'Jenkins Declarative Pipeline - how to get path to Jenkinsfile in use?
We have a series of Jenkinsfile scripts which are identical, except each configures an environment item to point to the directory in the SCM checkout that holds the Jenkinsfile. That is used to reference a file in the same directory. The SCM repo has all of these Jenkinsfile scripts in different directories. I see an easy opening to make the pipeline script identical in each case if I could only retrieve the path of the directory containing the Jenkinsfile.
I tried several different things like steps containing
script {
println __FILE__
}
and
script {
scriptDir = new File(getClass().protectionDomain.codeSource.location.path).parent
println scriptDir
}
Neither of which ran (gave non-existent variable in __FILE__
case and permission violation in the second case). I tried "${__FILE__}"
and other variants.
I need to use the directory in a steps-sh block so I believe it needs to be in an environment item.
Now, the Jenkins job configuration gives the path to the Jenkins file, but I don't want to have to repeat that to create another environment variable at that level.
Already consulted:
- Get absolute path of the script directory that is being processed by Job DSL
- Get absolute path to workspace directory in Jenkins Pipeline plugin
- How can I reference the Jenkinsfile directory, with Pipeline?
- as well as many more Google hits and other sites.
Help is appreciated.
Solution 1:[1]
Found at another thread:
def currentScriptPath = new File(currentBuild.rawBuild.parent.definition.scriptPath).parent
But it requires to approve a lot of methods.
Solution 2:[2]
If you really need this, you can fetch "${JOB_URL}config.xml"
and parse scriptPath
.
But that's not a clean solution and the request needs to be authenticated.
Solution 3:[3]
The simplest way is to put the Jenkinsfile at the root of your repository and get the value of the WORKSPACE environment variable set by Jenkins.
Given that Groovy is just basically Java, you can get the absolute path like so:
new File("{env.WORKSPACE}").absolutePath
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
Solution | Source |
---|---|
Solution 1 | |
Solution 2 | |
Solution 3 | Vadim Kotov |