134

I have a strange problem with the Jenkins HTML Publisher plugin, wherein all the fancy CSS I have added to the report is stripped out when viewed in Jenkins. If I download the report to local, I am able to see the CSS formatting. Is there a setting in Jenkins which allows CSS to be viewed?

My HTML Publisher Settings in Jenkins:

enter image description here

My Report Page when displayed in Jenkins :

enter image description here

My Report Page when displayed in Local :

enter image description here

2
  • 5
    Everyone is saying you "fix" it by disabling the Content Security Policy, without any thought as to why it's there in the first place. Anyone who can affect the changes to be built will be able to hijack the admin credentials and gain access to the whole Jenkins cluster. While inline css is mostly safe if you're careful, allowing scripts is a disaster.
    – OrangeDog
    Jul 18, 2019 at 9:40

20 Answers 20

240

Figured out the issue. Sharing it here for other users.

CSS is stripped out because of the Content Security Policy in Jenkins. (https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Configuring+Content+Security+Policy)

The default rule is set to:

sandbox; default-src 'none'; img-src 'self'; style-src 'self';

This rule set results in the following:

  • No JavaScript allowed at all
  • No plugins (object/embed) allowed
  • No inline CSS, or CSS from other sites allowed
  • No images from other sites allowed
  • No frames allowed
  • No web fonts allowed
  • No XHR/AJAX allowed, etc.

To relax this rule, go to

  1. Manage Jenkins->
  2. Manage Nodes->
  3. Click settings(gear icon)->
  4. click Script console on left and type in the following command:

    System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "")

and Press Run. If you see the output as 'Result:' below "Result" header then the protection disabled. Re-Run your build and you can see that the new HTML files archived will have the CSS enabled.

9
  • 1
    @Steerpike I wondered what you meant and then found out that the css was blocked upon restarting Jenkins. So I created a Jenkins job that runs the command every 12 hours. Seems to do the trick.
    – Aeropher
    Nov 25, 2016 at 17:23
  • @Aeropher thank you - I am a Jenkins novice - how do I setup that job? Setup a general job with a Build Step of Execute Windows Batch Command?
    – Steerpike
    Feb 3, 2017 at 11:11
  • 3
    @Steerpike That's right except it is a groovy command, so you need to execute it in an "Execute system Groovy Script" build step. And then under the "Build Triggers" section I selected "Build Periodically" with this value: H 12 * * *
    – Aeropher
    Feb 6, 2017 at 9:38
  • 3
    Disabling CSP entirely isn't very safe.
    – OrangeDog
    Jul 17, 2019 at 17:15
  • 1
    Also note that in Manage Jenkins page (e.g. localhost:8080/manage) you will be able to see a warning similar to this one: The default Content-Security-Policy is currently overridden using the hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP system property, which is a potential security issue when browsing untrusted files. As an alternative, you can set up a Resource Root URL that Jenkins will use to serve some static files without adding Content-Security-Policy headers. if the solution has been applied ok Dec 27, 2020 at 11:20
36

In CentOs, to enable images in html report

  • sudo vi /etc/sysconfig/jenkins
  • set following in JENKINS_JAVA_OPTION

JENKINS_JAVA_OPTIONS="-Djava.awt.headless=true -Dhudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP=\"default-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval'; img-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' data:;\""

This will work even after restarting jenkins' server.


Directive

default-src: The default-src is the default policy for loading content such as JavaScript, Images, CSS, Fonts, AJAX requests, Frames, HTML5 Media

img-src: Defines valid sources of images.

Source Value

' self ' - Allows loading resources from the same origin (same scheme, host and port).

Usage : default-src 'self'

' unsafe-inline ' - Allows use of inline source elements such as style attribute, onclick, or script tag bodies (depends on the context of the source it is applied to) and javascript: URIs.

Usage : default-src 'unsafe-inline'

' unsafe-eval ' - Allows unsafe dynamic code evaluation such as JavaScript eval()

Usage : default-src 'unsafe-eval'

data: - Allows loading resources via the data scheme (eg Base64 encoded images).

Usage : img-src 'self' data:

Please refer more about content security policy here

5
  • 2
    you should only enable inline css, and not all these other unsafe things
    – OrangeDog
    Jul 18, 2019 at 9:36
  • If you use some svg in object in data part like this <object type="image/svg+xml" data="imgs/lifecycle-diagram.svg"><span class="alt">lifecycleDiagram</span></object> (result of interactive asciidoctor spring-rest documentation for embedded plantuml diagram), you would need set object-src to self. Notice escaping:JENKINS_JAVA_OPTIONS='-Djava.awt.headless=true -Dhudson.security.HudsonPrivateSecurityRealm.ID_REGEX="^[a-zA-Z0-9_.-]+$" -Dhudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP="sandbox; default-src '\''none'\''; img-src '\''self'\''; style-src '\''self'\''; object-src '\''self'\'';"'
    – Lubo
    Aug 28, 2019 at 13:07
  • 1
    great! can be used for docker as well with --env JAVA_OPTS="..."
    – smelm
    Oct 4, 2019 at 13:21
  • 3
    For my ubuntu installation i used vi /etc/default/jenkins with the variable JAVA_ARGS
    – mRyan
    Oct 21, 2020 at 13:39
  • 1
    In Jenkins 2.346.1 the variable might have changed to "JAVA_OPTS" stackoverflow.com/a/73874025/658497
    – Noam Manos
    Sep 27, 2022 at 21:43
24

Go to “Manage Jenkins” -> “Script console” and run below command:

System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "")
2
  • 6
    After modifying the second param to the values mentioned by kithinkmatthew this worked for me, i.e. System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "default-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval'; img-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' data:;") Jun 1, 2019 at 2:48
  • @AndrewMackrodt what you suggested is the only solution that has worked for me (I am running Jenkins on CentOS)
    – lax1089
    Aug 6, 2020 at 18:07
20

On CentOS, the below solution (which was suggested in comments of another answer) is the only one which has worked for me:

  1. Go to: Manage Jenkins > Manage Nodes and Clouds
  2. Click Gear icon on the right hand side for the node (by default there will be just one Node called Master)
  3. Click 'Script Console' on the left
  4. Enter the following into the console window: System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "default-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval'; img-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' data:;")
  5. Click Run
  6. You should see some output in the Result section, similar to below screenshot:

Script Console Result

My particular issue was missing images/css in Serenity BDD reports. After performing these steps my Serenity reports had all images/css rendering properly, including reports from builds which had executed prior to this change. This solution will also work for any published html-based report.

3
  • 3
    Might be a little late, but this worked on my Windows setup. But for some reason I needed to click Run twice for the result to display the expected output
    – KiritoLyn
    Feb 27, 2022 at 17:52
  • Thanks it worked. Will this works after Jenkins restart also?
    – KingArasan
    Jul 31, 2022 at 14:18
  • @KingArasan Yes, this change persists across restarts
    – lax1089
    Jul 31, 2022 at 15:37
17

You can fix this by using the groovy command as specified in Vall's answer.

The effect is in place until Jenkins restarts and afterwards you have to do it again.

A solution to solve this problem is to configure a job that will do this for you whenever jenkins starts up.

You can do this by using the Startup Trigger plugin.

After you install it create a new job and you will have a new checkbox under the Build Triggers section that you will have to check.

Then add an Execute system Groovy script build step with the command:

System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP","")

Save and everything should work.

1
  • With this method, you need to install the Groovy plugin as well, if you didn't have already. Otherwise, the Execute system Groovy script build step won't show among the build options. Sep 3, 2020 at 7:49
15

(The following solution is for Windows.)

A permanent fix is to change a line in [Jenkins directory]\jenkins.xml (for me it's at C:\Jenkins\jenkins.xml)

<executable>java.exe</executable>
<arguments>[arguments are here]</arguments>

Add the following argument to the whitespace-separated list of arguments:

-Dhudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP=

Then restart the Jenkins service to pick up the change.

1
  • 2
    that is the only working answer for me, i also added -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 to arguments
    – Sasha Bond
    Sep 18, 2020 at 21:26
7

For Ubuntu 14 version helpful was special plugins:

https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Startup+Trigger - To start job on jenkins startup

https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Groovy+plugin - To run System Groovy script

And I made a job, that starts on Jenkins restart and sets parametr.

set to start build after Jenkins is ran

And added system Groovy script to set parametr. Run System Groovy script System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "sandbox; img-src 'self';")

3
  • Although running the job completes successfully, it does not enable the CSS display for my reports. I ran the exact same groovy script in the "Script Console" and that worked fine. What else can I do? This job's groovy script is not changing the actual parent Jenkin's property.
    – Frak
    Oct 19, 2017 at 19:02
  • @frakman1 at this moment my Groovy script looks like this - System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "") But that's all and everything works. Maybe you don't have admin user?
    – abiab
    Nov 7, 2017 at 9:25
  • 2
    Thank you for the response. I eventually got it to work. I had to use this script instead: System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "sandbox allow-same-origin allow-scripts; default-src 'self'; script-src * 'unsafe-eval'; img-src *; style-src * 'unsafe-inline'; font-src *")
    – Frak
    Nov 8, 2017 at 16:04
5

Go To

Manage Jenkins --> Script console

and type in the following command:

System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "")

then Press Run. if you get the output as 'Result', then rerun the build check the HTML report format

3

For setting permanently create a Groovy script file $JENKINS_HOME/init.groovy, or any .groovy file in the directory $JENKINS_HOME/init.groovy.d/ with the following content:

System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "sandbox allow-scripts; default-src 'self'; img-src *; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src * 'unsafe-inline';")

systemctl restart jenkins

https://wiki.jenkins.io/display/JENKINS/Post-initialization+script

1
  • ubuntu home: /var/lib/jenkins May 28, 2022 at 19:40
3

Although this is an old post and an answer is provided, I felt the urge to point out new material to enhance the answer. So, sorry for the dead bump, but it is the top search find for this topic after all.

All previous answers I saw proposed setting the default content security policy to a free-for-all, in one way or another. Given the fact that the content can be modified by anyone who runs a build on your Jenkins pipeline, this bears a certain risk. After all, this is a valid setting that serves to minimize the risk of cross-site scripting. This has been pointed out by several comments I've read even in this thread.

To educate further, here are some good resources I found

https://www.jenkins.io/doc/book/security/configuring-content-security-policy/

https://content-security-policy.com/

The following enabled beautiful HTML coverage reports on my managed Jenkins instance. It is pointed out in the Jenkins documentation that setting the resource URL is the somewhat preferred solution, but that was not possible in my case:

  1. In the Jenkins web frontend, navigate to the script console.
  2. Type System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "default-src 'none'; script-src 'self'; connect-src 'self'; img-src 'self'; style-src 'self';base-uri 'self';form-action 'self' ") and click 'Run'.
  3. The setting is effective immediately, so check results by reloading the 'broken' content you try to display. (e.g. your jobs published HTML coverage report)
  4. Reverting to default type System.clearProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP") in the scripting console.

The provided CSP Header is the so-called starter policy from the second link given above.

This policy allows images, scripts, AJAX, form actions, and CSS from the same origin, and does not allow any other resources to load (eg object, frame, media, etc). It is a good starting point for many sites.

For the case of HTML coverage reports in an access-protected Jenkins instance, I found this acceptable and working.

2

Open jenkins.xml file and copy arguments as below. it will fix permanently. Once its done restart your machine.

<arguments>-Xrs -Xmx256m -Dhudson.lifecycle=hudson.lifecycle.WindowsServiceLifecycle -Dhudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP="sandbox allow-scripts; default-src 'self'; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline';" -jar "%BASE%\jenkins.war" --httpPort=8080 --webroot="%BASE%\war"</arguments
1

It's too late to respond but thought to share.

I was struggling with Jenkins deployed on Tomcat, tried execution of script, it helps but goes away if tomcat is rebooted.

Made the permanent fix by setting the property in catalina.properties in tomcat.

Properties file: tomcat_installation_dir/conf/catalina.properties Just copy paste the below line in catalina.properties at the last (you can set it anywhere just to not mess with existing properties)

-Dhudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP=""

1

To set the system property permanently if using Jenkins-X, then create the file myvalues.yaml in the current directory, with the following content:

jenkins:
  Master:
    JavaOpts: >
      -Dhudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP=

Then restart the jenkins-x platform, which can be done by upgrading it:

$ jx upgrade platform --always-upgrade
# Presumably jx.exe is used if on Windows (not tested)

To avoid actually upgrading the platform, just forcibly upgrade it to the same version:

$ version=$(jx version --no-version-check\
            | grep 'jenkins x platform' | sed -e 's/^jenkins.\+ //')
$ jx upgrade platform --version ${version} --always-upgrade
1

For those who are using asciidoctor-maven-plugin plugin to produce an HTML document from the asciidoc file to further publish it to Jenkins, update the plugin configuration, add linkcss attribute:

<configuration>
    <attributes>
        <linkcss>true</linkcss>
    </attributes>
    <backend>html5</backend>
    <outputDirectory>${project.build.directory}/generated-resources</outputDirectory>
</configuration>
1

We have a much simpler solution to the problem. Unless you really insist on having the HTML reports, you can just use the Warnings NG plugin (which is a good idea anyway):

https://github.com/jenkinsci/warnings-ng-plugin/blob/master/SUPPORTED-FORMATS.md

We use this for CodeNarc (Groovy), but also for Checkstyle, PMD, SpotBugs and Java warnings (Java).

1

I know this is old, but this worked great for me, and it is what seems to be recommended in the Jenkins docs. I just set the resource root to a different url served from the same location.

"It is strongly recommended to set up the Resource Root URL instead of customizing Content-Security-Policy. Most of the documentation below was written when Content-Security-Policy was first introduced and is retained for use by administrators unable to set up Jenkins to serve user content from a different domain."

2
1
  1. In MacOS, Jenkins runs a service, that needs to create a groovy script inside $JENKINS_HOME/init.groovy.d
  2. Call startup-properties.groovy and code :
    import jenkins.model.Jenkins
    import java.util.logging.LogManager 
    /* Jenkins home directory */
    def jenkinsHome = Jenkins.instance.getRootDir().absolutePath
    def logger = LogManager.getLogManager().getLogger("")
    /* Replace the Key and value with the values you want to set.*/
    /* System.setProperty(key, value) */
    System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP", "")
    logger.info("Jenkins Startup Script: Successfully updated the system properties value for hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP . Script location : ${jenkinsHome}/init.groovy.d")
  1. Restart the Jenkins Service: brew services restart jenkins-lts

Re-build the job and verify the HTML report into the build

https://i.stack.imgur.com/A60BN.png

enter image description here

0

I had the same issues after adding HTTPS to my jenkins. In case you are having the same issue, the solution is easy - set your Jenkins url to use HTTPS protocol instead of HTTP. It can be configured via jenkins configuration -> jenkins url

0

The best solution to this problem is to add or update Resource Root URL in System of Manage Jenkins.

if you are running Jenkins on AWS simply add the Public IPv4 DNS in the Resource Root URL. For example, https://ec2-XXX-XXX-XXX-XXX.compute-1.amazonaws.com:8080 in Resource Root URL.

Note: Hostname of Jenkins URL and Resource Root URL should be different.

0

Just want to update per my study following this thread especially dragosb's answer. Need first install two plugins: Startup Trigger plugin then Groovy plugin. And don't forget to restart jenkins. After that, in the test project find build steps, from there add Execute system Groovy script before any other build step. And then paste following command:

System.setProperty("hudson.model.DirectoryBrowserSupport.CSP","")

enter image description here

Now after build you are able to open report.html and log.html.

I guess by doing this they restrict this security exception to be allowed in project level.

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