I am running Jenkins from user jenkins
thats has $PATH
set to something and when I go into Jenkins web interface, in the System Properties window (http://$host/systemInfo
) I see a different $PATH
.
I have installed Jenkins on Centos with the native rpm from Jenkins website. I am using the startup script provided with the installation using sudo /etc/init.d/jenkins start
Can anyone please explain to me why that happens?
Michael,
Two things:
When Jenkins connects to a computer, it goes to the sh
shell, and not the bash
shell (at least this is what I have noticed - I may be wrong). So any changes you make to $PATH in your bashrc file are not considered.
Also, any changes you make to $PATH in your local shell (one that you personally ssh into) will not show up in Jenkins.
To change the path that Jenkins uses, you have two options (AFAIK):
1) Edit your /etc/profile
file and add the paths that you want there
2) Go to the configuration page of your slave, and add environment variable PATH
, with value: $PATH:/followed-by/paths/you/want/to/add
If you use the second option, your System Information will still not show it, but your builds will see the added paths.
I kept running into this problem, but now I just add:
source /etc/profile
As the first step in my build process. Now all my subsequent rules are loaded for Jenkins to operate smoothly.
You can also edit the /etc/sysconfig/jenkins
file to make any changes to the environment variables, etc. I simply added source /etc/profile
to the end of the file. /etc/profile
has all all of the proper PATH
variables setup. When you do this, make sure you restart Jenkins
/etc/init.d/jenkins restart
We are running ZendServer CE which installs pear, phing, etc in a different path so this was helpful. Also, we don't get the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
errors we used to get with Oracle client and Jenkins.
I tried /etc/profile
, ~/.profile
and ~/.bash_profile
and none of those worked. I found that editing ~/.bashrc
for the jenkins slave account did.
The information on this answer is out of date. You need to go to Configure Jenkins > And you can then click to add an Environment Variable key-value pair from there.
eg: export MYVAR=test
would be MYVAR
is the key, and test
is the value.
I found two plugins for that. One loads the values from a file and the other lets you configure the values in the job configuration screen.
Envfile Plugin — This plugin enables you to set environment variables via a file. The file's format must be the standard Java property file format.
EnvInject Plugin — This plugin makes it possible to add environment variables and execute a setup script in order to set up an environment for the Job.
On my newer EC2 instance, simply adding the new value to the Jenkins user's .profile's PATH and then restarting tomcat worked for me.
On an older instance where the config is different, using #2 from Sagar's answer was the only thing that worked (i.e. .profile, .bash* didn't work).
Couldn't you just add it as an environment variable in Jenkins settings:
Manage Jenkins -> Global properties > Environment variables: And then click "Add" to add a property PATH and its value to what you need.
This is how I solved this annoying issue:
I changed the PATH
variable as @sagar suggested in his 2nd option, but still I got different PATH
value than I expected.
Eventually I found out that it was the EnvInject
plugin that replaced my PATH
variable!
So I could either uninstall EnvInject
or just use it to inject the PATH variable.
As many of our Jenkins jobs use that plugin, I didn't want to uninstall it...
So I created a file: environment_variables.properties
under my Jenkins home directory.
This file contained the path environment value that I needed:
PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/git/bin/
.
From the Jenkins web interface: Manage Jenkins -> Configure System
.
In that screen - I ticked the Prepare jobs environment
option, and in the Properties File Path
field I entered the path to my file: /var/lib/jenkins/environment_variables.properties
.
This way every Jenkins job we have receive whatever variables I put in this environment_variables.properties
file.
Jenkins also supports the format PATH+<name>
to prepend to any variable, not only PATH:
Global Environment variables or node Environment variables:
This is also supported in the pipeline step withEnv
:
node {
withEnv(['PATH+JAVA=/path/to/java/bin']) {
...
}
}
Just take note, it prepends to the variable. If it must be appended you need to do what the other answers show.
See the pipeline steps document here.
You may also use the syntax PATH+WHATEVER=/something to prepend /something to $PATH
Or the java docs on EnvVars here.
I only had progress on this issue after a "/etc/init.d/jenkins force-reload". I recommend trying that before anything else, and using that rather than restart.
On my Ubuntu 13.04, I tried quite a few tweaks before succeeding with this:
- Edit /etc/init/jenkins.conf
- Locate the spot where "exec start-stop-server..." begins
- Insert the environment update just before that, i.e.
export PATH=$PATH:/some/new/path/bin
Add
/usr/bin/bash
at
Jenkins -> Manage Jenkins -> configure System -> Shell->Shell executable
Jenkins use the sh so that even /etc/profile doesn't work for me When I add this, I have all the env.
Solution that worked for me
source ~/.bashrc
Explanation
I first verified Jenkins was running BASH, with echo $SHELL
and echo $BASH
(note I'm explicitly putting #!/bin/bash
atop the textarea in Jenkins, I'm not sure if that's a requirement to get BASH). source
ing /etc/profile
as others suggested was not working.
Looking at /etc/profile
I found
if [ "$PS1" ]; then
...
and inspecting "$PS1" found it null. I tried spoofing $PS1
to no avail like so
export PS1=1
bash -c 'echo $PATH'
however this did not produce the desired result (add the rest of the $PATH
I expect to see). But if I tell bash to be interactive
export PS1=1
bash -ci 'echo $PATH'
the $PATH
was altered as I expected.
I was trying to figure out how to properly spoof an interactive shell to get /etc/bash.bashrc
to load, however it turns out all I needed was down in ~/.bashrc
, so simply source
ing it solved the problem.
I tried all the things from above - didn't work for me.
I found two solution (both for SSH-Slave)
Go to the slave settings
Add a new environment variable
- PATH
- ${PATH}:${HOME}/.pub-cache/bin:${HOME}/.local/bin
The "${HOME}" part is important. This makes the additional PATH absolute. Relative path did not work for me.
Option II (pipeline-script)
pipeline {
agent {
label 'your-slave'
}
environment {
PATH = "/home/jenkins/.pub-cache/bin:$PATH"
}
stages {
stage('Test') {
steps {
ansiColor('xterm') {
echo "PATH is: $PATH"
}
}
}
}
}
On Ubuntu I just edit /etc/default/jenkins and add source /etc/profile at the end and it works to me.
Running the command with environment variable set is also effective. Of course, you have to do it for each command you run, but you probably have a job script, so you probably only have one command per build. My job script is a python script that uses the environment to decide which python to use, so I still needed to put /usr/local/bin/python2.7 in its path:
PATH=/usr/local/bin <my-command>
What worked for me was overriding the PATH environment for the slave.
Set: PATH
To: $PATH:/usr/local/bin
Then disconnecting and reconnecting the slave.
Despite what the system information was showing it worked.
I have Jenkins 1.639 installed on SLES 11 SP3 via zypper (the package manager). Installation configured jenkins as a service
# service jenkins
Usage: /etc/init.d/jenkins {start|stop|status|try-restart|restart|force-reload|reload|probe}
Although /etc/init.d/jenkins
sources /etc/sysconfig/jenkins
, any env variables set there are not inherited by the jenkins process because it is started in a separate login shell with a new environment like this:
startproc -n 0 -s -e -l /var/log/jenkins.rc -p /var/run/jenkins.pid -t 1 /bin/su -l -s /bin/bash -c '/usr/java/default/bin/java -Djava.awt.headless=true -DJENKINS_HOME=/var/lib/jenkins -jar /usr/lib/jenkins/jenkins.war --javaHome=/usr/java/default --logfile=/var/log/jenkins/jenkins.log --webroot=/var/cache/jenkins/war --httpPort=8080 --ajp13Port=8009 --debug=9 --handlerCountMax=100 --handlerCountMaxIdle=20 &' jenkins
The way I managed to set env vars for the jenkins process is via .bashrc
in its home directory - /var/lib/jenkins
. I had to create /var/lib/jenkins/.bashrc
as it did not exist before.
1- add to your profil file".bash_profile" file
it is in "/home/your_user/" folder
vi .bash_profile
add:
export JENKINS_HOME=/apps/data/jenkins
export PATH=$PATH:$JENKINS_HOME
==> it's the e jenkins workspace
2- If you use jetty : go to jenkins.xml file
and add :
<Arg>/apps/data/jenkins</Arg>
Here is what i did on ubuntu 18.04 LTS with Jenkins 2.176.2
I created .bash_aliases file and added there path, proxy variables and so on.
In beginning of .bashrc there was this defined.
# If not running interactively, don't do anything
case $- in
*i*) ;;
*) return;;
esac
So it's checking that if we are start non-interactive shell then we don't do nothing here.
bottom of the .bashrc there was include for .bash_aliases
# Alias definitions.
# You may want to put all your additions into a separate file like
# ~/.bash_aliases, instead of adding them here directly.
# See /usr/share/doc/bash-doc/examples in the bash-doc package.
if [ -f ~/.bash_aliases ]; then
. ~/.bash_aliases
fi
so i moved .bash_aliases loading first at .bashrc just above non-interactive check.
This didn't work first but then i disconnected slave and re-connected it so it's loading variables again. You don't need to restart whole jenkins if you are modifying slave variables. just disconnect and re-connect.
If your pipeline is executed on the remote node that is connected via SSH, then actually Jenkins runs agent application that performs incoming actions.
By default zsh
shell is used, not the bash
(my Jenkins has version 2.346.3).
Furthermore jenkins-agent runs non-login shell which makes default PATH values even if you put some configuration to .zshrc
. It will be skipped.
My choice is to put the following shebang at a script start
#!/bin/bash -l
-l
option makes bash to run in the login
mode and in this case bash
performs configurations specified in /etc/profile
and ~/.bash_profile
.
If you run script in Jenkins pipeline it will look like:
steps {
sh '''#!/bin/bash -l
env
'''
}
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