9

I'm having trouble running a Jenkins job using Groovy, and it seems super simple but I'm 1) a noob at Java/Groovy and 2) all the examples I can find are not quite what I need to do.

I found the following similar question: Jenkins Groovy Parallel Variable not working, but that exact code results in an error:

java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException: Calling public static java.util.List org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.DefaultGroovyMethods.collect(java.lang.Object,groovy.lang.Closure) on a CPS-transformed closure is not yet supported (JENKINS-26481); encapsulate in a @NonCPS method, or use Java-style loops

Here's my pseudo-code of what I want to do:

String[] arr = [ "one","two","three",'four','five' ]
echo "Running commands: ${arr}"
int top = arr.size()
echo "top is ${top}"
parallel arr.each {
    echo "${it}"
}

I've tried closures, but they throw an error and honestly I barely know how to use them. The following code

String[] arr = [ "one","two","three",'four','five' ]
echo "Running commands: ${arr}"

parallel arr.collect { item ->
    { -> 
        echo "${item}"
    }
}

throws the same "java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException" as the related question above.

I'm trying to learn how to properly utilize Groovy with Jenkins, but it's been rough. Just looking for any help I can get at this point.

Thank you.

1 Answer 1

12

It's a pretty annoying limitation, but currently you can't use .each in a pipeline script (as documented here: https://issues.jenkins-ci.org/browse/JENKINS-26481)

You need to do an actual loop, like

String[] arr = [ "one","two","three",'four','five' ]
echo "Running commands: ${arr}"
int top = arr.size()
echo "top is ${top}"
for (it in arr) {
    echo "${it}"
}

If actually need parallel execution the code will look more like:

String[] arr = [ "one","two","three",'four','five' ]
echo "Running commands: ${arr}"
int top = arr.size()
echo "top is ${top}"
def stepsForParallel = [:]

for (int i = 0; i < arr.size(); i++) {
    def it = arr[i]
    def stepName = "running ${it}"
    stepsForParallel[stepName] = { ->           
        echo "${it}"
    }
}

parallel stepsForParallel

The other stackoverflow you linked to uses the Build Flow plugin, which is the predecessor to the Pipeline plugin that you're using. That's why the same code doesn't work.

EDIT: In modern Jenkins (tested in 2.150.1) the original bug listed above is fixed, and .each works. You can do the following for parallel execution:

String[] arr = [ "one","two","three",'four','five' ]

def stepsForParallel = [:]
arr.each {
    def stepName = "running ${it}"
    stepsForParallel[stepName] = { ->           
        echo "${it}"
    }
}
parallel stepsForParallel
3
  • 1
    Hi, What's the need for closure here? Can't I just assign: stepsForParallel[stepName] = echo "${it}"?
    – Moshe
    Dec 23, 2018 at 11:09
  • 1
    I think this is for a scripted pipeline, as opposed to a declarative pipeline, yes? If so, it might be worth pointing that out for people who are newer to Jenkins Pipeline workflows.
    – Adil Sadik
    Sep 26, 2019 at 17:01
  • @AdilSadik correct, although it's simple to plug any Scripted syntax into a Declarative pipeline by either wrapping it in a script { ... } block or putting the script into a .groovy file and loading it. (or put it in the vars/ dir in a library and call it as a step, but that's more advanced.) Aug 6, 2021 at 3:43

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