I have a github repo called multibranch-test with two sub-directories Project1, Project2.
PS C:\Repos\multibranch-test> tree .
Folder PATH listing for volume Windows
Volume serial number is 2085-6D3D
C:\REPOS\MULTIBRANCH-TEST
├───Project1
└───Project2
Each sub-directory has a Jenkinsfile and the code for that project.
In Jenkins I have two multibranch pipeline jobs - one for Project1 and one for Project2. In the configuration for Project1 I don't want a push notification or polling to build Project1 if a commit was pushed in sub-directory for Project2.
So in Project1 I have configured Additional Behaviours:
- Advanced clone behaviours: Shallow clone is checked
- Sparse checkout path is set to Project1#
- Polling ignores commits in certain paths
- Included Regions: Project1/*
- Excluded Regions: *
- Build Configuration: Script Path: Project1/Jenkinsfile
What is happening is if I push a commit to master in sub-directory Project2, both Project1 and Project2 jobs get built. I only want Project2 to build. Can someone point out what I'm doing wrong?
Jenkinsfiles for both Projects are similar and look like:
#!groovy
node {
stage ('checkout') {
checkout scm
}
stage ('build') {
dir ('Project1') {
bat 'powershell -Command gci'
bat 'powershell -Command gci env:'
bat 'powershell -File .\\Project1.ps1'
}
}
You could create a job for the whole repo, which looks at the changes the commits brought you and then trigger the corresponding Jenkinsfile of project 1 or 2 or both
Default Jenkins behavior is that projects get rebuilt if their repo gets a commit, so your commit in repo generates event for both Jenkins projects and triggers both builds. Take a look on Jenkins docs: https://jenkins.io/doc/book/pipeline/
From Jenkins point of view it's hard to tell if change went into project 1 or 2 - what is immediately visible is "new commit to watched repo".
Simples solution would be to split repo into two separate repos one for each project. Since they are supposed to build separately it shouldn't be a problem.
This has been a big hassle for us, but we were able to solve it with some workarounds.
We have a master Jenkins job that's triggered by a GitHub commit hook. It figures out what changed since the last commit, and then triggers other service-specific Jenkins jobs.
We have some other conventions we're using (like naming conventions for services, directories, and Jenkins jobs) that aren't specified here, but hopefully this will help someone out.
Here's a breakdown of each component in the solution:
C:\REPOS\MULTIBRANCH-TEST\Project1\Jenkinsfile
(your build logic here)C:\REPOS\MULTIBRANCH-TEST\Project2\Jenkinsfile
(your build logic here)C:\REPOS\MULTIBRANCH-TEST\change-sets.sh
C:\REPOS\MULTIBRANCH-TEST\Jenkinsfile