Learn how to use GitHub Actions Importer to automate the migration of your Jenkins pipelines to GitHub Actions.
The instructions below will guide you through configuring your environment to use GitHub Actions Importer to migrate Jenkins pipelines to GitHub Actions.
Docker is installed and running.
GitHub CLI is installed.
Note
The GitHub Actions Importer container and CLI do not need to be installed on the same server as your CI platform.
There are some limitations when migrating from Jenkins to GitHub Actions with GitHub Actions Importer. For example, you must migrate the following constructs manually:
For more information on manual migrations, see Migrating from Jenkins to GitHub Actions.
Install the GitHub Actions Importer CLI extension:
gh extension install github/gh-actions-importer
Verify that the extension is installed:
$ gh actions-importer -h
Options:
-?, -h, --help Show help and usage information
Commands:
update Update to the latest version of GitHub Actions Importer.
version Display the version of GitHub Actions Importer.
configure Start an interactive prompt to configure credentials used to authenticate with your CI server(s).
audit Plan your CI/CD migration by analyzing your current CI/CD footprint.
forecast Forecast GitHub Actions usage from historical pipeline utilization.
dry-run Convert a pipeline to a GitHub Actions workflow and output its yaml file.
migrate Convert a pipeline to a GitHub Actions workflow and open a pull request with the changes.
The configure CLI command is used to set required credentials and options for GitHub Actions Importer when working with Jenkins and GitHub.
Create a GitHub personal access token (classic). For more information, see Managing your personal access tokens.
Your token must have the workflow scope.
After creating the token, copy it and save it in a safe location for later use.
Create a Jenkins API token. For more information, see Authenticating scripted clients in the Jenkins documentation.
After creating the token, copy it and save it in a safe location for later use.
In your terminal, run the GitHub Actions Importer configure CLI command:
gh actions-importer configure
The configure command will prompt you for the following information:
Jenkins, press Space to select it, then press Enter.https://github.com).An example of the configure command is shown below:
$ gh actions-importer configure
✔ Which CI providers are you configuring?: Jenkins
Enter the following values (leave empty to omit):
✔ Personal access token for GitHub: ***************
✔ Base url of the GitHub instance: https://github.com
✔ Personal access token for Jenkins: ***************
✔ Username of Jenkins user: admin
✔ Base url of the Jenkins instance: https://localhost
Environment variables successfully updated.
In your terminal, run the GitHub Actions Importer update CLI command to connect to GitHub Packages Container registry and ensure that the container image is updated to the latest version:
gh actions-importer update
The output of the command should be similar to below:
Updating ghcr.io/actions-importer/cli:latest...
ghcr.io/actions-importer/cli:latest up-to-date
You can use the audit command to get a high-level view of all pipelines in a Jenkins server.
The audit command performs the following steps:
To perform an audit of a Jenkins server, run the following command in your terminal:
gh actions-importer audit jenkins --output-dir tmp/audit
The files in the specified output directory contain the results of the audit. See the audit_summary.md file for a summary of the audit results.
The audit summary has the following sections.
The "Pipelines" section contains a high-level statistics regarding the conversion rate done by GitHub Actions Importer.
Listed below are some key terms that can appear in the "Pipelines" section:
The "Build steps" section contains an overview of individual build steps that are used across all pipelines, and how many were automatically converted by GitHub Actions Importer.
Listed below are some key terms that can appear in the "Build steps" section:
The "Manual tasks" section contains an overview of tasks that GitHub Actions Importer is not able to complete automatically, and that you must complete manually.
Listed below are some key terms that can appear in the "Manual tasks" section:
The final section of the audit report provides a manifest of all the files that were written to disk during the audit.
Each pipeline file has a variety of files included in the audit, including:
Additionally, the workflow_usage.csv file contains a comma-separated list of all actions, secrets, and runners that are used by each successfully converted pipeline. This can be useful for determining which workflows use which actions, secrets, or runners, and can be useful for performing security reviews.
You can use the forecast command to forecast potential GitHub Actions usage by computing metrics from completed pipeline runs in your Jenkins server.
In order to run the forecast command against a Jenkins instance, you must install the paginated-builds plugin on your Jenkins server. This plugin allows GitHub Actions Importer to efficiently retrieve historical build data for jobs that have a large number of builds. Because Jenkins does not provide a method to retrieve paginated build data, using this plugin prevents timeouts from the Jenkins server that can occur when fetching a large amount of historical data. The paginated-builds plugin is open source, and exposes a REST API endpoint to fetch build data in pages, rather than all at once.
To install the paginated-builds plugin:
https://<your-jenkins-instance>/pluginManager/available.paginated-builds plugin.To perform a forecast of potential GitHub Actions, run the following command in your terminal. By default, GitHub Actions Importer includes the previous seven days in the forecast report.
gh actions-importer forecast jenkins --output-dir tmp/forecast
The forecast_report.md file in the specified output directory contains the results of the forecast.
Listed below are some key terms that can appear in the forecast report:
Additionally, these metrics are defined for each queue of runners in Jenkins. This is especially useful if there is a mix of hosted or self-hosted runners, or high or low spec machines, so you can see metrics specific to different types of runners.
You can use the dry-run command to convert a Jenkins pipeline to its equivalent GitHub Actions workflow.
You can use the dry-run command to convert a Jenkins pipeline to an equivalent GitHub Actions workflow. A dry-run creates the output files in a specified directory, but does not open a pull request to migrate the pipeline.
To perform a dry run of migrating your Jenkins pipelines to GitHub Actions, run the following command in your terminal, replacing my-jenkins-project with the URL of your Jenkins job.
gh actions-importer dry-run jenkins --source-url my-jenkins-project --output-dir tmp/dry-run
You can view the logs of the dry run and the converted workflow files in the specified output directory.
If there is anything that GitHub Actions Importer was not able to convert automatically, such as unknown build steps or a partially successful pipeline, you might want to create custom transformers to further customize the conversion process. For more information, see Extending GitHub Actions Importer with custom transformers.
You can use the migrate command to convert a Jenkins pipeline and open a pull request with the equivalent GitHub Actions workflow.
To migrate a Jenkins pipeline to GitHub Actions, run the following command in your terminal, replacing the target-url value with the URL for your GitHub repository, and my-jenkins-project with the URL for your Jenkins job.
gh actions-importer migrate jenkins --target-url https://github.com/:owner/:repo --output-dir tmp/migrate --source-url my-jenkins-project
The command's output includes the URL to the pull request that adds the converted workflow to your repository. An example of a successful output is similar to the following:
$ gh actions-importer migrate jenkins --target-url https://github.com/octo-org/octo-repo --output-dir tmp/migrate --source-url http://localhost:8080/job/monas_dev_work/job/monas_freestyle
[2022-08-20 22:08:20] Logs: 'tmp/migrate/log/actions-importer-20220916-014033.log'
[2022-08-20 22:08:20] Pull request: 'https://github.com/octo-org/octo-repo/pull/1'
The output from a successful run of the migrate command contains a link to the new pull request that adds the converted workflow to your repository.
Some important elements of the pull request include:
When you are finished inspecting the pull request, you can merge it to add the workflow to your GitHub repository.
This section contains reference information on environment variables, optional arguments, and supported syntax when using GitHub Actions Importer to migrate from Jenkins.
GitHub Actions Importer uses environment variables for its authentication configuration. These variables are set when following the configuration process using the configure command. For more information, see the Configuring credentials section.
GitHub Actions Importer uses the following environment variables to connect to your Jenkins instance:
GITHUB_ACCESS_TOKEN: The personal access token (classic) used to create pull requests with a converted workflow (requires repo and workflow scopes).
GITHUB_INSTANCE_URL: The URL to the target GitHub instance (for example, https://github.com).
JENKINS_ACCESS_TOKEN: The Jenkins API token used to view Jenkins resources.
Note
This token requires access to all jobs that you want to migrate or audit. In cases where a folder or job does not inherit access control lists from their parent, you must grant explicit permissions or full admin privileges.
JENKINS_USERNAME: The username of the user account that created the Jenkins API token.
JENKINS_INSTANCE_URL: The URL of the Jenkins instance.
JENKINSFILE_ACCESS_TOKEN (Optional) The API token used to retrieve the contents of a Jenkinsfile stored in the build repository. This requires the repo scope. If this is not provided, the GITHUB_ACCESS_TOKEN will be used instead.
These environment variables can be specified in a .env.local file that is loaded by GitHub Actions Importer when it is run.
There are optional arguments you can use with the GitHub Actions Importer subcommands to customize your migration.
--source-file-path
You can use the --source-file-path argument with the forecast, dry-run, or migration subcommands.
By default, GitHub Actions Importer fetches pipeline contents from source control. The --source-file-path argument tells GitHub Actions Importer to use the specified source file path instead. You can use this option for Jenkinsfile and multibranch pipelines.
If you would like to supply multiple source files when running the forecast subcommand, you can use pattern matching in the file path value. For example, gh forecast --source-file-path ./tmp/previous_forecast/jobs/*.json supplies GitHub Actions Importer with any source files that match the ./tmp/previous_forecast/jobs/*.json file path.
In this example, GitHub Actions Importer uses the specified Jenkinsfile as the source file to perform a dry run.
gh actions-importer dry-run jenkins --output-dir path/to/output/ --source-file-path path/to/Jenkinsfile --source-url :url_to_jenkins_job
--config-file-path
You can use the --config-file-path argument with the audit, dry-run, and migrate subcommands.
By default, GitHub Actions Importer fetches pipeline contents from source control. The --config-file-path argument tells GitHub Actions Importer to use the specified source files instead.
When you use the --config-file-path option with the dry-run or migrate subcommands, GitHub Actions Importer matches the repository slug to the job represented by the --source-url option to select the pipeline. It uses the config-file-path to pull the specified source file.
In this example, GitHub Actions Importer uses the specified YAML configuration file to perform an audit.
gh actions-importer audit jenkins --output-dir path/to/output/ --config-file-path path/to/jenkins/config.yml
To audit a Jenkins instance using a config file, the config file must be in the following format, and each repository_slug value must be unique:
source_files:
- repository_slug: pipeline-name
path: path/to/Jenkinsfile
- repository_slug: multi-branch-pipeline-name
branches:
- branch: main
path: path/to/Jenkinsfile
- branch: node
path: path/to/Jenkinsfile
The following tables show the type of properties GitHub Actions Importer is currently able to convert. For more details about how Jenkins pipeline syntax aligns with GitHub Actions, see Migrating from Jenkins to GitHub Actions.
For information about supported Jenkins plugins, see the github/gh-actions-importer repository.
| Jenkins | GitHub Actions | Status |
|---|---|---|
| docker template | jobs.<job_id>.container |
Supported |
| build | jobs |
Partially supported |
| build environment | env |
Partially supported |
| build triggers | on |
Partially supported |
| general | runners |
Partially supported |
| Jenkins | GitHub Actions | Status |
|---|---|---|
| docker | jobs.<job_id>.container |
Supported |
| stage | jobs.<job_id> |
Supported |
| agent | runners |
Partially supported |
| environment | env |
Partially supported |
| stages | jobs |
Partially supported |
| steps | jobs.<job_id>.steps |
Partially supported |
| triggers | on |
Partially supported |
| when | jobs.<job_id>.if |
Partially supported |
| inputs | inputs |
Unsupported |
| matrix | jobs.<job_id>.strategy.matrix |
Unsupported |
| options | jobs.<job_id>.strategy |
Unsupported |
| parameters | inputs |
Unsupported |
GitHub Actions Importer uses the mapping in the table below to convert default Jenkins environment variables to the closest equivalent in GitHub Actions.
| Jenkins | GitHub Actions |
|---|---|
${BUILD_ID} |
${{ github.run_id }} |
${BUILD_NUMBER} |
${{ github.run_id }} |
${BUILD_TAG} |
${{ github.workflow }}-${{ github.run_id }} |
${BUILD_URL} |
${{ github.server_url }}/${{ github.repository }}/actions/runs/${{ github.run_id }} |
${JENKINS_URL} |
${{ github.server_url }} |
${JOB_NAME} |
${{ github.workflow }} |
${WORKSPACE} |
${{ github.workspace }} |
Portions have been adapted from https://github.com/github/gh-actions-importer/ under the MIT license:
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