A plugin that allows Jenkins to build merge requests.
This plugin fetches the source and target branches of a Gitlab merge request and makes them available to your build via build parameters. Once the build completes, Jenkins will leave a comment on the merge request indicating whether the merge request was successful.
- Whilst there is no explicit dependency on the Git plugin, it's strongly recommended that you install it since Jenkins will be unable to fetch the source code for your project.
- Ensure that a Jenkins user exists within Gitlab and has access to the repository. Ensure that the user has Reporter level access to the project. Please note that if you would like to use the Auto-merge feature Jenkins needs to have Developer access to the project.
- Install the plugin in Jenkins.
- The plugin is hosted on the Jenkins Plugin repository
- Go to
Jenkins
->Manage Plugins
->Available
- Search for
Gitlab Merge Request Builder
- And install it
- Ensure you restart Jenkins
- Go to
Manage Jenkins
->Configure System
->Gitlab Merge Request Builder
- Set the
Gitlab Host URL
to the base URL of your Gitlab server - Set your
Jenkins Username
for the Jenkins user (defaults to jenkins) - Set your
Jenkins API Token
for the Jenkins user. This can be found by logging into Gitlab as Jenkins and going to the user profile section. - Set/change any of the other available parameters as necessary. If you host Gitlab over an SSL connection you may want to enable ignoring certificate errors.
Save
to preserve your changes.- Go to
Manage Jenkins
->Configure Global Security
and setMarkup Formatter
to Safe HTML. It will make Jenkins display links in build history properly.
- Create a new job by going to
New Job
- Set the
Project Name
- Feel free to specify the
GitHub Project
URL as the URL for the Gitlab project (if you have the GitHub plugin installed) - In the
Source Code Management
section:- Click
Git
and enter your Repository URL and in Advanced set its Name toorigin
- For merge requests from forked repositories add another repository with Repository URL
${gitlabSourceRepository}
and in Advanced set Name to${gitlabSourceName}
- In
Branch Specifier
enterrefs/remotes/origin/${gitlabSourceBranch}
or for merge requests from forked repositories enterrefs/remotes/${gitlabSourceName}/${gitlabSourceBranch}
- In the
Additional Behaviours
section:- Click the
Add
drop down button and theMerge before build
item - Specify the name of the repository as
origin
(if origin corresponds to Gitlab) and enter theBranch to merge to
as${gitlabTargetBranch}
- Ensure
Prune stale remote-tracking branches
is not added
- Click the
- Click
- In the
Build Triggers
section:- Check the
Gitlab Merge Requests Builder
- Enter the
Gitlab Project Path
, this might be something likeyour_group/your_project
for Gitlab URLhttp://git.tld/your_group/your_project
- The
Target Branch Regex
may be configured to whitelist this job for certain target branches. If left empty, every valid merge request for the configured project path will trigger this job. - The
Use HTTP(S) URL
checkbox should be used if you want Jenkins to clone/fetch using HTTP(S) instead of SSH.
- Check the
- Configure any other pre build, build or post build actions as necessary
Save
to preserve your changes
You can trigger a job a manually by clicking This build is parameterized
and adding the relevant build parameters.
These include:
- gitlabSourceRepository (for MRs from forked repos)
- gitlabSourceName (for MRs from forked repos)
- gitlabSourceBranch
- gitlabTargetBranch
- gitlabMergeRequestId
Note: a manually triggered build will not add build triggered/succeeded/failed comments to the merge request. Note: You should ensure that the 'Global Config user.name Value' and 'Global Config user.email Value' are both set for your git plugin. In some cases, you will get an error indicating that a branch cannot be merged if these are not set.
- Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet
- Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it
- Fork the project
- Start a feature/bugfix branch
- Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
- Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Please try not to mess with the version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.
Copyright (c) 2013 Tim Olshansky. See LICENSE for further details.