There are various plugins that are available in Jenkins to showcase metrics for builds that are carried out over a period of time. These metrics are useful to understand your builds and how frequently they fail/pass over time. As an example, let’s look at the ‘Build History Metrics plugin’.
This plugin calculates the following metrics for all of the builds once installed
- Mean Time To Failure (MTTF)
- Mean Time To Recovery (MTTR)
- Standard Deviation of Build Times
Step 1 − Go to the Jenkins dashboard and click on Manage Jenkins
Step 2 − Go to the Manage Plugins option.
Step 3 − Go to the Available tab and search for the plugin ‘Build History Metrics plugin’ and choose to ‘install without restart’.
Step 4 − The following screen shows up to confirm the successful installation of the plugin. Restart the Jenkins instance.
When you go to your Job page, you will see a table with the calculated metrics. Metrics are shown for the last 7 days, last 30 days, and all time.
To see overall trends in Jenkins, there are plugins available to gather information from within the builds and Jenkins and display them in a graphical format. One example of such a plugin is the ‘Hudson global-build-stats plugin’. So let’s go through the steps for this.
Step 1 − Go to the Jenkins dashboard and click on Manage Jenkins
Step 2 − Go to the Manage Plugins option
Step 3 − Go to the Available tab and search for the plugin ‘Hudson global-build-stats plugin’ and choose to ‘install without restart’.
Step 4 − The following screen shows up to confirm the successful installation of the plugin. Restart the Jenkins instance.
To see the Global statistics, please follow Steps 5 through 8.
Step 5 − Go to the Jenkins dashboard and click on Manage Jenkins. In the Manage Jenkins screen, scroll down and now you will now see an option called ‘Global Build Stats’. Click on this link.
Step 6 − Click on the button ‘Initialize stats’. What this does is that it gather’s all the existing records for builds that have already been carried out and charts can be created based on these results.
Step 7 − Once the data has been initialized, it’s time to create a new chart. Click on the ‘Create a new chart’ link.
Step 8 − A pop-up will come to enter the relevant information for the new chart details. Enter the following mandatory information
- Title – Any title information, for this example is given as ‘Demo’
- Chart Width – 800
- Chart Height – 600
- Chart time scale – Daily
- Chart time length – 30 days
The rest of the information can remain as it is. Once the information is entered, click on Create New chart.
You will now see the chart which displays the trends of the builds over time.
If you click on any section within the chart, it will give you a drill-down of the details of the job and its builds.