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I am experimenting the Jenkins, and am looking for a way to allow Jenkins to set parameters for different project builds. Normally all these attributes are stored in the settings.xml (I currently have a settings.xml for the user running Jenkins which includes default properties and my repositories).

I want to have different builds of the same project that specific different Maven parameters and also different goals. (have a job that runs compile checks frequently, another that deploys the app to the test server every hour, another for releasing to staging and then prod)

What is the best way for creating parameterized builds in Jenkins.

Thanks

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1 Answer

up vote 9 down vote accepted

You can use some solutions. What I'm using are:

  • Create profiles in your build.

            <profile>
                    <activation>
                            <file>
                                    <exists>findbugs-exclude.xml</exists>
                            </file>
                    </activation>
                    <build>
                            <plugins>
                                    <plugin>
                                            <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
                                            <artifactId>findbugs-maven-plugin</artifactId>
                                            <configuration>
                                                    <excludeFilterFile>findbugs-exclude.xml</excludeFilterFile>
                                            </configuration>
                                    </plugin>
                            </plugins>
                    </build>
            </profile>
            <profile>
                    <id>package</id>
                    <build>
                            <plugins>
                                    <plugin>
                                            <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
                                            <artifactId>maven-dependency-plugin</artifactId>
                                            <executions>
                                                    <execution>
                                                            <id>copy-dependencies</id>
                                                            <phase>package</phase>
                                                            <goals>
                                                                    <goal>copy-dependencies</goal>
                                                            </goals>
                                                            <configuration>
                                                                    <outputDirectory>${project.build.directory}/lib</outputDirectory>
                                                                    <overWriteReleases>false</overWriteReleases>
                                                                    <overWriteSnapshots>false</overWriteSnapshots>
                                                                    <overWriteIfNewer>true</overWriteIfNewer>
                                                                    <includeScope>runtime</includeScope>
                                                            </configuration>
                                                    </execution>
                                            </executions>
                                    </plugin>
                            </plugins>
                    </build>
            </profile>
    

The you can define in jenkins clean install -P package - for package task or clean install for normal build

  • Put parameters directly to pom from command line for example:

    mvn clean install -Dparameter.one=ONE -Dparameter.two=TWO Example:

    <project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/maven-v4_0_0.xsd">
    <modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
    <groupId>com.test</groupId>
    <artifactId>test</artifactId>
    <version>1.0.0</version>
    <name>test</name>
    <properties>
            <testng.version>6.4</testng.version>
    </properties>
    
    <dependencies>
            <dependency>
                    <groupId>org.testng</groupId>
                    <artifactId>testng</artifactId>
                    <version>${testng.version}</version>
                    <scope>test</scope>
            </dependency>
    </dependencies></project>
    

If you run it normally testng version 6.4 will be used. But if you run it like: mvn clean install -Dtestng.version=6.3.1 testng version 6.3.1 will be used.

See

Downloading: http://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/org/testng/testng/6.3.1/testng-6.3.1.pom Downloaded: http://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/org/testng/testng/6.3.1/testng-6.3.1.pom (0 B at 0.0 KB/sec) Downloading: http://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/org/testng/testng/6.3.1/testng-6.3.1.jar Downloaded: http://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/org/testng/testng/6.3.1/testng-6.3.1.jar (0 B at 0.0 KB/sec)

You can parametrize default part of pom (setting default values directly and overriding it by execution properties)

Change in last example version:

<dependency>
      <groupId>org.testng</groupId>
      <artifactId>testng</artifactId>
      <version>${env.testngVersion}</version>
      <scope>test</scope>
</dependency>

In bash you can call:

export testngVersion=6.0
mvn clean install

Or in jenkins by setting testngVersion=6.0 in This build is parameterized section

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One important thing to note is that it seems that Jenkins build props are ignored in the Maven build task in a freeform job (Maven 2/3 jobs work fine). – TheTerribleSwiftTomato yesterday

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