One common pattern for automated releases I have seen and used relies on Git tags as the catalyst for a release process. The immutable nature of releases and the immutable nature of tags can definitely go hand in hand, but up until few months ago Jenkins Pipeline was not able to trigger effectively off of Git tags.

In this post I want to briefly share how to use tags to drive behaviors in Jenkins Pipeline. Consider the following contrived Jenkinsfile, which contains the three basic stages of Build, Test, and Deploy:

pipeline {
    agent any
    stages {
        stage('Build') {
            steps {
                sh 'make package'
            }
        }
        stage('Test') {
            steps {
                sh 'make check'
            }
        }
        stage('Deploy') {
            when { tag "release-*" }
            steps {
                echo 'Deploying only because this commit is tagged...'
                sh 'make deploy'
            }
        }
    }
}

Of particular note is the when condition on the "Deploy" stage which is applying the tag criteria. This means the stage would only execute when the Pipeline has been triggered from a tag in Git matching the release-* Ant-style wildcard.

In practice, this means that all pull requests, and branch-based Pipeline Runs result in the stage being skipped:

Not Deployed!

When I push a release-1.0 tag, the Pipeline will then be triggerd and run the "Deploy" stage:

Deployed!

Out of the box, Pipelines won’t trigger off of the presence of tags, which means that a Multibranch Pipeline must have a configuration update to know that it must Discover Tags.

Configuring

From the configuration screen of a Multibranch Pipeline (or GitHub Organization Folder), Discovering tags can be enabled by adding the appropriate "Behavior" to the Branch Source configuration:

Configuring the Multibranch Pipeline

With these changes, the Jenkinsfile in the tagged versions of my source repository can now drive distinct deployment behavior which is not otherwise enabled in the Pipeline.

About the Author
R. Tyler Croy

R. Tyler Croy has been part of the Jenkins project for the past seven years. While avoiding contributing any Java code, Tyler is involved in many of the other aspects of the project which keep it running, such as this website, infrastructure, governance, etc.