Jenkins is the market leading continuous integration system, originally created by Kohsuke Kawaguchi.
Jenkins (and It's predecessor Hudson) are useful projects for automating common development tasks (e.g. unit-testing, production batches) - but they are somewhat Java-centric. Thankfully the designers have provided an excellent and complete REST interface. This library wraps up that interface as more conventional python objects in order to make many Jenkins oriented tasks easier to automate.
This library can help you:
- Query the test-results of a completed build
- Get a objects representing the latest builds of a job
- Search for artefacts by simple criteria
- Block until jobs are complete
- Install artefacts to custom-specified directory structures
- username/password auth support for jenkins instances with auth turned on
- Ability to search for builds by subversion revision
- Ability to add/remove/query Jenkins slaves
- Ability to add/remove/modify Jenkins views
A big thanks to CloudBees, who provide this project with free continuous-integration services. Go check out the status of this project on one of their servers. Literally nobody knows more about Jenkins than CloudBees.
https://jenkinsapi.ci.cloudbees.com/
If you need to ask for help or report a bug, please use the github issue tracker. Please do not email the developers directly.
First of all, thanks for using this project. The fact that you are checking this out is reason enough for me to continue developing it. This project is 100% free and no financial donations are requested, however there are other wasy you can support this work in progress:
- Submit code and tests: This is test-driven development. The best way to help this project move along is to find a bug and pull-request a new test that shows us what's wrong. The developers of this project find it much easier to fix against tests than bug-reports.
- Submit issues & bug reports: It may be 2nd best but it's still very useful. Your bug reports help us work out what's wrong with our project and what features we need to prioritize in future releases. We take note of every issue and are truly grateful to any user who can spare the time to tell us what they think.
- Submit case studies: If you like what we do, please tell us how you are using this project. We want to know what company you are working for and what kind of uses you have found for JenkinsAPI. We'd love to feature your case-study in future versions of our documentation. If you have a story to tell just raise it as an issue on Github.
Thanks!
[x] Currently incompatible with Jenkins > 1.518. Job deletion operations fail unless Cross-Site scripting protection is disabled.
For other issues, please refer to the support URL below.
Support & bug-reportst: https://github.com/salimfadhley/jenkinsapi/issues?direction=desc&sort=comments&state=open
Project source code: github: https://github.com/salimfadhley/jenkinsapi
Project documentation: https://jenkinsapi.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
Releases: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/jenkinsapi
Egg-files for this project are hosted on PyPi. Most Python users should be able to use pip or setuptools to automatically install this project.
Most users can do the following:
pip install jenkinsapi
Or..
easy_install jenkinsapi
JenkinsAPI is intended to map the objects in Jenkins (e.g. Builds, Views, Jobs) into easily managed Python objects:
Python 2.7.4 (default, Apr 19 2013, 18:28:01) [GCC 4.7.3] on linux2 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> import jenkinsapi >>> from jenkinsapi.jenkins import Jenkins >>> J = Jenkins('http://localhost:8080') >>> J.keys() # Jenkins objects appear to be dict-like, mapping keys (job-names) to ['foo', 'test_jenkinsapi'] >>> J['test_jenkinsapi'] <jenkinsapi.job.Job test_jenkinsapi> >>> J['test_jenkinsapi'].get_last_good_build() <jenkinsapi.build.Build test_jenkinsapi #77>
- Salim Fadhley ([email protected])
- Aleksey Maksimov ([email protected])
- Ramon van Alteren ([email protected])
- Ruslan Lutsenko ([email protected])
- Cleber J Santos ([email protected])
- William Zhang ([email protected])
- Victor Garcia ([email protected])
- Bradley Harris ([email protected])
PLEASE do not use these email addresses for support, use github's issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT): Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.