With jenkins build flow plugin this was possible:
ignore(FAILURE){
build( "system-check-flow" )
}
How to do this with Declarative Pipeline syntax?
To ignore a failed step in declarative pipeline you basically have two options:
script
step and try-catch
block (similar to previous proposition by R_K but in declarative style)stage('someStage') { steps { script { try { build job: 'system-check-flow' } catch (err) { echo err.getMessage() } } echo currentBuild.result } }
catchError
stage('someStage') { steps { catchError { build job: 'system-check-flow' } echo currentBuild.result } }
In both cases the build won't be aborted upon exception in build job: 'system-check-flow'
. In both cases the echo
step (and any other following) will be executed.
But there's one important difference between these two options. In first case if the try
section raises an exception the overall build status won't be changed (so echo currentBuild.result
=> SUCCESS
). In the second case you overall build will fail (so echo currentBuild.result
=> FAILURE
).
This is important, because you can always fail the overall build in first case (by setting currentBuild.result = 'FAILURE'
) but you can't repair build in second option (currentBuild.result = 'SUCCESS'
won't work).
catch (err) { echo err }
, provoke a error java.lang.ClassCastException: org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.steps.EchoStep.message expects class java.lang.String but received class hudson.AbortException
. Prefer echo err.getMessage()
.
catchError
also as a stage option. Comes in handy if you have multiple sub stages that you want to catch errors for in the parent stage. E. g. stage('Test'){ options{ catchError(message: "Test failed", stageResult: 'UNSTABLE', buildResult: 'UNSTABLE') } stages { ... }}
In addition to simply making the stage pass, it is now also possible to fail the stage, but continue the pipeline and pass the build:
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('1') {
steps {
sh 'exit 0'
}
}
stage('2') {
steps {
catchError(buildResult: 'SUCCESS', stageResult: 'FAILURE') {
sh "exit 1"
}
}
}
stage('3') {
steps {
sh 'exit 0'
}
}
}
}
In the example above, all stages will execute, the pipeline will be successful, but stage 2 will show as failed:
As you might have guessed, you can freely choose the buildResult
and stageResult
, in case you want it to be unstable or anything else. You can even fail the build and continue the execution of the pipeline.
Just make sure your Jenkins is up to date, since this feature is only available since "Pipeline: Basic Steps" 2.16 (May 14, 2019). Before that, catchError
is still available but without parameters:
steps {
catchError {
sh "exit 1"
}
}
catchError(buildResult: 'UNSTABLE', stageResult: 'FAILURE')
, so that the build is marked unstable instead of success or failure if any of the stages fail.
Nov 9, 2023 at 19:49
I was looking for an answer for a long time and I found a hack for it! I put the try/catch block on the whole stage:
try {
stage('some-stage') {
//do something
}
} catch (Exception e) {
echo "Stage failed, but we continue"
}
try {
stage("some-other-stage") { // do something }
} catch (Exception e) {
echo "Stage failed, but we still continue"
}
As result you will get something like this:
This is still not ideal, but it gives the necessary results.
In recent versions it's possible to pass propogate=false
option to build step.
link: https://jenkins.io/doc/pipeline/steps/pipeline-build-step/
example:
build job:"jobName", propagate:false
Try this example:
stage('StageName1')
{
steps
{
catchError(buildResult: 'SUCCESS', stageResult: 'FAILURE')
{
SomeCodeThatCanBeErrored
}
}
}
stage('StageName2')
{
steps
{
ContinueOtherCode
}
}
For my decalartive pipeline I have found another solution:
stage('Deploy test')
{
steps
{
bat returnStatus: true, script: 'sc stop Tomcat9'
// The return value of the step will be the status code!
// evaluate return status yourself, or ignore it
}
}
The same works for the sh command to execute scripts on Unix platforms.
The example ignores the return status, because the tomcat might be already stopped, because of a previously failed pipeline run.
Complementing the existing working solutions that use catchError
as a step or in script, you can also use catchError
as a stage option.
This is useful if you have multiple sub stages that you want to catch errors for in the parent stage:
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Tests') {
options {
catchError(message: "Test failed", stageResult: 'UNSTABLE', buildResult: 'UNSTABLE')
}
stages {
stage('Test 1') {
echo 'test 1 succeeded'
}
stage('Test 2') {
error 'test 2 failed'
}
}
}
}
}
This isn't explicitly documented, but there is a hint that you may use steps as options (emphasis mine):
However, the stage-level options can only contain steps like retry, timeout, or timestamps, or Declarative options that are relevant to a stage, like skipDefaultCheckout.
It names a few steps as examples, but not as the only possible steps to be used as options. Also, if you enter an invalid option, Jenkins lists all available options in the error message, which includes catchError
.
In the new pipeline, you can use try-catch to achieve this.
node{
try{
build job: 'system-check-flow'
}
catch (err){
echo "system-check-flow failed"
}
try{
build job: 'job2'
}
catch (err){
echo "job2 failed"
}
}
Here it will build the 'system-check-flow' job. If it fails it will catch the error, ignore, and then move on to build 'job2'
try{}..catch(){}
in a script{}
block, for this to work in the declarative syntax
Jul 9, 2018 at 14:13
The cleanest and latest way would be:
stage('Integration Tests') {
steps {
script {
warnError(message: "${STAGE_NAME} stage was unstable.", catchInterruptions: false) {
// your scripts
}
}
}
}
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Stage') {
steps{
script{
jobresult = build(job: './failing-job',propagate:false).result
if(jobresult != 'SUCCESS'){
catchError(stageResult: jobresult, buildResult: 'UNSTABLE'){
error("Downstream job failing-job failed.")
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
For all those that are wondering about how to set the result of a downstream job to the stage/build) Not the most graceful solution, but it gets the job done. Funny thing is that if this stageResult variable was available as a global variable or as a variable outside the catchError block these kinds of solutions would not be needed. Sadly it isn't, and the only way to set the stage result in a pipeline that I thought of is this way. The error() block is needed, otherwise catchError will not set the stageResult/buildResult(the catchError block requires an error, ofcourse).
you could put the step script inside "post" step, if if it's a teardown like step
code as below:
post {
always {
script {
try{
echo 'put your alway need run scripts here....if it's a teardown like step'
}catch (err) {
echo 'here failed'
}
script{
emailext (
xxxx
)
}
}