Jeeves is an automated report generator for Jenkins CI. It generates an HTML report using Jinja2 templating and sends it out over email using Python's smtplib.
Create a file named "config.yaml" based off "config.yaml.example" with the following fields filled in:
- jenkins_url: URL of your Jenkins server
- jenkins_username: Your Jenkins username
- jenkins_api_token: Your Jenkins API token
- job_search_fields: Filter of Jenkins Jobs to included in report, e.g. DFG-ceph-rhos. To search for multiple fields, seperate them by comma, e.g. DFG-ceph-rhos,DFG-all-unified. Allows for regex searches as well, e.g. ^DFG-ceph,rgw$
- bz_url: URL of your Bugzilla, e.g. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/
- jira_url: URL of your Jira, e.g. https://projects.engineering.redhat.com/
- jira_username: Your Jira username
- jira_password: Your Jira password
- certificate: CRT file to authenticate with Jira server
- smtp_host: SMTP host of your email
- email_subject: Subject of your email report
- email_to: Email address you would like to send your report to. To send the report to multiple emails, seperate them by comma, e.g. [email protected],[email protected]
- email_to_test: Email address to send test reports to (note: this field is only required if you run Jeeves with the
--test-email
flag)
If you wish to use a different configuration file, you can specify it as a command line argument.
Create a file named "blockers.yaml" based off "blockers.yaml.example" with each UNSTABLE and FAILED job containing two sections - 'bz' and 'jira' - and a list of the blocker IDs. 0 indicates blocker bug/ticket is not on file (either doesn't exist or hasn't been created yet)
If you have a blocker for a job that is neither a Bugzilla bug or a Jira ticket, you may add a section to your blockers file called 'other', with each item having two fields - 'name' and 'url'. Both fields are optional - you can include one, the other, or both.
If you wish to use a different blockers file, you can specify it as a command line argument.
You can define "owners" for a job in "blockers.yaml" for use with reminder mode. To do so, simply add an "owners" subfield to a job with one or more emails. You can see some examples of this in "blockers.yaml.example".
To run:
$ ./jeeves.py [-h] [--config CONFIG] [--blockers BLOCKERS] [--no-email] [--test-email] [--remind] [--template TEMPLATE]
- To only save report to the 'archive' folder, and not send an email, add
--no-email
- To send report to email specified in
email_to_test
field, add--test-email
- Note that running Jeeves with the
--test-email
flag will not save the report to 'archive' folder - As such, running Jeeves with both the
--test-email
and--no-email
flags will result in no report being saved and no email being sent
- Note that running Jeeves with the
- To run Jeeves in "reminder" mode, add
--remind
- Note this will override the usage of both
--no-email
and--test-email
- Note this will override the usage of both
- To use a different template for HTML report, add
--template <template file>
. The template should be in the templates directory.- Note that this flag will be ignored if Jeeves is run in "reminder" mode
Jeeves has a reminder mode that will send an email to "owners" of jobs in Jenkins that have "UNSTABLE" or "FAILURE" status. You can add as many "owners" as you would like to a given job. You can see some examples of this in "blockers.yaml.example".
- PyYAML for parsing config YAML
- Jinja2 for generating HTML
- Python Jenkins for interacting with Jenkins
- python-bugzilla for interacting with Bugzilla
- jira-python for interacting with Jira
To install packages run:
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
It is recommended you do this within a virtual environment.
Jeeves has a small but growing test suite driven by pytest. Currently all tests reside in the test_functions.py
file.
To run tests simply run the pytest
command within the Jeeves directory.
Please see contribution guidelines in CONTRIBUTING.md
Jeeves was designed for use by Red Hat OpenStack QE and the organization's production CI environment - while the project can be used for other Jenkins environments, it may require some tweaking to work as expected.