Wow, talk about service. Thanks a lot for adding that ... I'm using it already and loving it.
On Friday, December 21, 2012 6:52:15 PM UTC-5, gboissinot wrote: > > From EnvInject 1.75, you are able to use currentJob and currentBuild > variables in order to access respectively to Job and Run instances. > > On Wed, Dec 19, 2012 at 3:58 PM, Matt Felzani > <[email protected]<javascript:>> > wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I'm trying to use the EnvInject plugin. Specifically in the "Prepare an > > environment for the run" > "Evaluated Groovy script" I want to be able > to > > get access to the job's BUILD_NUMBER so that I can inject a variable > that is > > partly composed of that value. > > > > I've tried code like: > > def manager = binding.getVariable("manager") > > def buildNumber = > > manager.build.getEnvironment(manager.listener)['BUILD_NUMBER'] > > > > But I get an error of: > > [EnvInject] - [ERROR] - SEVERE ERROR occurs: No such property: manager > for > > class: groovy.lang.Binding > > > > I've tried code like: > > def buildNumber = > > manager.build.getEnvironment(manager.listener)['BUILD_NUMBER'] > > > > But I get an error of: > > > > [EnvInject] - [ERROR] - SEVERE ERROR occurs: No such property: manager > for > > class: Script1 > > > > > > Is the manager - via any API call - available at the time that script > runs? > > > > The following code works (and it returns the correct value), but i'm > just > > trying to avoid having the Job's name (i.e. - "BnL Build") be hard-coded > in > > the script: > > def env = Jenkins.instance.getItem("BnL > > Build").getLastBuild().getEnvironment() > > def buildNumber = env['BUILD_NUMBER'] > > > > Thanks in advance, > > Matt >
