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Difference between revisions of "CBI"

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{{important|Security issues| There may be security issues related to using the Gerrit plugin and there may be security issues related to allowing the CI system to write directly to your code repos and downloads area. If you request plugins other than those available on the Shared instance, webmaster may not be able to help troubleshoot any issues that you may encounter with your instance.}}
 
{{important|Security issues| There may be security issues related to using the Gerrit plugin and there may be security issues related to allowing the CI system to write directly to your code repos and downloads area. If you request plugins other than those available on the Shared instance, webmaster may not be able to help troubleshoot any issues that you may encounter with your instance.}}
  
= Jenkins configuration and tools  =
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=CBI Goals=
 
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* Check [[CI best practices]] for general recommendations how to setup Jenkins.
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* Check the Eclipse [[Jenkins]] page for tools, configurations and other information.
+
 
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==Initiative Goals==
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Primary goals are:
 
Primary goals are:
 
* Make it really easy to contribute Eclipse projects
 
* Make it really easy to contribute Eclipse projects
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===Jenkins===
 
===Jenkins===
  
* [http://ci.eclipse.org The list of Jenkins instances at Eclipse]
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* See: [[Jenkins]]
* [[Jenkins]]
+
  
 
===Maven===
 
===Maven===

Revision as of 15:43, 13 September 2018

The Eclipse Common Build Infrastructure (CBI) is an initiative combining infrastructure, technologies and practices for building Eclipse Software.

Jenkins @ Eclipse (JIPP)

Jenkins is a continuous integration (CI) server used on Eclipse servers for Eclipse projects as part of the Common Build Infrastructure (CBI). Jenkins instances are maintained by the Eclipse Webmasters/Release Engineer.

NOTE: JIPP instances are being migrated from a standalone implementation to a Kubernetes cluster implementation.

What's provided?

Each Eclipse Project has access to one Jenkins instance (JIPP), including the following:

  • (1) Jenkins instance, with (1) resources Base Pack (see below)
    • Membership-sponsored projects may allocate more resources (see below)
  • Digital signing Service: Java JAR, Java Cryptography Extensions, Windows Portable Executable with Microsoft Authenticode, macOS application bundles.
  • Packaging service: Apple Disk Image (.dmg), Linux Flatpak
  • Disk space: Ephemeral for builds, permanent for release builds.
  • Access to worldwide download mirrors

Additional Resource Packs

Each Eclipse Project has access to one Base pack for building. For some projects, that may not be enough. Projects sponsored by Eclipse Membership (via Project Lead) have additional Packs, based on membership level. These packs can be allocated to projects.

  • Some Packs are only available to Enterprise and Strategic members.
  • Enterprise and Strategic members can engage with the Foundation to acquire additional Packs.

CBI Resource Packs.png

Resource Packs Included in Membership

Eclipse Foundation Member Organizations have access to Resource Packs above the Base Pack that is allotted to each Project, based on their membership level.

CBI Resource Pack Assignments.png


Assigning Resource Packs to a Project

Resource Packs are assigned by Eclipse Members to Eclipse Projects they sponsor (Members have a Project Lead on the Project). Packs are assigned as a whole to a single project (i.e., can’t split Packs across multiple projects). A <ember can assign several packs to a single project.

To assign a pack to a project, please file a Bug.

Asking for Help

Requesting a JIPP instance

Please file a bug against Eclipse Foundation > Community > CI-Jenkins to request your project's own instance. Please ensure your project lead can +1 the request. Please specify if you wish to grant write access to your download or code repositories.

Note.png
About write access
If your git repo is handled by Gerrit, granting write access to your code repositories is a different procedure, so you must ask specifically for it. If you don't use Gerrit, then granting write access to your download area automatically grants write access to your code repositories and vice-versa.


Important.png
Security issues
There may be security issues related to using the Gerrit plugin and there may be security issues related to allowing the CI system to write directly to your code repos and downloads area. If you request plugins other than those available on the Shared instance, webmaster may not be able to help troubleshoot any issues that you may encounter with your instance.


CBI Goals

Primary goals are:

  • Make it really easy to contribute Eclipse projects
    • Make it really easy to copy & modify source
    • Make it really easy to build
    • Make it really easy to test
    • Make it really easy to post a change for review
    • Make it really easy to sign software

Secondary goals are:

  • Get all Eclipse projects building their software on Eclipse Foundation hardware.
  • Make it easy for people to build custom Eclipse distributions.

Preferred Build Technologies

Jenkins

Maven

Maven 3.0 drives the builds. Projects are expected to provide standard Maven 3.0 POM files for their builds. The builds should be built in such a way that they can be run on the local workstation, or on the Eclipse build server. Note that builds can only be signed on the Eclipse build server.

Tycho

Tycho is focused on a Maven-centric, manifest-first approach to building Eclipse plug-ins, features, update sites, RCP applications and OSGi bundles.

Helpful links:

p2 Repo checks

It's highly recommended that any Eclipse.org project runs frequently, and maybe even systematically, the p2 repo analyzer to make sure it conforms to some requirements of being a nice citizen in the Eclipse.org world.

Nexus

Services/Nexus

Signing tool

Deliverables

Additionally to recommendation and infrastructure, the CBI also produces pieces of software that are meant to be commonly used by all Eclipse.org projects.

CBI License bundle

We offer a P2 repository containing the org.eclipse.license bundle which is located at:

   http://download.eclipse.org/cbi/updates/license/

This URL is a composite P2 repo containing the license bundle.


If you are using Tycho you can add the p2 repo to the <repositories> section of your pom.xml file. Something similar to this:

    <repository>
      <id>license-feature</id>
      <url>http://download.eclipse.org/cbi/updates/license/</url>
      <layout>p2</layout>
    </repository>

In any particular feature which you need the license you can use the usual feature.xml section:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<feature
      id="org.eclipse.help"
      label="%featureName"
      version="2.0.0.qualifier"
      provider-name="%providerName"
      plugin="org.eclipse.help.base"
      license-feature="org.eclipse.license"
      license-feature-version="1.0.0.qualifier"/> 
....

Signing tool

p2 repo checks

A set of "tests" which create reports or can be ran as unit tests that check to correctness of p2 repositories. That is partially just "correctness" in general (such as, that jars are signed, etc.) but more so that repositories conform to the requirements of the Eclipse Simultaneous release (such as, that jars have correct "Provider names", licenses, etc.). For more information, see See CBI/p2repoAnalyzers/Repo Reports.

p2 repo aggregator

A tool to combine several p2 repositories. Among other things, it makes sure they all have consistent constraints (that is, can be "installed together") unlike a raw p2 mirror task. For more information see CBI/aggregator/manual.

Resources

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