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Jenkins Prometheus Metrics Plugin

About

Jenkins Prometheus Plugin expose an endpoint (default /prometheus) with metrics where a Prometheus Server can scrape.

Documentation can be found here

Please note that the documentation is a WIP.

Metrics exposed

Currently only metrics from the Metrics-plugin and summary of build duration of jobs and pipeline stages

Environment variables

PROMETHEUS_NAMESPACE Prefix of metric (Default: default).

PROMETHEUS_ENDPOINT REST Endpoint (Default: prometheus)

COLLECTING_METRICS_PERIOD_IN_SECONDS Async task period in seconds (Default: 120 seconds)

COLLECT_DISK_USAGE Should the plugin collect disk usage information. Set this to false if you are running Jenkins against a cloud-based storage backend, in order to avoid scanning virtually unlimited storage.

Building

mvn clean install
mvn hpi:hpi

Author / Maintainer

Marky Jackson

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

Opening or finding an issue

OPENING AN ISSUE: You should usually open an issue in the following situations:

Report an error you can’t solve yourself Discuss a high-level topic or idea (for example, community, vision or policies) Propose a new feature or other project idea

FINDING AN ISSUE: If you found an open issue that you want to tackle, comment on the issue to let people know you’re on it. That way, people are less likely to duplicate your work.

If an issue was opened a while ago, it’s possible that it’s being addressed somewhere else, or has already been resolved, so comment to ask for confirmation before starting work.

Opening a pull request

You should usually open a pull request in the following situations:

Submit trivial fixes (for example, a typo, a broken link or an obvious error) Start work on a contribution that was already asked for, or that you’ve already discussed, in an issue

Testing your code

To run unit tests, use the test maven goal, or

mvn test

The automated pipeline also runs static analysis, to run it locally, use the spotbugs:check target, or

mvn spotbugs:check

Forking a repository

Fork the repository and clone it locally. Connect your local to the original “upstream” repository by adding it as a remote. Pull in changes from “upstream” often so that you stay up to date so that when you submit your pull request, merge conflicts will be less likely.

Create a branch for your edits.

Reference any relevant issues or supporting documentation in your PR (for example, “Closes #37.”)

Include screenshots of the before and after if your changes include differences in HTML/CSS. Drag and drop the images into the body of your pull request.

Test your changes! Run your changes against any existing tests if they exist and create new ones when needed. Whether tests exist or not, make sure your changes don’t break the existing project.

Getting Started Fork this repository on GitHub by clicking the Fork button in the top right of this page.

Clone your forked repo to your local machine.

Create a new branch. git checkout -b new-branch

Add your contributions. Have a look at CONTRIBUTING.md. There are 3 easy ways to contribute to this project:

Commit and push your changes.

git add -A git commit -m "Your commit message" git push --set-upstream origin new-branch Create a Pull Request by navigating to your forked repository and clicking the New pull request button on your left-hand side of the page.

Add in a title, edit the PR template, and then press the Create pull request button.

Wait for your Pull Request to be reviewed and merged.

Congratulations! You just opened a Pull Request.