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Difference between revisions of "CI best practices"
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** build artifacts in general should be seen as ephemeral | ** build artifacts in general should be seen as ephemeral | ||
** if a build artifact is considered a milestone, release candidate, release, etc. it should be copied to a storage server (eg. downloads.eclipse.org) | ** if a build artifact is considered a milestone, release candidate, release, etc. it should be copied to a storage server (eg. downloads.eclipse.org) | ||
− | ** public announcements like "You can get the latest release from our Hudson/Jenkins instance" are considered to be bad practice | + | ** public announcements like "You can get the latest release from our Hudson/Jenkins instance" are considered to be bad practice |
+ | |||
+ | * [[Eclipse/Testing | General tips about testing]] | ||
== Hudson/Jenkins == | == Hudson/Jenkins == |
Revision as of 06:41, 11 May 2017
Contents
Continuous Integration - best practices
General tips
- keep the builds and tests fast!
- true to the XP spirit, turnaround time between check in and feedback (build successful/failed) should be kept to a minimum
- long running builds and tests should be split up
- eg. into staged tests: test a few basic things first and only if they are successful, run more detailed tests
- a CI server is not a build artifact repository or storage server!
- build artifacts in general should be seen as ephemeral
- if a build artifact is considered a milestone, release candidate, release, etc. it should be copied to a storage server (eg. downloads.eclipse.org)
- public announcements like "You can get the latest release from our Hudson/Jenkins instance" are considered to be bad practice
Hudson/Jenkins
Job configuration smells
- build logic leaks to job
- too many build steps
- shell steps
- not under SCM
Source: https://narkisr.github.io/jenkins-scaling/#configuration-smells
Deal with branches
- managing branches from UI results in duplication, create a template project and clone, use programmatic API instead
Disk usage
Builds and tests can consume large amounts of data while checking out Git repositories, downloading Maven artifacts and compiling multi-OS, multi-arch, multi-bitness artifacts, etc.
Disk space is cheap, but not free (yet). Therefore disk usage should be reasonable.
Here is a rough guideline for HIPPs/JIPPs:
- up to 50GB of disk space is considered to be fine.
- 50-100GB is mostly considered to be OK, if it has no impact on other projects.
- upwards of 100GB is considered to be excessive and you should check your job structure/configurations
As always there are exceptions to that rule. If a project has a good reason to use a lot of disk space this will be respected.
If not, you will be notified and ultimately blamed publicly.
Build history
- a build history is a good indicator to track the health/stability/test coverage, etc. of your project
- since the build history can take up considerable large amounts of disk space it should be kept at bay
- it's nice to see the last 500 builds, but in many cases 10-20 builds have nearly the same value to see trends
- in most cases there is no benefit in keeping more than a few builds with their artifacts, especially if the size is in the 500MB+ range
Console logs
- console logs are important, but if all debug levels are dialed to 11, logs can become quite big (100s of MB)
- Hudson is not good at dealing with huge console logs, Jenkins is better
- browsers in general don't like huge console logs
- try to find a balance between huge logs and time spent to run a build again with different logging levels if something failed (maybe a log level parameter can help)
Old build jobs
- best case scenario: all your build configurations are stored in a SCM and you don't have to keep extra job configurations
- if a build job is deprecated or archived, consider deleting the workspace to save disk space