This plugin allows you to automatically terminate a build if it’s taking too long.
This plugin isn’t applicable to pipelines.
Use the timeout
step in workflow-basic-steps instead.
Go to Manage Jenkins
and then Configure System
. Under the item Global Build Time Out
you can activate a global
timeout which will be applied to any job. Choose your timeout strategy, the duration and add actions which should be
executed at timeout.
In addition, the option can be activated that individual jobs can overwrite the global timeout if they provide a corresponding build step.
Note that sometimes if a project is not of the hudson.model.Project
type,
then the individual jobs would not be allowed to overwrite the global timeout.
Alternatively, the timeout can be specified in the build environment of a job.
To do this, click Configure
in the job view and in the build environment section, select the item
Terminate a build if it’s stuck
.
Because Java only allows threads to be interrupted at a set of fixed locations, depending on how a build hangs, the abort operation might not take effect. For example,
-
if Jenkins is waiting for child processes to complete, it can abort right away.
-
if Jenkins is stuck in an infinite loop, it can never be aborted.
-
if Jenkins is doing a network or file I/O within the Java VM (such as lengthy file copy or SVN update), it cannot be aborted.
So if you think the build timeout isn’t taking effect, our default assumption is that the build is hanging at the place that cannot be interrupted. If you suspect otherwise, please obtain the thread dump and report it.
If you are interested in contributing, please pay attention to the below steps:
mvn hpi:run
For newcomers, please see guide at https://www.jenkins.io/participate/ for more information about how to participate and contribute.
Time-out action | Note |
---|---|
Abort and restart the build |
Installing Naginator Plugin enables this action |