54

I would like to set the build name and description from a Jenkins Declarative Pipeline, but can't find the proper way of doing it. I tried using an environment bracket after the pipeline, using a node bracket in an agent bracket, etc. I always get syntax error.

The last version of my Jenkinsfile goes like so:

pipeline {  
    stages {
        stage("Build") {
            steps {
                echo "Building application..."
                bat "%ANT_HOME%/bin/ant.bat clean compile"
                currentBuild.name = "MY_VERSION_NUMBER"
                currentBuild.description = "MY_PROJECT MY_VERSION_NUMBER"
            }
        }
        stage("Unit Tests") {
            steps {
                echo "Testing (JUnit)..."
            echo "Testing (pitest)..."
                bat "%ANT_HOME%/bin/ant.bat run-unit-tests"
            }
        }
        stage("Functional Test") {
            steps {
                echo "Selenium..."
            }
        }
        stage("Performance Test") {
            steps {
                echo "JMeter.."
            }
        }
        stage("Quality Analysis") {
            steps {
                echo "Running SonarQube..."
                bat "%ANT_HOME%/bin/ant.bat run-sonarqube-analysis"
            }
        }
        stage("Security Assessment") {
            steps {
                echo "ZAP..."
            }
        }
        stage("Approval") {
            steps {
            echo "Approval by a CS03"
            }
        }
        stage("Deploy") {
            steps {
                echo "Deploying..."
            }
        }
    }
    post {      
        always {
            junit '/test/reports/*.xml'
        }
        failure {
            emailext attachLog: true, body: '', compressLog: true, recipientProviders: [[$class: 'CulpritsRecipientProvider'], [$class: 'DevelopersRecipientProvider']], subject: '[JENKINS] MY_PROJECT build failed', to: '...recipients...'
        }
        success {
            emailext attachLog: false, body: '', compressLog: false, recipientProviders: [[$class: 'DevelopersRecipientProvider']], subject: '[JENKINS] MY_PROJECT build succeeded', to: '...recipients...'
        }
    }       
}

Error is:

org.codehaus.groovy.control.MultipleCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
WorkflowScript: 11: Expected a step @ line 11, column 5.
                currentBuild.name = "MY_VERSION_NUMBER"
       ^

WorkflowScript: 12: Expected a step @ line 12, column 5.
                currentBuild.description = "MY_PROJECT MY_VERSION_NUMBER"
       ^

Ideally, I'd like to be able to read MY_PROJECT and MY_VERSION_NUMBER from the build.properties file, or from the Jenkins build log. Any guidance about that requirement would be appreciated as well.

UPDATE

Based on the answer I had below, the following worked:

stage("Build") {
    steps {
        echo "Building application..."
        bat "%ANT_HOME%/bin/ant.bat clean compile"

        script {
            def props = readProperties  file: 'build.properties'
            currentBuild.displayName = "v" + props['application.version']
        }
    }

Now the build version is automatically set during the pipeline by reading the build.properties file.

2 Answers 2

91

I think this will do what you want. I was able to do it inside a script block:

pipeline {
    stages {
        stage("Build"){
            steps {
                script {
                    currentBuild.displayName = "The name."
                    currentBuild.description = "The best description."
                }
                ... do whatever.
            }
        }
    }
}

The script is kind of an escape hatch to get out of a declarative pipeline. There is probably a declarative way to do it but i couldn't find it. And one more note. I think you want currentBuild.displayName instead of currentBuild.name In the documentation for Jenkins globals I didn't see a name property under currentBuild.

1
  • The declarative way would be to write a pure groovy script in an external file or shared library and call that as a step, eliminating the need for a script block. Mar 4, 2020 at 22:17
17

If you want to set build name to a job from a parameter, you can use

currentBuild.displayName = "${nameOfYourParameter}". Make sure you use double quotes instead of single quotes.

Job Configuration

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Build job with parameter

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Build History

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REFERENCE: How to set build name in Pipeline job?

4
  • 2
    As an additional note, I was having trouble with this because I was using single-quoted strings (eg. '${NumeroCambio}'). This apparently only works with double-quoted strings. Oct 25, 2018 at 18:07
  • 1
    Thats a point that I forgot. I updated the answer. Thanks, Colin! Oct 26, 2018 at 14:09
  • @CarlosAndres, one question which plugin are you using for this pretty green ball and tick Feb 16, 2020 at 21:35
  • 1
    AFAIK instead of currentBuild.displayName = "${nameOfYourParameter}" you could just use currentBuild.displayName = nameOfYourParameter.
    – msa
    Jan 8, 2021 at 17:02

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