I'm experiencing some behaviors in Jenkins Shared Libraries, and it'll be great if someone can explain this to me:
Let's say i have a file in the vars directory:
// MultiMethod.groovy
def Foo() { ... }
def Bar() { ... }
Now if i want to use those functions from the pipeline, what i did was:
// Jenkinsfile
@Library('LibName') _
pipeline {
...
steps {
script {
// Method (1): this will work
def var = new MultiMethod()
var.Foo()
var.Bar()
// Method (2) this will not work
MultiMethod.Foo()
}
}
}
(The (1) and (2) methods are methods of calling the methods in the groovy script. Don't be confused by these 2 uses of the word "Method" please.)
So it works only if I instantiate this MultiMethod with the new operator.
But, if I name the file multiMethod (camelCased) instead of MultiMethod, i can use method (2) to call the methods in the script. Can someone explain this behavior?
That seems to be working fine.
Based on the example above. If I have the groovy file named MultiMethod, (We saw earlier that i can use its methods if I instantiate with with new), I can't seem to instantiate an object of MultiMethod when loading the library dynamically, like this:
// Jenkinsfile
pipeline {
...
steps {
script {
// Method (1): this will not work
library 'LibName'
def var = new MultiMethod()
var.Foo()
var.Bar()
}
}
}
If i try to do so, i get this:
Running in Durability level: MAX_SURVIVABILITY
org.codehaus.groovy.control.MultipleCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
WorkflowScript: 11: unable to resolve class multiMethod
@ line 11, column 32.
def mult = new multiMethod()
^
1 error
at org.codehaus.groovy.control.ErrorCollector.failIfErrors(ErrorCollector.java:310)
at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.applyToSourceUnits(CompilationUnit.java:958)
at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.doPhaseOperation(CompilationUni
...
I notice that if I do this:
// Jenkinsfile
pipeline {
...
steps {
script {
library 'LibName'
MultiMethod.Foo()
MultiMethod.Bar()
}
}
}
It does work !!
Another question if you may. I noticed that people use to write
return this
In the end of their scripts in the vars directory. Can someone explain what is it good for? I'd be happy if someone could explain this in the context of how does the mechanism of this works, like why are those scripts turns into Global Variables?
Thanks
First Question Answer
It's because Jenkins has defined that standard for the shared library. To clear your doubt, there is really a good explanation in Jenkins official documentation and it will work if you do it by following the standards. like below example:
make sure you are following this folder structure
shared-library
├── src
│ └── org
│ └── any
│ └── MultiMethod.groovy
└── vars
└── multiMethod.groovy
multiMethod.groovy
def foo() {
echo "Hello foo from vars/multiMethod.groovy"
}
def bar() {
echo "Hello bar from vars/multiMethod.groovy"
}
Once you have this and you are configuring your shared library like this way, then you can make use of multiMethod.groovy on your Jenkins file like below:
Jenkinsfile
@Library('jenkins-shared-library') _
pipeline {
agent any;
stages {
stage('log') {
steps {
script {
multiMethod.foo()
multiMethod.bar()
}
}
}
}
}
why does it work this way? - it explains here
But to make use of src/org/any/MultiMethod.groovy available in the src folder, you have to instantiate the class and call the method. Below is my example
MultiMethod.groovy
package org.any
class MultiMethod {
def steps;
MultiMethod(steps) {
this.steps = steps
}
def foo() {
steps.echo "Hello foo from src/org/any/MultiMethod.groovy"
}
def bar() {
steps.echo "Hello bar from src/org/any/MultiMethod.groovy"
}
}
Jenkinsfile
@Library('jenkins-shared-library') _
import org.any.MultiMethod
pipeline {
agent any;
stages {
stage('log') {
steps {
script {
def x= new MultiMethod(this);
x.foo()
x.bar()
}
}
}
}
}
Second Question Answer
Your second question is duplicate to this post. I have tried to explain and given an example. Please take a look.
Last Question Answer
It's not necessary to return this from the Jenkins global variable defined in vars if you do
vars/returnThisTest.groovy
def helloWorld() {
echo "Hello EveryOne"
}
or
def helloWorld() {
echo "Hello EveryOne"
}
return this;
both are the same and from Jenkinsfile you can just call like returnThisTest.helloWorld(), but return this can be more useful when a scenario will be like this - a good example from Jenkins documentation
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