# Default values for jenkins. # This is a YAML-formatted file. # Declare name/value pairs to be passed into your templates. # name: value ## Overrides for generated resource names # See templates/_helpers.tpl # nameOverride: # fullnameOverride: # namespaceOverride: # For FQDN resolving of the controller service. Change this value to match your existing configuration. # ref: https://github.com/kubernetes/dns/blob/master/docs/specification.md clusterZone: "cluster.local" # The URL of the Kubernetes API server kubernetesURL: "https://kubernetes.default" renderHelmLabels: true controller: # Used for label app.kubernetes.io/component componentName: "jenkins-controller" image: "reg.cestong.com.cn/cecf/custom-jenkins" tag: "latest" tagLabel: jdk11 imagePullPolicy: "Always" imagePullSecretName: # Optionally configure lifetime for controller-container lifecycle: # postStart: # exec: # command: # - "uname" # - "-a" disableRememberMe: false numExecutors: 0 # configures the executor mode of the Jenkins node. Possible values are: NORMAL or EXCLUSIVE executorMode: "NORMAL" # This is ignored if enableRawHtmlMarkupFormatter is true markupFormatter: plainText customJenkinsLabels: [] # The default configuration uses this secret to configure an admin user # If you don't need that user or use a different security realm then you can disable it adminSecret: true hostNetworking: false # When enabling LDAP or another non-Jenkins identity source, the built-in admin account will no longer exist. # If you disable the non-Jenkins identity store and instead use the Jenkins internal one, # you should revert controller.adminUser to your preferred admin user: adminUser: "admin" # adminPassword: admin: existingSecret: "" userKey: jenkins-admin-user passwordKey: jenkins-admin-password # This values should not be changed unless you use your custom image of jenkins or any devired from. If you want to use # Cloudbees Jenkins Distribution docker, you should set jenkinsHome: "/var/cloudbees-jenkins-distribution" jenkinsHome: "/var/jenkins_home" # This values should not be changed unless you use your custom image of jenkins or any devired from. If you want to use # Cloudbees Jenkins Distribution docker, you should set jenkinsRef: "/usr/share/cloudbees-jenkins-distribution/ref" jenkinsRef: "/usr/share/jenkins/ref" # Path to the jenkins war file which is used by jenkins-plugin-cli. jenkinsWar: "/usr/share/jenkins/jenkins.war" # Overrides the default arguments passed to the war # overrideArgs: # - --httpPort=8080 resources: requests: cpu: "50m" memory: "256Mi" limits: cpu: "2000m" memory: "4096Mi" # Share process namespace to allow sidecar containers to interact with processes in other containers in the same pod shareProcessNamespace: false # Overrides the init container default values # initContainerResources: # requests: # cpu: "50m" # memory: "256Mi" # limits: # cpu: "2000m" # memory: "4096Mi" # Environment variables that get added to the init container (useful for e.g. http_proxy) # initContainerEnv: # - name: http_proxy # value: "http://192.168.64.1:3128" # containerEnv: # - name: http_proxy # value: "http://192.168.64.1:3128" # Set min/max heap here if needed with: # javaOpts: "-Xms512m -Xmx512m" # jenkinsOpts: "" # If you are using the ingress definitions provided by this chart via the `controller.ingress` block the configured hostname will be the ingress hostname starting with `https://` or `http://` depending on the `tls` configuration. # The Protocol can be overwritten by specifying `controller.jenkinsUrlProtocol`. # jenkinsUrlProtocol: "https" # If you are not using the provided ingress you can specify `controller.jenkinsUrl` to change the url definition. # jenkinsUrl: "" # If you set this prefix and use ingress controller then you might want to set the ingress path below # jenkinsUriPrefix: "/jenkins" # Enable pod security context (must be `true` if podSecurityContextOverride, runAsUser or fsGroup are set) usePodSecurityContext: true # Note that `runAsUser`, `fsGroup`, and `securityContextCapabilities` are # being deprecated and replaced by `podSecurityContextOverride`. # Set runAsUser to 1000 to let Jenkins run as non-root user 'jenkins' which exists in 'jenkins/jenkins' docker image. # When setting runAsUser to a different value than 0 also set fsGroup to the same value: runAsUser: 1000 fsGroup: 0 # If you have PodSecurityPolicies that require dropping of capabilities as suggested by CIS K8s benchmark, put them here securityContextCapabilities: {} # drop: # - NET_RAW # Completely overwrites the contents of the `securityContext`, ignoring the # values provided for the deprecated fields: `runAsUser`, `fsGroup`, and # `securityContextCapabilities`. In the case of mounting an ext4 filesystem, # it might be desirable to use `supplementalGroups` instead of `fsGroup` in # the `securityContext` block: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/67014#issuecomment-589915496 podSecurityContextOverride: fsGroup: 994 runAsUser: 1000 # runAsNonRoot: true # supplementalGroups: [1000] # # capabilities: {} # Container securityContext containerSecurityContext: runAsUser: 1000 runAsGroup: 1000 readOnlyRootFilesystem: true allowPrivilegeEscalation: false servicePort: 8080 targetPort: 8080 # For minikube, set this to NodePort, elsewhere use LoadBalancer # Use ClusterIP if your setup includes ingress controller serviceType: ClusterIP # Use Local to preserve the client source IP and avoids a second hop for LoadBalancer and Nodeport type services, # but risks potentially imbalanced traffic spreading. serviceExternalTrafficPolicy: # Jenkins controller service annotations serviceAnnotations: {} # Jenkins controller custom labels statefulSetLabels: {} # foo: bar # bar: foo # Jenkins controller service labels serviceLabels: {} # service.beta.kubernetes.io/aws-load-balancer-backend-protocol: https # Put labels on Jenkins controller pod podLabels: {} # Used to create Ingress record (should be used with ServiceType: ClusterIP) # nodePort: # -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=4000 # -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false # -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false # jmxPort: 4000 # Optionally configure other ports to expose in the controller container extraPorts: [] # - name: BuildInfoProxy # port: 9000 # targetPort: 9010 (Optional: Use to explicitly set targetPort if different from port) # List of plugins to be install during Jenkins controller start installPlugins: - kubernetes:4029.v5712230ccb_f8 - workflow-aggregator:596.v8c21c963d92d - git:5.1.0 - configuration-as-code:1670.v564dc8b_982d0 # Set to false to download the minimum required version of all dependencies. installLatestPlugins: true # Set to true to download latest dependencies of any plugin that is requested to have the latest version. installLatestSpecifiedPlugins: false # List of plugins to install in addition to those listed in controller.installPlugins additionalPlugins: [] # Enable to initialize the Jenkins controller only once on initial installation. # Without this, whenever the controller gets restarted (Evicted, etc.) it will fetch plugin updates which has the potential to cause breakage. # Note that for this to work, `persistence.enabled` needs to be set to `true` initializeOnce: false # Enable to always override the installed plugins with the values of 'controller.installPlugins' on upgrade or redeployment. # overwritePlugins: true # Configures if plugins bundled with `controller.image` should be overwritten with the values of 'controller.installPlugins' on upgrade or redeployment. overwritePluginsFromImage: true # Configures the restrictions for naming projects. Set this key to null or empty to skip it in the default config. projectNamingStrategy: standard # Enable HTML parsing using OWASP Markup Formatter Plugin (antisamy-markup-formatter), useful with ghprb plugin. # The plugin is not installed by default, please update controller.installPlugins. enableRawHtmlMarkupFormatter: false # Used to approve a list of groovy functions in pipelines used the script-security plugin. Can be viewed under /scriptApproval scriptApproval: [] # - "method groovy.json.JsonSlurperClassic parseText java.lang.String" # - "new groovy.json.JsonSlurperClassic" # List of groovy init scripts to be executed during Jenkins controller start initScripts: [] # - | # print 'adding global pipeline libraries, register properties, bootstrap jobs...' # 'name' is a name of an existing secret in same namespace as jenkins, # 'keyName' is the name of one of the keys inside current secret. # the 'name' and 'keyName' are concatenated with a '-' in between, so for example: # an existing secret "secret-credentials" and a key inside it named "github-password" should be used in Jcasc as ${secret-credentials-github-password} # 'name' and 'keyName' must be lowercase RFC 1123 label must consist of lower case alphanumeric characters or '-', # and must start and end with an alphanumeric character (e.g. 'my-name', or '123-abc') # existingSecret existing secret "secret-credentials" and a key inside it named "github-username" should be used in Jcasc as ${github-username} # When using existingSecret no need to specify the keyName under additionalExistingSecrets. existingSecret: additionalExistingSecrets: [] # - name: secret-name-1 # keyName: username # - name: secret-name-1 # keyName: password additionalSecrets: [] # - name: nameOfSecret # value: secretText # Generate SecretClaim resources in order to create Kubernetes secrets from HashiCorp Vault using kube-vault-controller. # 'name' is name of the secret that will be created in Kubernetes. The Jenkins fullname is prepended to this value. # 'path' is the fully qualified path to the secret in Vault # 'type' is an optional Kubernetes secret type. Defaults to 'Opaque' # 'renew' is an optional secret renewal time in seconds secretClaims: [] # - name: secretName # required # path: testPath # required # type: kubernetes.io/tls # optional # renew: 60 # optional # Name of default cloud configuration. cloudName: "kubernetes" # Below is the implementation of Jenkins Configuration as Code. Add a key under configScripts for each configuration area, # where each corresponds to a plugin or section of the UI. Each key (prior to | character) is just a label, and can be any value. # Keys are only used to give the section a meaningful name. The only restriction is they may only contain RFC 1123 \ DNS label # characters: lowercase letters, numbers, and hyphens. The keys become the name of a configuration yaml file on the controller in # /var/jenkins_home/casc_configs (by default) and will be processed by the Configuration as Code Plugin. The lines after each | # become the content of the configuration yaml file. The first line after this is a JCasC root element, eg jenkins, credentials, # etc. Best reference is https:///configuration-as-code/reference. The example below creates a welcome message: JCasC: defaultConfig: true configUrls: [] # - https://acme.org/jenkins.yaml # Remote URL:s for configuration files. configScripts: {} # welcome-message: | # jenkins: # systemMessage: Welcome to our CI\CD server. This Jenkins is configured and managed 'as code'. # Allows adding to the top-level security JCasC section. For legacy, default the chart includes apiToken configurations security: apiToken: creationOfLegacyTokenEnabled: false tokenGenerationOnCreationEnabled: false usageStatisticsEnabled: true # Ignored if securityRealm is defined in controller.JCasC.configScripts securityRealm: |- local: allowsSignup: false enableCaptcha: false users: - id: "${chart-admin-username}" name: "Jenkins Admin" password: "${chart-admin-password}" # Ignored if authorizationStrategy is defined in controller.JCasC.configScripts authorizationStrategy: |- loggedInUsersCanDoAnything: allowAnonymousRead: false # Optionally specify additional init-containers customInitContainers: [] # - name: custom-init # image: "alpine:3.7" # imagePullPolicy: Always # command: [ "uname", "-a" ] sidecars: configAutoReload: # If enabled: true, Jenkins Configuration as Code will be reloaded on-the-fly without a reboot. If false or not-specified, # jcasc changes will cause a reboot and will only be applied at the subsequent start-up. Auto-reload uses the # http:///reload-configuration-as-code endpoint to reapply config when changes to the configScripts are detected. enabled: true image: kiwigrid/k8s-sidecar:1.24.4 imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent resources: {} # limits: # cpu: 100m # memory: 100Mi # requests: # cpu: 50m # memory: 50Mi # How many connection-related errors to retry on reqRetryConnect: 10 # env: # - name: REQ_TIMEOUT # value: "30" # SSH port value can be set to any unused TCP port. The default, 1044, is a non-standard SSH port that has been chosen at random. # Is only used to reload jcasc config from the sidecar container running in the Jenkins controller pod. # This TCP port will not be open in the pod (unless you specifically configure this), so Jenkins will not be # accessible via SSH from outside of the pod. Note if you use non-root pod privileges (runAsUser & fsGroup), # this must be > 1024: sshTcpPort: 1044 # folder in the pod that should hold the collected dashboards: folder: "/var/jenkins_home/casc_configs" # If specified, the sidecar will search for JCasC config-maps inside this namespace. # Otherwise the namespace in which the sidecar is running will be used. # It's also possible to specify ALL to search in all namespaces: # searchNamespace: containerSecurityContext: readOnlyRootFilesystem: true allowPrivilegeEscalation: false # Allows you to inject additional/other sidecars other: [] ## The example below runs the client for https://smee.io as sidecar container next to Jenkins, ## that allows to trigger build behind a secure firewall. ## https://jenkins.io/blog/2019/01/07/webhook-firewalls/#triggering-builds-with-webhooks-behind-a-secure-firewall ## ## Note: To use it you should go to https://smee.io/new and update the url to the generete one. # - name: smee # image: docker.io/twalter/smee-client:1.0.2 # args: ["--port", "{{ .Values.controller.servicePort }}", "--path", "/github-webhook/", "--url", "https://smee.io/new"] # resources: # limits: # cpu: 50m # memory: 128Mi # requests: # cpu: 10m # memory: 32Mi # Name of the Kubernetes scheduler to use schedulerName: "" # Node labels and tolerations for pod assignment # ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#nodeselector # ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#taints-and-tolerations-beta-feature nodeSelector: kubernetes.io/hostname: k8sw4 terminationGracePeriodSeconds: terminationMessagePath: terminationMessagePolicy: tolerations: [] affinity: {} # Leverage a priorityClass to ensure your pods survive resource shortages # ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/pod-priority-preemption/ priorityClassName: podAnnotations: {} # Add StatefulSet annotations statefulSetAnnotations: {} # StatefulSet updateStrategy # ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/statefulset/#update-strategies updateStrategy: {} ingress: enabled: true # Override for the default paths that map requests to the backend paths: [] # - backend: # serviceName: ssl-redirect # servicePort: use-annotation # - backend: # serviceName: >- # {{ template "jenkins.fullname" . }} # # Don't use string here, use only integer value! # servicePort: 8080 # For Kubernetes v1.14+, use 'networking.k8s.io/v1beta1' # For Kubernetes v1.19+, use 'networking.k8s.io/v1' apiVersion: "extensions/v1beta1" labels: {} annotations: {} # kubernetes.io/ingress.class: nginx # kubernetes.io/tls-acme: "true" # For Kubernetes >= 1.18 you should specify the ingress-controller via the field ingressClassName # See https://kubernetes.io/blog/2020/04/02/improvements-to-the-ingress-api-in-kubernetes-1.18/#specifying-the-class-of-an-ingress ingressClassName: nginx # Set this path to jenkinsUriPrefix above or use annotations to rewrite path # path: "/jenkins" # configures the hostname e.g. jenkins.example.com hostName: "jenkins.cestong.com.cn" tls: # - secretName: jenkins.cluster.local # hosts: # - jenkins.cluster.local # often you want to have your controller all locked down and private # but you still want to get webhooks from your SCM # A secondary ingress will let you expose different urls # with a differnt configuration secondaryingress: enabled: false # paths you want forwarded to the backend # ex /github-webhook paths: [] # For Kubernetes v1.14+, use 'networking.k8s.io/v1beta1' # For Kubernetes v1.19+, use 'networking.k8s.io/v1' apiVersion: "extensions/v1beta1" labels: {} annotations: {} # kubernetes.io/ingress.class: nginx # kubernetes.io/tls-acme: "true" # For Kubernetes >= 1.18 you should specify the ingress-controller via the field ingressClassName # See https://kubernetes.io/blog/2020/04/02/improvements-to-the-ingress-api-in-kubernetes-1.18/#specifying-the-class-of-an-ingress # ingressClassName: nginx # configures the hostname e.g. jenkins-external.example.com hostName: tls: # - secretName: jenkins-external.example.com # hosts: # - jenkins-external.example.com # If you're running on GKE and need to configure a backendconfig # to finish ingress setup, use the following values. # Docs: https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/docs/concepts/backendconfig backendconfig: enabled: false apiVersion: "extensions/v1beta1" name: labels: {} annotations: {} spec: {} # Openshift route route: enabled: false labels: {} annotations: {} # path: "/jenkins" # controller.hostAliases allows for adding entries to Pod /etc/hosts: # https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/add-entries-to-pod-etc-hosts-with-host-aliases/ hostAliases: [] # - ip: 192.168.50.50 # hostnames: # - something.local # - ip: 10.0.50.50 # hostnames: # - other.local # Expose Prometheus metrics prometheus: # If enabled, add the prometheus plugin to the list of plugins to install # https://plugins.jenkins.io/prometheus enabled: false # Additional labels to add to the ServiceMonitor object serviceMonitorAdditionalLabels: {} # Set a custom namespace where to deploy ServiceMonitor resource # serviceMonitorNamespace: monitoring scrapeInterval: 60s # This is the default endpoint used by the prometheus plugin scrapeEndpoint: /prometheus # Additional labels to add to the PrometheusRule object alertingRulesAdditionalLabels: {} # An array of prometheus alerting rules # See here: https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/alerting_rules/ # The `groups` root object is added by default, simply add the rule entries alertingrules: [] # Set a custom namespace where to deploy PrometheusRule resource prometheusRuleNamespace: "" # RelabelConfigs to apply to samples before scraping. Prometheus Operator automatically adds # relabelings for a few standard Kubernetes fields. The original scrape job’s name # is available via the __tmp_prometheus_job_name label. # More info: https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/configuration/#relabel_config relabelings: [] # MetricRelabelConfigs to apply to samples before ingestion. metricRelabelings: [] googlePodMonitor: # If enabled, It creates Google Managed Prometheus scraping config enabled: false # Set a custom namespace where to deploy PodMonitoring resource # serviceMonitorNamespace: "" scrapeInterval: 60s # This is the default endpoint used by the prometheus plugin scrapeEndpoint: /prometheus # Can be used to disable rendering controller test resources when using helm template testEnabled: true httpsKeyStore: jenkinsHttpsJksSecretName: '' jenkinsHttpsJksSecretKey: "jenkins-jks-file" jenkinsHttpsJksPasswordSecretName: "" jenkinsHttpsJksPasswordSecretKey: "https-jks-password" enable: false disableSecretMount: false httpPort: 8081 path: "/var/jenkins_keystore" fileName: "keystore.jks" password: "password" # Convert keystore.jks files content to base64 ( cat keystore.jks | base64 ) and put the output here jenkinsKeyStoreBase64Encoded: | /u3+7QAAAAIAAAABAAAAAQANamVua2luc2NpLmNvbQAAAW2r/b1ZAAAFATCCBP0wDgYKKwYBBAEq AhEBAQUABIIE6QbCqasvoHS0pSwYqSvdydMCB9t+VNfwhFIiiuAelJfO5sSe2SebJbtwHgLcRz1Z gMtWgOSFdl3bWSzA7vrW2LED52h+jXLYSWvZzuDuh8hYO85m10ikF6QR+dTi4jra0whIFDvq3pxe TnESxEsN+DvbZM3jA3qsjQJSeISNpDjO099dqQvHpnCn18lyk7J4TWJ8sOQQb1EM2zDAfAOSqA/x QuPEFl74DlY+5DIk6EBvpmWhaMSvXzWZACGA0sYqa157dq7O0AqmuLG/EI5EkHETO4CrtBW+yLcy 2dUCXOMA+j+NjM1BjrQkYE5vtSfNO6lFZcISyKo5pTFlcA7ut0Fx2nZ8GhHTn32CpeWwNcZBn1gR pZVt6DxVVkhTAkMLhR4rL2wGIi/1WRs23ZOLGKtyDNvDHnQyDiQEoJGy9nAthA8aNHa3cfdF10vB Drb19vtpFHmpvKEEhpk2EBRF4fTi644Fuhu2Ied6118AlaPvEea+n6G4vBz+8RWuVCmZjLU+7h8l Hy3/WdUPoIL5eW7Kz+hS+sRTFzfu9C48dMkQH3a6f3wSY+mufizNF9U298r98TnYy+PfDJK0bstG Ph6yPWx8DGXKQBwrhWJWXI6JwZDeC5Ny+l8p1SypTmAjpIaSW3ge+KgcL6Wtt1R5hUV1ajVwVSUi HF/FachKqPqyLJFZTGjNrxnmNYpt8P1d5JTvJfmfr55Su/P9n7kcyWp7zMcb2Q5nlXt4tWogOHLI OzEWKCacbFfVHE+PpdrcvCVZMDzFogIq5EqGTOZe2poPpBVE+1y9mf5+TXBegy5HToLWvmfmJNTO NCDuBjgLs2tdw2yMPm4YEr57PnMX5gGTC3f2ZihXCIJDCRCdQ9sVBOjIQbOCzxFXkVITo0BAZhCi Yz61wt3Ud8e//zhXWCkCsSV+IZCxxPzhEFd+RFVjW0Nm9hsb2FgAhkXCjsGROgoleYgaZJWvQaAg UyBzMmKDPKTllBHyE3Gy1ehBNGPgEBChf17/9M+j8pcm1OmlM434ctWQ4qW7RU56//yq1soFY0Te fu2ei03a6m68fYuW6s7XEEK58QisJWRAvEbpwu/eyqfs7PsQ+zSgJHyk2rO95IxdMtEESb2GRuoi Bs+AHNdYFTAi+GBWw9dvEgqQ0Mpv0//6bBE/Fb4d7b7f56uUNnnE7mFnjGmGQN+MvC62pfwfvJTT EkT1iZ9kjM9FprTFWXT4UmO3XTvesGeE50sV9YPm71X4DCQwc4KE8vyuwj0s6oMNAUACW2ClU9QQ y0tRpaF1tzs4N42Q5zl0TzWxbCCjAtC3u6xf+c8MCGrr7DzNhm42LOQiHTa4MwX4x96q7235oiAU iQqSI/hyF5yLpWw4etyUvsx2/0/0wkuTU1FozbLoCWJEWcPS7QadMrRRISxHf0YobIeQyz34regl t1qSQ3dCU9D6AHLgX6kqllx4X0fnFq7LtfN7fA2itW26v+kAT2QFZ3qZhINGfofCja/pITC1uNAZ gsJaTMcQ600krj/ynoxnjT+n1gmeqThac6/Mi3YlVeRtaxI2InL82ZuD+w/dfY9OpPssQjy3xiQa jPuaMWXRxz/sS9syOoGVH7XBwKrWpQcpchozWJt40QV5DslJkclcr8aC2AGlzuJMTdEgz1eqV0+H bAXG9HRHN/0eJTn1/QAAAAEABVguNTA5AAADjzCCA4swggJzAhRGqVxH4HTLYPGO4rzHcCPeGDKn xTANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQsFADCBgTELMAkGA1UEBhMCY2ExEDAOBgNVBAgMB29udGFyaW8xEDAOBgNV BAcMB3Rvcm9udG8xFDASBgNVBAoMC2plbmtpbnN0ZXN0MRkwFwYDVQQDDBBqZW5raW5zdGVzdC5p bmZvMR0wGwYJKoZIhvcNAQkBFg50ZXN0QHRlc3QuaW5mbzAeFw0xOTEwMDgxNTI5NTVaFw0xOTEx MDcxNTI5NTVaMIGBMQswCQYDVQQGEwJjYTEQMA4GA1UECAwHb250YXJpbzEQMA4GA1UEBwwHdG9y b250bzEUMBIGA1UECgwLamVua2luc3Rlc3QxGTAXBgNVBAMMEGplbmtpbnN0ZXN0LmluZm8xHTAb BgkqhkiG9w0BCQEWDnRlc3RAdGVzdC5pbmZvMIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKC AQEA02q352JTHGvROMBhSHvSv+vnoOTDKSTz2aLQn0tYrIRqRo+8bfmMjXuhkwZPSnCpvUGNAJ+w Jrt/dqMoYUjCBkjylD/qHmnXN5EwS1cMg1Djh65gi5JJLFJ7eNcoSsr/0AJ+TweIal1jJSP3t3PF 9Uv21gm6xdm7HnNK66WpUUXLDTKaIs/jtagVY1bLOo9oEVeLN4nT2CYWztpMvdCyEDUzgEdDbmrP F5nKUPK5hrFqo1Dc5rUI4ZshL3Lpv398aMxv6n2adQvuL++URMEbXXBhxOrT6rCtYzbcR5fkwS9i d3Br45CoWOQro02JAepoU0MQKY5+xQ4Bq9Q7tB9BAwIDAQABMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAA4IBAQAe 4xc+mSvKkrKBHg9/zpkWgZUiOp4ENJCi8H4tea/PCM439v6y/kfjT/okOokFvX8N5aa1OSz2Vsrl m8kjIc6hiA7bKzT6lb0EyjUShFFZ5jmGVP4S7/hviDvgB5yEQxOPpumkdRP513YnEGj/o9Pazi5h /MwpRxxazoda9r45kqQpyG+XoM4pB+Fd3JzMc4FUGxfVPxJU4jLawnJJiZ3vqiSyaB0YyUL+Er1Q 6NnqtR4gEBF0ZVlQmkycFvD4EC2boP943dLqNUvop+4R3SM1QMM6P5u8iTXtHd/VN4MwMyy1wtog hYAzODo1Jt59pcqqKJEas0C/lFJEB3frw4ImNx5fNlJYOpx+ijfQs9m39CevDq0= agent: enabled: true defaultsProviderTemplate: "" # URL for connecting to the Jenkins controller jenkinsUrl: # connect to the specified host and port, instead of connecting directly to the Jenkins controller jenkinsTunnel: kubernetesConnectTimeout: 5 kubernetesReadTimeout: 15 maxRequestsPerHostStr: "32" retentionTimeout: 5 waitForPodSec: 600 namespace: # private registry for agent image jnlpregistry: image: "jenkins/inbound-agent" tag: "3107.v665000b_51092-15" workingDir: "/home/jenkins/agent" nodeUsageMode: "NORMAL" customJenkinsLabels: [] # name of the secret to be used for image pulling imagePullSecretName: componentName: "jenkins-agent" websocket: false directConnection: false privileged: false runAsUser: runAsGroup: hostNetworking: false resources: requests: cpu: "512m" memory: "512Mi" # ephemeralStorage: limits: cpu: "512m" memory: "512Mi" # ephemeralStorage: livenessProbe: {} # execArgs: "cat /tmp/healthy" # failureThreshold: 3 # initialDelaySeconds: 0 # periodSeconds: 10 # successThreshold: 1 # timeoutSeconds: 1 # You may want to change this to true while testing a new image alwaysPullImage: false # Controls how agent pods are retained after the Jenkins build completes # Possible values: Always, Never, OnFailure podRetention: "Never" # Disable if you do not want the Yaml the agent pod template to show up # in the job Console Output. This can be helpful for either security reasons # or simply to clean up the output to make it easier to read. showRawYaml: true # You can define the volumes that you want to mount for this container # Allowed types are: ConfigMap, EmptyDir, HostPath, Nfs, PVC, Secret # Configure the attributes as they appear in the corresponding Java class for that type # https://github.com/jenkinsci/kubernetes-plugin/tree/master/src/main/java/org/csanchez/jenkins/plugins/kubernetes/volumes volumes: [] # - type: ConfigMap # configMapName: myconfigmap # mountPath: /var/myapp/myconfigmap # - type: EmptyDir # mountPath: /var/myapp/myemptydir # memory: false # - type: HostPath # hostPath: /var/lib/containers # mountPath: /var/myapp/myhostpath # - type: Nfs # mountPath: /var/myapp/mynfs # readOnly: false # serverAddress: "192.0.2.0" # serverPath: /var/lib/containers # - type: PVC # claimName: mypvc # mountPath: /var/myapp/mypvc # readOnly: false # - type: Secret # defaultMode: "600" # mountPath: /var/myapp/mysecret # secretName: mysecret # Pod-wide environment, these vars are visible to any container in the agent pod # You can define the workspaceVolume that you want to mount for this container # Allowed types are: DynamicPVC, EmptyDir, HostPath, Nfs, PVC # Configure the attributes as they appear in the corresponding Java class for that type # https://github.com/jenkinsci/kubernetes-plugin/tree/master/src/main/java/org/csanchez/jenkins/plugins/kubernetes/volumes/workspace workspaceVolume: {} ## DynamicPVC example # type: DynamicPVC # configMapName: myconfigmap ## EmptyDir example # type: EmptyDir # memory: false ## HostPath example # type: HostPath # hostPath: /var/lib/containers ## NFS example # type: Nfs # readOnly: false # serverAddress: "192.0.2.0" # serverPath: /var/lib/containers ## PVC example # type: PVC # claimName: mypvc # readOnly: false # # Pod-wide environment, these vars are visible to any container in the agent pod envVars: [] # - name: PATH # value: /usr/local/bin # Mount a secret as environment variable secretEnvVars: [] # - key: PATH # optional: false # default: false # secretKey: MY-K8S-PATH # secretName: my-k8s-secret nodeSelector: kubernetes.io/hostname: k8sw4 # Key Value selectors. Ex: # jenkins-agent: v1 # Executed command when side container gets started command: args: "${computer.jnlpmac} ${computer.name}" # Side container name sideContainerName: "jnlp" # Doesn't allocate pseudo TTY by default TTYEnabled: false # Max number of spawned agent containerCap: 10 # Pod name podName: "default" # Allows the Pod to remain active for reuse until the configured number of # minutes has passed since the last step was executed on it. idleMinutes: 0 # Raw yaml template for the Pod. For example this allows usage of toleration for agent pods. # https://github.com/jenkinsci/kubernetes-plugin#using-yaml-to-define-pod-templates # https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/taint-and-toleration/ yamlTemplate: "" # yamlTemplate: |- # apiVersion: v1 # kind: Pod # spec: # tolerations: # - key: "key" # operator: "Equal" # value: "value" # Defines how the raw yaml field gets merged with yaml definitions from inherited pod templates: merge or override yamlMergeStrategy: "override" # Timeout in seconds for an agent to be online connectTimeout: 100 # Annotations to apply to the pod. annotations: {} # Add additional containers to the agents. # Containers specified here are added to all agents. Set key empty to remove container from additional agents. additionalContainers: [] # - sideContainerName: dind # image: docker # tag: dind # command: dockerd-entrypoint.sh # args: "" # privileged: true # resources: # requests: # cpu: 500m # memory: 1Gi # limits: # cpu: 1 # memory: 2Gi # Disable the default Jenkins Agent configuration. # Useful when configuring agents only with the podTemplates value, since the default podTemplate populated by values mentioned above will be excluded in the rendered template. disableDefaultAgent: false # Below is the implementation of custom pod templates for the default configured kubernetes cloud. # Add a key under podTemplates for each pod template. Each key (prior to | character) is just a label, and can be any value. # Keys are only used to give the pod template a meaningful name. The only restriction is they may only contain RFC 1123 \ DNS label # characters: lowercase letters, numbers, and hyphens. Each pod template can contain multiple containers. # For this pod templates configuration to be loaded the following values must be set: # controller.JCasC.defaultConfig: true # Best reference is https:///configuration-as-code/reference#Cloud-kubernetes. The example below creates a python pod template. podTemplates: {} # python: | # - name: python # label: jenkins-python # serviceAccount: jenkins # containers: # - name: python # image: python:3 # command: "/bin/sh -c" # args: "cat" # ttyEnabled: true # privileged: true # resourceRequestCpu: "400m" # resourceRequestMemory: "512Mi" # resourceLimitCpu: "1" # resourceLimitMemory: "1024Mi" # Here you can add additional agents # They inherit all values from `agent` so you only need to specify values which differ additionalAgents: {} # maven: # podName: maven # customJenkinsLabels: maven # # An example of overriding the jnlp container # # sideContainerName: jnlp # image: jenkins/jnlp-agent-maven # tag: latest # python: # podName: python # customJenkinsLabels: python # sideContainerName: python # image: python # tag: "3" # command: "/bin/sh -c" # args: "cat" # TTYEnabled: true persistence: enabled: true ## A manually managed Persistent Volume and Claim ## Requires persistence.enabled: true ## If defined, PVC must be created manually before volume will be bound existingClaim: ## jenkins data Persistent Volume Storage Class ## If defined, storageClassName: ## If set to "-", storageClassName: "", which disables dynamic provisioning ## If undefined (the default) or set to null, no storageClassName spec is ## set, choosing the default provisioner. (gp2 on AWS, standard on ## GKE, AWS & OpenStack) ## storageClass: "openebs-hostpath" annotations: {} labels: {} accessMode: "ReadWriteOnce" size: "8Gi" # Existing data source to clone PVC from # ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volume-pvc-datasource/ dataSource: # name: PVC-NAME # kind: PersistentVolumeClaim volumes: - name: dockersock hostPath: path: "/var/run/docker.sock" mounts: - mountPath: /var/run/docker.sock name: dockersock networkPolicy: # Enable creation of NetworkPolicy resources. enabled: false # For Kubernetes v1.4, v1.5 and v1.6, use 'extensions/v1beta1' # For Kubernetes v1.7, use 'networking.k8s.io/v1' apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 # You can allow agents to connect from both within the cluster (from within specific/all namespaces) AND/OR from a given external IP range internalAgents: allowed: true podLabels: {} namespaceLabels: {} # project: myproject externalAgents: {} # ipCIDR: 172.17.0.0/16 # except: # - 172.17.1.0/24 ## Install Default RBAC roles and bindings rbac: create: true readSecrets: false serviceAccount: create: true # The name of the service account is autogenerated by default name: annotations: {} extraLabels: {} imagePullSecretName: serviceAccountAgent: # Specifies whether a ServiceAccount should be created create: false # The name of the ServiceAccount to use. # If not set and create is true, a name is generated using the fullname template name: annotations: {} extraLabels: {} imagePullSecretName: ## Backup cronjob configuration ## Ref: https://github.com/maorfr/kube-tasks backup: # Backup must use RBAC # So by enabling backup you are enabling RBAC specific for backup enabled: false # Used for label app.kubernetes.io/component componentName: "backup" # Schedule to run jobs. Must be in cron time format # Ref: https://crontab.guru/ schedule: "0 2 * * *" labels: {} serviceAccount: create: true name: annotations: {} # Example for authorization to AWS S3 using kube2iam or IRSA # Can also be done using environment variables # iam.amazonaws.com/role: "jenkins" # "eks.amazonaws.com/role-arn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/jenkins-backup" # Set this to terminate the job that is running/failing continously and set the job status to "Failed" activeDeadlineSeconds: "" image: repository: "maorfr/kube-tasks" tag: "0.2.0" imagePullSecretName: # Additional arguments for kube-tasks # Ref: https://github.com/maorfr/kube-tasks#simple-backup extraArgs: [] # Add existingSecret for AWS credentials existingSecret: {} ## Example for using an existing secret # jenkinsaws: ## Use this key for AWS access key ID # awsaccesskey: jenkins_aws_access_key ## Use this key for AWS secret access key # awssecretkey: jenkins_aws_secret_key # Add additional environment variables # jenkinsgcp: ## Use this key for GCP credentials # gcpcredentials: credentials.json env: [] # Example environment variable required for AWS credentials chain # - name: "AWS_REGION" # value: "us-east-1" resources: requests: memory: 1Gi cpu: 1 limits: memory: 1Gi cpu: 1 # Destination to store the backup artifacts # Supported cloud storage services: AWS S3, Minio S3, Azure Blob Storage, Google Cloud Storage # Additional support can added. Visit this repository for details # Ref: https://github.com/maorfr/skbn destination: "s3://jenkins-data/backup" # By enabling only the jenkins_home/jobs folder gets backed up, not the whole jenkins instance onlyJobs: false # Enable backup pod security context (must be `true` if runAsUser or fsGroup are set) usePodSecurityContext: true # When setting runAsUser to a different value than 0 also set fsGroup to the same value: runAsUser: 1000 fsGroup: 1000 securityContextCapabilities: {} # drop: # - NET_RAW cronJob: apiVersion: batch/v1 checkDeprecation: true awsSecurityGroupPolicies: enabled: false policies: - name: "" securityGroupIds: [] podSelector: {} # Here you can configure unit tests values when executing the helm unittest in the CONTRIBUTING.md helmtest: # A testing framework for bash bats: # Bash Automated Testing System (BATS) image: "bats/bats" tag: "1.9.0"