Jenkins Pipeline Environment Variables: Difference between revisions

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The current build ID, identical to [[#BUILD_NUMBER|BUILD_NUMBER]]. Available both on master and on nodes.
The current build ID, identical to [[#BUILD_NUMBER|BUILD_NUMBER]]. Available both on master and on nodes.
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Revision as of 00:08, 8 April 2021

Internal

Overview

A Jenkins pipeline exposes environment variables via the global variable env, which is available from anywhere in the Jenkinsfile. Please note that env is not available from Groovy layer code invoked from Jenkinsfile:

String imageVersion = buildInfo.rpmVersion != null ? buildInfo.rpmVersion : env.PREBUILT_IMAGE_TAG
[...]
hudson.remoting.ProxyException: groovy.lang.MissingPropertyException: No such property: env for class: playground.jenkins.steps.TestSomethingStep

The full list of environment variables accessible from within a Jenkins pipeline is documented at http://<jenkins-instance-url>/pipeline-syntax/globals#env.

Programming Model

Accessing Environment Variables

echo "Running ${env.BUILD_ID} on ${env.JENKINS_URL}"

Setting Environment Variables

Setting an environment variable within a Jenkins Pipeline is accomplished differently depending on whether declarative or scripted pipeline is used.

Declarative Pipeline

Declarative pipeline supports an environment directive. An environment directive used in the top-level pipeline block will apply to all steps within the pipeline. An environment directive defined within a stage will only apply the given environment variables to steps within the stage.

pipeline {
    agent any
    environment { 
        CC = 'clang'
    }
    stages {
        stage('Example') {
            environment { 
                DEBUG_FLAGS = '-g'
            }
            steps {
                sh 'printenv'
            }
        }
    }
}

Scripted Pipeline

Scripted pipeline must use the withEnv step.

Setting Environment Variables Dynamically

https://jenkins.io/doc/book/pipeline/jenkinsfile/#setting-environment-variables-dynamically

Environment Variables

https://www.jenkins.io/doc/pipeline/tour/environment/
https://www.jenkins.io/doc/book/pipeline/jenkinsfile/#using-environment-variables

Environment variables can be set globally or per stage. Setting environment variable per stage means they will only apply to the stage in which they were defined.

Jenkins Pipeline Environment Variables

The Jenkins Pipeline exposes its environment variable via the global variable "env", which is available from anywhere in the Jenkinsfile".

The full list is available at ${YOUR_JENKINS_URL}/pipeline-syntax/globals#env

BUILD_ID

The current build ID, identical to BUILD_NUMBER. Available both on master and on nodes.

153

BUILD_NUMBER

The current build number, such as "153". Same as BUILD_ID.

Available both on master and on nodes.
153

BUILD_TAG

Contains job name, branch name, build number:

jenkins-${env.JOB_NAME}-${env.BUILD_NUMBER}

BUILD_URL

The URL where the results of this build can be found. Example: http://<jenkins-instance-url>/jenkins/job/MyJobName/17/

EXECUTOR_NUMBER

The unique number that identifies the current executor among executors of the same machine performing this build. This is the number shown in the "build executor status", except that the number starts from 0, not 1.

JAVA_HOME

If your job is configured to use a specific JDK, this variable is set to the JAVA_HOME of the specified JDK. When this variable is set, PATH is also updated to include the bin subdirectory of JAVA_HOME

JENKINS_URL

Full URL of Jenkins, such as https://example.com:port/jenkins/. It is only available if Jenkins URL set in "System Configuration".

JOB_NAME

Name of the project of this build.

JOB_BASE_NAME

NODE_NAME

The name of the node the current build is running on. Set to 'master' for master node. Example:

WORKSPACE

The absolute path of the workspace