Jenkins > System Log > New Log Recorder and
use jenkins.plugins.openstack.compute
as the logger name.
Access openstack client from groovy console
Use Jenkins.instance.clouds[0].openstack.@clientProvider.get()
to
access the openstack4j client. Users are discouraged to use this
anything else but querying the openstack (otherwise there is no way to
ensure plugin will work correctly). For older versions fo the plugin use
Jenkins.instance.clouds[0].openstack.@client
.
The image might not support it at all or can fail executing it. Check machine log in OpenStack for further details. Note that for now, there is no guarantee the script will complete before machine is connected to Jenkins and builds are started.