One of the most important parts of your DevOps and CICD journey is a Declarative Pipeline Syntax of Jenkins....
🌿Some terms for your Knowledge:
What is Pipeline - A pipeline is a collection of steps or jobs interlinked in a sequence.
In Jenkins, a pipeline is a series of automated steps that allow you to model and automate the process of delivering software. Jenkins supports two types of pipelines:
Declarative: Declarative is a more recent and advanced implementation of a pipeline as a code.
Scripted: Scripted was the first and most traditional implementation of the pipeline as a code in Jenkins. It was designed as a general-purpose DSL (Domain Specific Language) built with Groovy.
🌿Why you should have a Pipeline
The definition of a Jenkins Pipeline is written into a text file (called a Jenkinsfile
) which in turn can be committed to a project’s source control repository.
This is the foundation of "Pipeline-as-code"; treating the CD pipeline as a part of the application to be versioned and reviewed like any other code.
Creating a Jenkinsfile
and committing it to source control provides a number of immediate benefits:
Automatically creates a Pipeline build process for all branches and pull requests.
Code review/iteration on the Pipeline (along with the remaining source code).
🌿Pipeline syntax
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Build') {
steps {
//
}
}
stage('Test') {
steps {
//
}
}
stage('Deploy') {
steps {
//
}
}
}
}
🌿Task-01:
★ Create a New Job, this time select Pipeline instead of Freestyle Project.
- Complete the example using the Declarative pipeline
- Build the Job and click on "Build Now" to start the job.
- After a build is completed, you can view the console output by clicking on the "Console Output" link on the build page.
📚Happy Learning :)