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sap-jenkins-library/documentation/docs/guidedtour.md
Daniel Kurzynski 720ba0c875
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* Remove sdk docs

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Co-authored-by: Stephan Aßmus <stephan.assmus@sap.com>

* Add hint regarding Cloud SDK Pipeline

* Update documentation/docs/guidedtour.md

Co-authored-by: Stephan Aßmus <stephan.assmus@sap.com>

Co-authored-by: Stephan Aßmus <stephan.assmus@sap.com>
2020-11-17 17:35:01 +01:00

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Getting Started with Project "Piper"

Follow this guided tour to become familiar with the basics of using project "Piper".

The public sample application cloud-cf-helloworld-nodejs will be enriched with a pipeline which syncs the sources, builds these as MTA and deploys the result into a Cloud Foundry environment. The application contains a simple nodejs application. Deployed as web service, it serves static data.

Recommendation: We recommend to clone the sample application cloud-cf-helloworld-nodejs and execute the instructions on your own repository. See (Optional) Sample Application.

The stated instructions assume the use of this application.

Prerequisites

  • You have installed a Linux system with at least 4 GB memory. Note: We have tested our samples on Ubuntu 16.04. On Microsoft Windows, you might face some issues.
  • You have installed the newest version of Docker. See Docker Community Edition. Note: we have tested on Docker 18.09.6.
  • Your system has access to GitHub.com.

Cx Server is a life-cycle management tool to bootstrap a pre-configured Jenkins instance within minutes. All required plugins and shared libraries are included automatically. It is based on Docker images provided by project "Piper".

To get started, initialize Cx Server by using this docker run command:

docker run -it --rm -u $(id -u):$(id -g) -v "${PWD}":/cx-server/mount/ ppiper/cx-server-companion:latest init-cx-server

This creates a few files in your current working directory. The shell script cx-server and the configuration file server.cfg are of special interest.

Now, you can start the Jenkins server by using the following command:

chmod +x ./cx-server
./cx-server start

For more information on the Cx Server and how to customize your Jenkins, have a look at the Operations Guide for Cx Server.

For alternative approaches to setup a Jenkins build sever which fits the needs of the project "Piper" pipelines and steps please read the Infrastructure Overview.

(Optional) Sample Application

!!! info "Choosing the best sample application" Depending on the type of project you're interested in, different sample applications might be interesting. For SAP Cloud SDK, please have a look at the Address Manager example application.

Copy the sources of the application into your own Git repository. While we will ask you to fork the application's repository into a GitHub space, you can use any version control system based on Git like GitLab or plain git. Note: A public GitHub repository is visible to the public. The configuration files may contain data you don't want to expose, so use a private repository.

  1. Create an organization on GitHub, if you haven't any yet. See Creating a new organization.
  2. Duplicate the repository cloud-cf-helloworld-nodejs into your GitHub organization. Make this repository private. Note: Forked public repositories cannot be made private.
  3. Get an account and space in the Cloud Foundry environment. For the deployment of the application you need access to a space on the Cloud Foundry environment of the SAP Cloud Platform. If you haven't any yet, get a Trial Account.
  4. Select the 1_REST_persist_in_Memory branch of your cloud-cf-helloworld-nodejs fork. Other branches might work as well, but this one is tested.

Create Your First Pipeline

  1. Get your application repository in place.

  2. Create a new file with the name Jenkinsfile in the root level of your repository and enter the following code:

    @Library('piper-lib-os') _
    node() {
        stage('prepare') {
            checkout scm
            setupCommonPipelineEnvironment script:this
        }
    }
    

    The "prepare" step synchronizes the repository and initializes the project specific settings. For more information about Jenkinsfiles and pipelines, see Using a Jenkinsfile.

  3. Save your changes to your remote repository.

  4. To set up a Jenkins job for your repository, open the Jenkins UI under http://<jenkins-server-address>:<http-port> and choose New Item. Per default, the cx-server starts Jenkins on HTTP port 80. For more information, see the Jenkins User Documentation.

    ![Clicke New Item](images/JenkinsHomeMenu-1.png "Jenkins Home Menu")

  5. Provide a name for your new item (for example, My First Pipeline) and select Multibranch Pipeline.

    ![Create Pipeline Job](images/JenkinsNewItemPipeline.png "Jenkins New Item")

    **Note:** The ready-made continuous delivery pipelines of project "Piper" must run as **Multibranch Pipeline**.
  6. For Branch Sources, choose Add source, select Git as source repository.

    ![Create Pipeline Job](images/JenkinsNewItemPipeline-AddSource.png "Branch Sources - Add source")

  7. For Project Repository in the Git section, enter the URL of your Git repository, for example https://github.com/<your-org>/cloud-cf-helloworld-nodejs. Note: If your repository is protected, you must provide your credentials in Credentials.

  8. For Discover branches, choose Add and Filter by name (with wildcards).

    ![Create Pipeline Job](images/JenkinsNewItemPipeline-DiscoverBranch.png "Discover branches - Add")

    A multibranch pipeline can execute different Jenkinsfiles for different branches. In this case, however, configure the pipeline of a single branch only.
  9. For Include in the Filter by name section, enter the branch name 1_REST_persist_in_Memory.

    ![Create Pipeline Job](images/JenkinsNewItemPipeline-FilterByName.png "Discover Branches - Filter By Name")

  10. Choose Save. Result: Jenkins scans the repository for branches and filters them according to the specified Includes. If the branch is detected, it is built.

For additional information about multibranch pipelines, please refer to the Jenkins documentation.

Add a Build Step

  1. In your Jenkinsfile, add the following code snippet:

    stage('build') {
        mtaBuild script: this
    }
    

    The mtaBuild step calls a build tool to build a multi-target application (MTA). The tool consumes an MTA descriptor that contains the metadata of all entities which comprise an application or are used by one during deployment or runtime, and the dependencies between them. For more information about MTAs, see sap.com.

  2. Create the MTA descriptor file with the name mta.yaml in the root level of the repository. Insert the following code:

    _schema-version: 2.1.0
    ID: com.sap.piper.node.hello.world
    version: 1.0.0
    description: A Hello World sample application
    provider: SAP Sample generator
    modules:
      - name: piper.node.hello.world
        type: nodejs
        path: .
    
  3. Configure the step to build an MTA for the Cloud Foundry environment. Create the configuration file .pipeline/config.yml relative to the root level of the repository and insert the following content:

    general:
    steps:
      mtaBuild:
        buildTarget: 'CF'
    

    For additional information about the configuration, have a look at the Common Configuration Guide and the MTA build step documentation.

  4. Save your changes to your remote repository.

  5. To run your pipeline, choose Build Now in the job UI. Result: The pipeline processed two stages, the "prepare" and the "build".

Add a Deploy Step

  1. In your Jenkinsfile, add the following code snippet:

    stage('deploy') {
        cloudFoundryDeploy script: this
    }
    

    The cloudFoundryDeploy step calls the Cloud Foundry command line client to deploy the built MTA into SAP Cloud Platform.

  2. To configure the step to deploy into the Cloud Foundry environment, in your repository, open the .pipeline/config.yml and add the following content:

      cloudFoundryDeploy:
        deployTool: 'mtaDeployPlugin'
        deployType: 'standard'
        cloudFoundry:
          org: '<your-organisation>'
          space: '<your-space>'
          credentialsId: 'CF_CREDENTIALSID'
    

    Note: look after the indentation of the step within the YAML. Specify the organisation and space properties. For more information about the configuration, see the Common Configuration Guide and cloudFoundryDeploy.

  3. The key CF_CREDENTIALSID refers to a user-password credential you must create in Jenkins: In Jenkins, choose Credentials from the main menu and add a Username with Password entry.

    ![Add Credentials](images/JenkinsCredentials-1.png "Add Credentials")

  4. Save the Credential

  5. Save your changes to your remote repository.

  6. To run your pipeline, choose Build Now in the job UI. Result: The pipeline processed the three stages "prepare", "build" and "deploy".

    ![Build Now](images/JenkinsPipelineJob.png "Stage View")

If your pipeline fails, compare its files to the final Jenkinsfile, the config.yml, and the mta.yaml. Note: YAML files are surprisingly sensitive regarding indentation.

Open Application

Your application has been deployed into your space in the Cloud Foundry space on SAP Cloud Platform. Login to SAP Cloud Platform and navigate into you space. Result: Your space contains the application piper.node.hello.world, the state of the application is Started.

![Deployed Application](images/SCPDeployApp-1.png "SAP Cloud Platform")

Open the application name to get into the Application Overview. Open the Application Route and add /users to the URL. Result: The application returns a list of user data.

What's Next

You are now familiar with the basics of using project "Piper". Through the concept of pipeline as code, project "Piper" and Jenkins pipelines are extremely powerful. While Jenkins pipelines offer a full set of common programming features, project "Piper" adds SAP-specific flavors. Have a look at the different Scenarios to understand how to easily integrate SAP systems with defaults. Dive into the ready-made continuous delivery pipeline: the General Purpose Pipeline helps you to quickly build and deliver your apps. Browse the steadily increasing list of features you can implement through the project "Piper" Steps.

The Configuration pattern supports simple pipelines that can be reused by multiple applications. To understand the principles of inheritance and customization, have a look at the the configuration documentation.