6.2 KiB
${docGenStepName}
${docGenDescription}
Prerequisites
- A SAP Cloud Platform ABAP Environment system is available. On this system, a Communication User, a Communication System and a Communication Arrangement is setup for the Communication Scenario “SAP Cloud Platform ABAP Environment - Software Component Test Integration (SAP_COM_0510)“. This can be done manually through the respective applications on the SAP Cloud Platform ABAP Environment System or through creating a service key for the system on cloud foundry with the parameters {“scenario_id”: “SAP_COM_0510", “type”: “basic”}. In a pipeline, you can do this with the step cloudFoundryCreateServiceKey.
- You can either provide the ABAP endpoint configuration to directly trigger ann ATC run on the ABAP system or optionally provide the Cloud Foundry parameters with your credentials to read a Service Key of a SAP Cloud Platform ABAP Environment system in Cloud Foundry that contains all the details of the ABAP endpoint to trigger an ATC run.
- Regardless if you chose an ABAP endpoint directly or reading a Cloud Foundry Service Key you have to provide the configuration of the packages and software components you want to be checked in an ATC run in a .yml or .yaml file. This file must be stored in the same folder as the Jenkinsfile defining the pipeline.
- The Software Components and/or Packages you want to be checked must be present in the configured system in order to run the check. Please make sure that you have created or pulled the respective Software Components and/or Packages in the SAP Cloud Platform ABAP Environment system.
Examples will be listed below.
${docGenParameters}
${docGenConfiguration}
${docJenkinsPluginDependencies}
Examples
Configuration in the config.yml
The recommended way to configure your pipeline is via the config.yml file. In this case, calling the step in the Jenkinsfile is reduced to one line:
abapEnvironmentRunATCCheck script: this
If you want to provide the host and credentials of the Communication Arrangement directly, the configuration could look as follows:
steps:
abapEnvironmentRunATCCheck:
abapCredentialsId: 'abapCredentialsId',
host: 'https://myABAPendpoint.com',
atcConfig: 'atcconfig.yml',
ATC run via Cloud Foundry Service Key example in Jenkinsfile
The following example triggers an ATC run via reading the Service Key of an ABAP instance in Cloud Foundry.
You can store the credentials in Jenkins and use the cfCredentialsId parameter to authenticate to Cloud Foundry. The username and password to authenticate to ABAP system will then be read from the Cloud Foundry Service Key that is bound to the ABAP instance.
This can be done accordingly:
abapEnvironmentRunATCCheck(
cfApiEndpoint : 'https://test.server.com',
cfOrg : 'cfOrg',
cfSpace: 'cfSpace',
cfServiceInstance: 'myServiceInstance',
cfServiceKeyName: 'myServiceKey',
abapCredentialsId: 'cfCredentialsId',
atcConfig: 'atcconfig.yml',
script: this,
)
To trigger the ATC run an ATC config file atcconfig.yml
will be needed. Check section 'ATC config file example' for more information.
ATC run via direct ABAP endpoint configuration in Jenkinsfile
This example triggers an ATC run directly on the ABAP endpoint.
In order to trigger the ATC run you have to pass the username and password for authentication to the ABAP endpoint via parameters as well as the ABAP endpoint/host. You can store the credentials in Jenkins and use the abapCredentialsId parameter to authenticate to the ABAP endpoint/host.
This must be configured as following:
abapEnvironmentRunATCCheck(
abapCredentialsId: 'abapCredentialsId',
host: 'https://myABAPendpoint.com',
atcConfig: 'atcconfig.yml',
script: this,
)
To trigger the ATC run an ATC config file atcconfig.yml
will be needed. Check section 'ATC config file example' for more information.
ATC config file example
The following section contains an example of an atcconfig.yml
file.
This file must be stored in the same Git folder where the Jenkinsfile
is stored to run the pipeline. This folder must be taken as a SCM in the Jenkins pipeline to run the pipeline.
You can specify a list of packages and/or software components to be checked. This must be in the same format as below example for a atcconfig.yml
file.
For each package that has to be checked you can configure if you want the subpackages to be included in checks or not.
Please note that if you chose to provide both packages and software components to be checked with the atcconfig.yml
file, the set of packages and the set of software components will be combinend by the API using a logical AND operation.
Therefore, we advise to specify either the Software Components or Packages.
See below example for an atcconfig.yml
file with both packages and software components to be checked:
atcobjects:
package:
- name: "TestPackage"
includesubpackage: false
- name: "TestPackage2"
includesubpackage: true
softwarecomponent:
- name: "TestComponent"
- name: "TestComponent2"
The following example of an atcconfig.yml
file that only contains packages to be checked:
atcobjects:
package:
- name: "TestPackage"
includesubpackage: false
- name: "TestPackage2"
includesubpackage: true
The following example of an atcconfig.yml
file that only contains software components to be checked:
atcobjects:
softwarecomponent:
- name: "TestComponent"
- name: "TestComponent2"
The following is an example of an atcconfig.yml
file that supports the check variant and configuration ATC options:
checkvariant: "TestCheckVariant"
configuration: "TestConfiguration"
atcobjects:
softwarecomponent:
- name: "TestComponent"
- name: "TestComponent2"