The pipeline step allows you to define your Pipelines in a more structured way.
Pipelines are a series of steps that allow you to orchestrate the work required to build, test and deploy applications. Pipelines are defined in a file called Jenkinsfile that is stored in the root of your project’s source repository.
See Getting started
Pipeline syntax validation (ie Linting) via HTTP POST using curl from Pipeline Dev tool
# curl (REST API)
# User
JENKINS_USER=bitwisenote-jenkins1
# Api key from "/me/configure" on my Jenkins instance
JENKINS_USER_KEY=--my secret, get your own--
# Url for my local Jenkins instance.
JENKINS_URL=http://$JENKINS_USER:$JENKINS_USER_KEY@localhost:32769
# JENKINS_CRUMB is needed if your Jenkins master has CRSF protection enabled (which it should)
JENKINS_CRUMB=`curl "$JENKINS_URL/crumbIssuer/api/xml?xpath=concat(//crumbRequestField,\":\",//crumb)"`
curl -X POST -H $JENKINS_CRUMB -F "jenkinsfile=<Jenkinsfile" $JENKINS_URL/pipeline-model-converter/validate
pipeline {
agent any
environment {
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID = credentials('jenkins-aws-secret-key-id')
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY = credentials('jenkins-aws-secret-access-key')
}
stages {
stage('Stage 1') {
steps {
echo 'Hello world!'
script {
if (isUnix()) {
sh 'echo Unix'
} else {
bat 'echo Windows'
}
}
}
}
}
}
where:
pipeline {
agent { docker 'maven:3.3.3' }
stages {
stage('build') {
steps {
sh 'mvn --version'
sh 'mvn install'
}
}
}
}