Book Image

Extending Jenkins

By : Donald Simpson
Book Image

Extending Jenkins

By: Donald Simpson

Overview of this book

Jenkins CI is the leading open source continuous integration server. It is written in Java and has a wealth of plugins to support the building and testing of virtually any project. Jenkins supports multiple Software Configuration Management tools such as Git, Subversion, and Mercurial. This book explores and explains the many extension points and customizations that Jenkins offers its users, and teaches you how to develop your own Jenkins extensions and plugins. First, you will learn how to adapt Jenkins and leverage its abilities to empower DevOps, Continuous Integration, Continuous Deployment, and Agile projects. Next, you will find out how to reduce the cost of modern software development, increase the quality of deliveries, and thereby reduce the time to market. We will also teach you how to create your own custom plugins using Extension points. Finally, we will show you how to combine everything you learned over the course of the book into one real-world scenario.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Extending Jenkins
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Chapter 2. Automating the Jenkins UI

In this chapter, we will be looking at a selection of different approaches that can be used to alter and enhance the Jenkins user interface (UI).

As with Jenkins as a whole, the Jenkins UI is highly customizable and has been clearly designed from the outset to be adaptable and extendable so that you can tailor and adapt it to fit your particular requirements and environment.

There are different ways in which you can customize the UI, ranging from purely look and feel cosmetic alterations to user input refinements, and then towards the automatic creation of Jenkins jobs and setting up a dynamic Slave Node provisioning system.

The focus and the most suitable approach is usually driven by the way in which Jenkins will be used; focusing on the areas that matter the most in a particular situation is usually where the most benefit is to be gained.

We will examine four of the most common use case scenarios in this chapter and the different ways in which the automation...