I tried setting NPM_TOKEN to what I think it should be namely the value in ~/.npmrc e.g. MYTOKEN== given my ~/.npmrc has the following stanzas
//myrepo.com/repository/npm-hosted/:_auth=MYTOKEN==
//myrepo.com/repository/npm-hosted/:always-auth=true
I am getting error while trying to build a java project in TeamCity. The same project builds and excecutes well on my local. I recently pushed changes to this project on GitLab. This is my first time working with GitLab and TeamCity together. Other projects have no issues during build. I am unable to understand what is causing this error:
[15:58:54][Step 1/1] compile.earCommons (4s)
[15:58:54][compile.earCommons] echo
[15:58:54][compile.earCommons] echo
[15:58:54][compile.earCommons] wlcompile (4s)
[15:58:59][wlcompile]
com.bea.util.jam.internal.javadoc.JavadocClassloadingException: An error
has occurred while invoking javadoc to inspect your source
files. This may be due to the fact that $JAVA_HOME/lib/tools.jar does
not seem to be in your system classloader. One common case in which
this happens is when using the 'ant' tool, which uses a special
context classloader to load classes from tools.jar.
This situation elicits what is believed to a javadoc bug in the initial
release of JDK 1.6. Javadoc attempts to use its own context classloader
tools.jar but ignores one that may have already been set, which leads
to some classes being loaded into two different classloaders. The
telltale sign of this problem is a javadoc error message saying that
'languageVersion() must return LanguageVersion - you might see this
message in your process' output.
This will hopefully be fixed in a later release of JDK 1.6; if a new
version of 1.6 has become available, you might be able to solve this
by simply upgrading to the latest JDK.
Alternatively, you can work around it by simply including
$JAVA_HOME/lib/tools.jar in the java -classpath
parameter. If you are running ant, you will need to modify the standard
ant script to include tools.jar in the -classpath.
[15:58:59][Step 1/1] Process exited with code 1
[15:58:59][Step 1/1] Ant output
[15:59:10][Step 1/1] Process exited with code 1 (Step: Ant)
[15:58:59][Step 1/1] Step Ant failed
****Update****
Build Step: Ant
Step 1:
Runner type: Ant (Runner for Ant build.xml files)
Execute: If all previous steps finished successfully
build.xml file: \ant\build.xml
Working directory: same as checkout directory
Targets: none specified
Ant home path: C:\apache-ant-1.7.0
Additional Ant command line parameters: -lib c:\WebLogic\12.1.2\wlserver\server\lib\javaee.jar;c:\WebLogic\12.1.2\wlserver\server\lib\weblogic.jar;c:\WebLogic\12.1.2\wlserver\server\lib\webservices.jar
JDK home path: c:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_80
JVM command line parameters: not specified
Reduce test failure feedback time: OFF
Java code coverage: disabled
Docker Settings
Docker Image: unset
I'll appreciate any help in this regard.
I found there was character encoding issue with one of the files that prevented compiler from loading the java classes. Once that was fixed, the build worked fine.
Following on from here, when using OpenSUSE Tumbleweed I cannot get flatpak-builder to compile submodule dependencies. I first noticed this issue when developing a console application within Gnome Builder using the Vala dependencies Gee and GXml.
As a test, I have installed org.gnome.Books.json and issued the following command (as documented here):
$ flatpak-builder --repo=repo books-app org.gnome.Books.json
The outcome is the same as I observed when developing my own application, the fatal error:
Initializing build dir
Committing stage init to cache
Starting build of org.gnome.Books
fuse: failed to exec fusermount: Permission denied
<more stuff>
Cloning into '/home/robin/Projects-CSim/org.gnome.books/.flatpak-builder/build/gnome-online-accounts-1/telepathy-account-widgets'...
Submodule path 'telepathy-account-widgets': checked out '7d944b79961dfb6291110ceb27597a224d329b36'
error: Build directory /home/<user>/Projects/org.gnome.books/.flatpak-builder/rofiles/rofiles-D4R4cZ not initialized, use flatpak build-init
Error: module gnome-online-accounts: module gnome-online-accounts: Child process exited with code 1
Effectively it fails to build the very first submodule. This is the same behaviour that I observed when invoked from Gnome-Builder on my project; it downloaded but failed to build the very first submodule - in that case it was libgee-0.8.
I've double checked the Flatpak (V0.10.4) installation here and cannot find a solution. I understand from the documentation that invoking flatpak-builder should automatically invoke flatpak build-init.
This is worrisome as Gnome-Builder seems be using Flatpak as the default packager. Any suggestions?
The problem is not Flatpak. It is a conflict between Flatpak and fuse. For some reason this was not occuring with valac or meson from the command line, only Flatpak.
From here we find a solution:
# chmod +x /usr/bin/fusermount
Is this a peculiarity of OpenSUSE Tumbleweed? In any case, after making this change, Flatpak builds submodules as expected. Magnificent!
Not sure about the security aspect of this, however - any comments would be welcomed.
I'm using amazon-ecr plugin for Jenkins, it went well for a long time and suddenly broke today
ERROR: Build step failed with exception
net.sf.json.JSONException: A JSONObject text must begin with '{' at character 0 of
at net.sf.json.util.JSONTokener.syntaxError(JSONTokener.java:499)
at net.sf.json.JSONObject._fromJSONTokener(JSONObject.java:919)
at net.sf.json.JSONObject._fromString(JSONObject.java:1145)
at net.sf.json.JSONObject.fromObject(JSONObject.java:162)
at net.sf.json.JSONObject.fromObject(JSONObject.java:132)
at org.jenkinsci.plugins.docker.commons.credentials.DockerRegistryToken$1.call(DockerRegistryToken.java:91)
at org.jenkinsci.plugins.docker.commons.credentials.DockerRegistryToken$1.call(DockerRegistryToken.java:71)
at hudson.remoting.LocalChannel.call(LocalChannel.java:45)
at org.jenkinsci.plugins.docker.commons.credentials.DockerRegistryToken.newKeyMaterialFactory(DockerRegistryToken.java:71)
at org.jenkinsci.plugins.docker.commons.credentials.DockerRegistryEndpoint.newKeyMaterialFactory(DockerRegistryEndpoint.java:204)
at org.jenkinsci.plugins.docker.commons.credentials.DockerRegistryEndpoint.newKeyMaterialFactory(DockerRegistryEndpoint.java:193)
at com.cloudbees.dockerpublish.DockerBuilder$Perform.executeCmd(DockerBuilder.java:404)
at com.cloudbees.dockerpublish.DockerBuilder$Perform.executeCmd(DockerBuilder.java:382)
at com.cloudbees.dockerpublish.DockerBuilder$Perform.buildAndTag(DockerBuilder.java:326)
at com.cloudbees.dockerpublish.DockerBuilder$Perform.exec(DockerBuilder.java:274)
at com.cloudbees.dockerpublish.DockerBuilder$Perform.access$100(DockerBuilder.java:254)
at com.cloudbees.dockerpublish.DockerBuilder.perform(DockerBuilder.java:225)
at hudson.tasks.BuildStepMonitor$1.perform(BuildStepMonitor.java:20)
at hudson.model.AbstractBuild$AbstractBuildExecution.perform(AbstractBuild.java:782)
at hudson.model.Build$BuildExecution.build(Build.java:205)
at hudson.model.Build$BuildExecution.doRun(Build.java:162)
at hudson.model.AbstractBuild$AbstractBuildExecution.run(AbstractBuild.java:534)
at hudson.model.Run.execute(Run.java:1738)
at hudson.model.FreeStyleBuild.run(FreeStyleBuild.java:43)
at hudson.model.ResourceController.execute(ResourceController.java:98)
at hudson.model.Executor.run(Executor.java:410)
Build step 'Docker Build and Publish' marked build as failure
Finished: FAILURE
Docker Build runs fine, if I remove the ECR auth and fails only at push.
I have no knowledge in java, and not sure what, the above error says
Update
This feels to be a issue with Jenkins upgrade. Installing fresh Jenkins and amazon-ecr does work fine.
Leaving the question open.
thanks much,
Shan
/var/lib/jenkins/.dockercfg might become blank for some reason.
Try removing that file and rerunning build job.
That should generate new .dockercfg file and the issue will be fixed.
I have a Java project.
PS: In my project, I don't have any java program/source code in src/test/java. - This folder just contains a blank.txt file.
I have two different Gradle versions:
Gradle 1.6 with Java 7 (as Java 8 is NOT compatible with Gradle 1.6 or any version < less than 1.10 version if I'm correct).
The other version is: Gradle 2.3 with Java 8.
Using both of the above mentioned Gradle 1.6 + Java7 OR Gradle 2.3 + Java 8 versions my project build successfully.
Though, I noticed one thing: That while running the build, it calls "test" task automatically (as per the Gradle design, test task runs for free); I found during Gradle 1.6 + Java7 run --- I see the following output.
:jar
:assemble
:compileTestJava UP-TO-DATE
:processTestResources
:testClasses
:test
:check
As you'll notice, it says I don't have any test source code (i.e. src/test/java doesn't contain any source code OR there's nothing new for Gradle to compile this time may be nothing changed since last time gradle ran the build) and that's why compileTestJava task is showing UP-TO-DATE in front of it.
But, :test task is showing that it ran successfully. I have used jacoco (code coverage) section within test { .. } task, then it actually ran that part (as there is no UP-TO-DATE in front of test task). Jacoco section is NOT defined in my project's build.gradle but actually it's coming from a top level / GRADLE_HOME/init.d/some-common-top-level.gradle file (where test { ... has jacoco { ... } .. } section in it).
As I mentioned above, test task didn't say UP-TO-DATE, therefore, after Gradle build process was complete, I can see it created the following folder/files structure inside build/tmp/expandedArchives/org.jacoco.... folder:
$ ls -ltr build/tmp/expandedArchives/
total 4
drwxr-xr-x+ 1 e020001 Domain Users 0 Jul 7 20:45 org.jacoco.agent-0.7.2.201409121644.jar_778m6tp3jrtvcetasufl59dmau
$ ls -ltr build/tmp/expandedArchives/org.jacoco.agent-0.7.2.201409121644.jar_778m6tp3jrtvcetasufl59dmau/
total 272
drwxr-xr-x+ 1 e020001 Domain Users 0 Jul 7 20:58 META-INF
-rwxr-xr-x 1 e020001 Domain Users 2652 Jul 7 20:58 about.html
-rwxr-xr-x 1 e020001 Domain Users 272311 Jul 7 20:58 jacocoagent.jar
drwxr-xr-x+ 1 e020001 Domain Users 0 Jul 7 20:58 org
The same is NOT happening when I'm running Gradle 2.3 and Java8.
Build is successful but I'm not getting build/tmp/expandedArchives/org.jacoco.... folder containing jacocoagent.jar file.
Any idea, why Gradle 2.3 is not creating this jacoco specific .jar file.
With Gradle 2.3+Java8, the following output shows UP-TO-DATE in front of both :compileTestJava and :test tasks (which was not the case with Gradle 1.6 for test task).
I ran "gradle clean build".
:compileTestJava UP-TO-DATE
:compileTestGroovy UP-TO-DATE
:processTestResources
:testClasses
:test UP-TO-DATE
:check
I need Gradle 2.3 to generate this jacocoagent.jar under build/tmp/expandedArchives/org.jacoco..... folder so that I can use it in a downstream Jenkins job (which runs non-Unit tests) as this project does have some Integration tests and I'm fetching the jacocoagent.jar from the parent main build job (which runs gradle clean build including test task) in downstream job so that I can pass it to TOMCAT JVM while starting Tomcat (so that I can get jacocoIT.exec code coverage for IT tests). But, after I switched to Gradle 2.3, all projects where I don't have src/test/java ... now jacocoagent.jar is not getting created and the copy artifact plugin fails while trying to copy the .jar file from parent job.
One more point:
With Gradle 1.6 + Java7, if I run gradle clean build, it successfully creates that jacocoagent.jar inside build/tmp/expandedArchives/org.jacoco..... folder but it works this way, only when I run gradle clean build or "gradle clean; gradle test".
If I run gradle clean build, and then remove build/tmp folder, and now just run: gradle test, it shows me UP-TO-DATE in front of both :compileTestJava and :test tasks and doesn't create build/tmp/expandedArchives/org.jacoco.... folder containing jacocoagent.jar file.
For more info, I'm attaching the profile run (i.e. using --profile option) while running gradle test task for Gradle 1.6 + java 7.
I see that, in the profile html file that when test task is run, it first calls compileJava as per Gradle process logic and then test task and it's also calling depedencies --- :jacocoAgent (as per the dependency resolution tab):
But,
with Gradle 2.3 + Java8, the dependency Resolution / order and Task execution step is not same (or in the order as compared to Gradle 1.6) for generating or showing any reference to jacocoAgent dependency as it's not even calling it.
Running Gradle1.6 +Java7 test task with -i (or --info) option shows why it ran test task even though I had no test source code, see the reason why:
Note: Recompile with -Xlint:unchecked for details.
:processResources
Skipping task ':processResources' as it has no source files.
:processResources UP-TO-DATE
:classes
Skipping task ':classes' as it has no actions.
:compileTestJava
Skipping task ':compileTestJava' as it has no source files.
:compileTestJava UP-TO-DATE
:processTestResources
Executing task ':processTestResources' due to:
No history is available.
:testClasses
Skipping task ':testClasses' as it has no actions.
:test
file or directory '/my/workspace/project/build/classes/test', not found
Executing task ':test' due to:
No history is available.
file or directory '/my/workspace/project/build/classes/test', not found
Finished generating test XML results (0.001 secs)
Generating HTML test report...
Finished generating test html results (0.012 secs)
BUILD SUCCESSFUL
you can force the test task to be executed no matter what the status of inputs and outputs are:
test{
outputs.upToDateWhen{false}
}
for earlier gradle versions you can ensure the class directory exists by
task createTestClassesDir << {sourceSets.test.output.classesDir.mkdirs()}
test.dependsOn createTestClassesDir
Summary:
With Gradle 2.3, if there are no valid .java/.groovy (or etc) test code, then test task won't even run and thus there'll be no jacocoagent.jar created somewhere deep in build/tmp/exapandedArchives/org.jacoco.xxx.... folder.
Solution was to include the following (in top level $GRADLE_HOME/init.d/some-global-file.gradle) inside allprojects { .... } section. All we are doing is, if src/test/java (standard) or any legacy folder structure (src/java if your project structure is like this) doesn't have any valid test source code, then we can add a dummy test file (DummyTestXYZ.java or groovy) and let test task run which will generate jacocoagent.jar (which we can use / tie in Tomcat options for generating jacoco report for non-unit aka integration tests). This way, if your main build job calls a downstream/child job to run your IT tests, it won't fail as it can fetch jacocoagent.jar (from main build job's workspace) as test task will create jacocoagent.jar in build/tmp/expandedArchives/org.jacoco.xx.x.xx..x folder (that you can get using Copy Artifact plugin in Jenkins).
PS: Change the if statement logic acc. to your own folder setup i.e. in which folder you'd want to create the DummyTestXYZ.java file. In our case, all new projects were using src/test/java (standard folder structure as per Maven/Gradle standard) and during the new project creation, we are adding valid sample unit tests checked-in to the source control. Thus, in the logic below, we are actually ignoring to create this DummyTestXYZ.java in case src/test/java exists and creating this file only if src/test/java folder doesn't exist in the project (i.e. this is a project which has legacy folder structure) + test/java (legacy folder for storing JUnit unit tests) has no .java programs and/or if test/java doesn't exist then create it first and then create the dummy file. I know, we could have uploaded jacocoagent.jar at some location on Jenkins server and use that file while starting Tomcat for getting code coverage for IT tests. The dummy test file we added requires junit:junit:4.10 or 4.11 library version for the :compileTestJava task to succeed.
compileJava {
doLast {
def dirName = "${projectDir}/test/java"
if(!file( "${projectDir}/src/test/java" ).exists())
if(!file( dirName ).exists())
new File( dirName ).mkdirs()
if(file( dirName ).exists()) {
def javaCnt = new FileNameByRegexFinder().getFileNames(dirName, /.*\.java/).size()
if(javaCnt == 0) {
def f = new File( dirName , 'DummyTestXYZ.java' )
def w = f.newPrintWriter()
w.println('import org.junit.Test;')
w.println('')
w.println('public class DummyTestXYZ {')
w.println('#Test' )
w.println('public void test() {')
w.println('}')
w.println('}')
w.close()
}
}
}
}
test {
doFirst {
testResultsDirName = "test-results/UT"
testReportDirName = "tests/UT"
}
maxParallelForks = 5
forkEvery = 50
//ignoreFailures = true
// Following Jacoco section is required only in Jenkins
// But a developer can uncomment them if they want this feature to work for their
// Desktop local Gradle builds.
jacoco {
//Following vars works only with versions >= 1.7 version of Gradle
destinationFile = file("$buildDir/jacoco/UT/jacocoUT.exec")
}
doLast {
if (file("${projectDir}/test/java/DummyTestXYZ.java").exists()) {
println "++"
println "++"
println "++"
println "======================================================="
println "DEV Team – Please add valid Unit tests in this project."
println "======================================================="
println "++"
println "++"
println "++"
sleep(30 * 1000)
new File("${projectDir}/build/classes/test").deleteDir()
new File("${buildDir}/jacoco/UT").deleteDir()
new File("${buildDir}/test-results/UT").deleteDir()
delete "${projectDir}/test/java/DummyTestXYZ.java"
}
}
}
//Do the same (as above test code) for any other similar test tasks like integartionTest, acceptanceTest etc..
jacocoTestReport {
//cleaning any compile time generated (for ex: JiBx classes files) so that jacoco task won't fail for not finding the actual source files (.java/.groovy for the compile time generated .class files)
doFirst {
delete fileTree (dir: "${buildDir}/classes", include: "**/JiBX_*.class")
}
group = "Reporting"
description = "Generate Jacoco coverage reports after running tests."
//ignoreFailures = true
executionData = fileTree(dir: 'build/jacoco', include: '**/*.exec')
reports {
xml{
enabled true
//Following value is a file
destination "${buildDir}/reports/jacoco/xml/jacoco.xml"
}
csv.enabled false
html{
enabled true
//Following value is a folder
destination "${buildDir}/reports/jacoco/html"
}
}
sourceDirectories = files(['src/java','src/main/java', 'src/main/groovy'])
classDirectories = files('build/classes/main')
doLast {
if (file("${projectDir}/test/java/DummyTestXYZ.java").exists()) {
delete "${projectDir}/test/java/DummyTestXYZ.java"
}
}
}