Skip to content

wesmckean/quickstart-tutorials

 
 

Repository files navigation

Jenkins Tutorial Files

This repository includes the files necessary for transitioning from docker to docker compose in our Jenkins tutorials and installation guides.

How to Set Up the Repository in Gitpod?

  • To initialize your Gitpod workspace, prepend gitpod.io/# to any GitHub, GitLab, or Bitbucket repository URL.
  • Access our Gitpod workspace here.
  • If you plan to use Gitpod regularly, we recommend installing the Gitpod extension. This extension adds a Gitpod button to every GitHub repository you visit, making it easy to launch a workspace. You can find the extension here for Chromium and here for Firefox.

Gitpod

Gitpod is a cloud-based development environment designed for teams. It supports various IDEs, including VScode, IntelliJ, and many more, enabling efficient and secure software development.

Steps to Run Examples from the Repository

  • Use docker compose up to run examples from this project. Currently, we have four working examples:

    • maven
    • node
    • python
    • multibranch pipeline
  • To run different examples with docker compose up -d, append the example name to the command, like so:

    • maven => docker compose --profile maven up -d
    • python => docker compose --profile python up -d
    • node => docker compose --profile node up -d
    • multi => docker compose --profile multi up -d
  • If no tutorial-related argument is used (i.e., docker compose --profile default up -d), the command runs the latest default example.

  • If no argument regarding profiles is used at all (i.e., docker compose up -d), then you will have a Jenkins controller desperately waiting for a non existent agent to connect.

  • If you prefer to build images yourself, append -f build-docker-compose.yaml after docker compose. For example, to build the node tutorial Jenkins instance, use: docker compose -f build-docker-compose.yaml up -d node.

How to Verify Jenkins Installation

  • Check the status of the container with the docker ps or docker compose ps commands.
  • Access your running Jenkins instance at http://127.0.0.1:8080.
  • On Gitpod, if containers are running successfully after entering docker compose up <tutorial-name>, a pop-up titled A service is available on port 8080 should appear. If it doesn't, you can view the running service in the PORTS section on the right side of the terminal.

Clean Up Instructions

  • To stop and remove running containers, use docker compose down.
  • If you encounter a Resource is still in use warning, use the --remove-orphans option which would give docker compose down --remove-orphans.
  • To remove the created volumes (should you need to restart from scratch), add the -v option which would give docker compose down -v.

Suppressing Jenkins Warning using JCASC

To improve the Gitpod experience with Jenkins, we've suppressed a reverse proxy setup warning in Jenkins that was causing issues in the Gitpod environment. We achieved this using Jenkins Configuration as Code (JCASC) and added the following property to the JCASC YAML file:

jenkins:
  disabledAdministrativeMonitors:
    - "hudson.diagnosis.ReverseProxySetupMonitor"

For more detailed information about this configuration and the context behind it, please refer to the corresponding issue.

Encountering Issues?

If you encounter any issues while running the examples, please open an issue in this repository. We will be happy to help you resolve the issue. Please let us know the following details when you open an issue:

  • The command you used to run the example.
  • The error message you received.
  • The steps you took before encountering the issue.
  • The version of docker you're using via the docker version command.
  • The version of docker compose you're using via the docker compose version command.

The tutorials have been tested with:

  • Docker version 24.0.9
  • Docker Compose version 2.23.3

About

Jenkins tutorial files

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Dockerfile 38.9%
  • Python 32.6%
  • Shell 28.5%