90
votes

I have two jobs in jenkins, both of which need the same parameter.

How can I run the first job with a parameter so that when it triggers the second job, the same parameter is used?

11
We can use so many ways: One best way is use current job parameters, Or use predefined parameters in the trigger downstream jobksr
This title is so confusing. How is this "passing variables between jobs?". Also accepted answer is a plugin. Fancy that!Rakib

11 Answers

73
votes

You can use Parameterized Trigger Plugin which will let you pass parameters from one task to another.

You need also add this parameter you passed from upstream in downstream.

39
votes

1.Post-Build Actions > Select ”Trigger parameterized build on other projects”

2.Enter the environment variable with value.Value can also be Jenkins Build Parameters.

Detailed steps can be seen here :-

https://itisatechiesworld.wordpress.com/jenkins-related-articles/jenkins-configuration/jenkins-passing-a-parameter-from-one-job-to-another/

Hope it's helpful :)

28
votes

The accepted answer here does not work for my use case. I needed to be able to dynamically create parameters in one job and pass them into another. As Mark McKenna mentions there is seemingly no way to export a variable from a shell build step to the post build actions.

I achieved a workaround using the Parameterized Trigger Plugin by writing the values to a file and using that file as the parameters to import via 'Add post-build action' -> 'Trigger parameterized build...' then selecting 'Add Parameters' -> 'Parameters from properties file'.

20
votes

I think the answer above needs some update:

I was trying to create a dynamic directory to store my upstream build artifacts so I wanted to pass my upstream job build number to downstream job I tried the above steps but couldn't make it work. Here is how it worked:

  1. I copied the artifacts from my current job using copy artifacts plugin.
  2. In post build action of upstream job I added the variable like "SOURCE_BUILD_NUMBER=${BUILD_NUMBER}" and configured it to trigger the downstream job.
  3. Everything worked except that my downstream job was not able to get $SOURCE_BUILD_NUMBER to create the directory.
  4. So I found out that to use this variable I have to define the same variable in down stream job as a parameter variable like in this picture below:

enter image description here

This is because the new version of jenkins require's you to define the variable in the downstream job as well. I hope it's helpful.

10
votes

(for fellow googlers)

If you are building a serious pipeline with the Build Flow Plugin, you can pass parameters between jobs with the DSL like this :

Supposing an available string parameter "CVS_TAG", in order to pass it to other jobs :

build("pipeline_begin", CVS_TAG: params['CVS_TAG'])
parallel (
   // will be scheduled in parallel.
   { build("pipeline_static_analysis", CVS_TAG: params['CVS_TAG']) },
   { build("pipeline_nonreg", CVS_TAG: params['CVS_TAG']) }
)
// will be triggered after previous jobs complete
build("pipeline_end", CVS_TAG: params['CVS_TAG'])

Hint for displaying available variables / params :

// output values
out.println '------------------------------------'
out.println 'Triggered Parameters Map:'
out.println params
out.println '------------------------------------'
out.println 'Build Object Properties:'
build.properties.each { out.println "$it.key -> $it.value" }
out.println '------------------------------------'
8
votes

Just add my answer in addition to Nigel Kirby's as I can't comment yet:

In order to pass a dynamically created parameter, you can also export the variable in 'Execute Shell' tile and then pass it through 'Trigger parameterized build on other projects' => 'Predefined parameters" => give 'YOUR_VAR=$YOUR_VAR'. My team use this feature to pass npm package version from build job to deployment jobs

UPDATE: above only works for Jenkins injected parameters, parameter created from shell still need to use same method. eg. echo YOUR_VAR=${YOUR_VAR} > variable.properties and pass that file downstream

3
votes

I faced the same issue when I had to pass a pom version to a downstream Rundeck job.

What I did, was using parameters injection via a properties file as such:

1) Creating properties in properties file via shell :

Build actions:

  • Execute a shell script
  • Inject environment variables

E.g : properties definition

2) Passing defined properties to the downstream job : Post Build Actions :

  • Trigger parameterized build on other project
  • Add parameters : Current build parameters
  • Add parameters : predefined parameters

E.g : properties sending

3) It was then possible to use $POM_VERSION as such in the downstream Rundeck job.

/!\ Jenkins Version : 1.636

/!\ For some reason when creating the triggered build, it was necessary to add the option 'Current build parameters' to pass the properties.

3
votes

Reading through the answers, I don't see another option that I like so will offer it as well. I love the parameterization of jobs, but it doesn't always scale well. If you have jobs which are not directly downstream of the first job but farther down the pipeline, you don't really want to parameterize every job in the pipeline so as to be able to pass the parameters all the way through. Or if you have a large number of parameters used by a variety of other jobs (especially those not necessarily tied to one parent or master job), again parameterization doesn't work.

In these cases, I favor outputting the values to a properties file and then injecting that in whatever job I need using the EnvInject plugin. This can be done dynamically, which is another way to solve the issue from another answer above where parameterized jobs were still used. This solution scales very well in many scenarios.

1
votes

You can use Hudson Groovy builder to do this.

First Job in pipeline

enter image description here

Second job in pipeline

enter image description here

0
votes

I figured it out!

With almost 2 hours worth of trial and error, i figured it out.

This WORKS and is what you do to pass variables to remote job:

    def handle = triggerRemoteJob(remoteJenkinsName: 'remoteJenkins', job: 'RemoteJob' paramters: "param1=${env.PARAM1}\nparam2=${env.param2}")

Use \n to separate two parameters, no spaces..

As opposed to parameters: '''someparams'''

we use paramters: "someparams"

the " ... " is what gets us the values of the desired variables. (These are double quotes, not two single quotes)

the ''' ... ''' or ' ... ' will not get us those values. (Three single quotes or just single quotes)

All parameters here are defined in environment{} block at the start of the pipeline and are modified in stages>steps>scripts wherever necessary.

I also tested and found that when you use " ... " you cannot use something like ''' ... "..." ''' or "... '..'..." or any combination of it...

The catch here is that when you are using "..." in parameters section, you cannot pass a string parameter; for example This WILL NOT WORK:

    def handle = triggerRemoteJob(remoteJenkinsName: 'remoteJenkins', job: 'RemoteJob' paramters: "param1=${env.PARAM1}\nparam2='param2'")

if you want to pass something like the one above, you will need to set an environment variable param2='param2' and then use ${env.param2} in the parameters section of remote trigger plugin step

0
votes

You can also make a job write into a properties file somewhere and have another job read it. One of the way to do that is to inject variables via EnvInject plugin.