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@jimklimov jimklimov commented Nov 23, 2023

A small almost-cosmetic change which makes life easier for my colleagues when they develop (and debug failures of) Jenkins scripted pipelines.

UPDATE: Grew to be not so small, so evicted into a method of its own to constrain changes to other parts of the codebase. Learned a few more tricks over time, as new MTL situations were found in the field.

@jimklimov jimklimov requested a review from a team as a code owner November 23, 2023 08:35
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Out of curiosity, what output does this give you and how is it helpful?

jimklimov and others added 5 commits December 11, 2023 21:55
…to avoid catching by full name

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
…argeExceptionRealistic() tests

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
…sException as a carrier of MethodTooLargeException; re-throw with just a compact message to appear in the build log

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
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jimklimov commented Mar 5, 2024

Tests helped me realize that the catch block was a bit naive; the groovy parser returns a special exception class with a collection of errors, one of which (okay, the only one) is the Method Too Large one.

PR updated with handling of both eventualities, and if the only exception in view is the MTL - re-throw with a short message avoiding a wall of text in pipeline log. From self-test console (showing both server log id=... and pipeline log test0), it now complains much more readably, like this:

   6.903 [test0 #1] Started
   7.635 [id=99]	SEVERE	o.j.p.w.cps.CpsFlowExecution#parseScript: FAILED to parse WorkflowScript (the pipeline script) due to MethodTooLargeException: Method too large: WorkflowScript.___cps___1 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
   7.680 [test0 #1] java.lang.RuntimeException: FAILED to parse WorkflowScript (the pipeline script) due to MethodTooLargeException: Method too large: WorkflowScript.___cps___1 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
   7.680 [test0 #1] 	at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.parseScript(CpsFlowExecution.java:697)
   7.680 [test0 #1] 	at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.start(CpsFlowExecution.java:586)
   7.681 [test0 #1] 	at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.job.WorkflowRun.run(WorkflowRun.java:335)
   7.681 [test0 #1] 	at hudson.model.ResourceController.execute(ResourceController.java:101)
   7.681 [test0 #1] 	at hudson.model.Executor.run(Executor.java:442)
   7.700 [test0 #1] Finished: FAILURE
   7.718 [id=27]	INFO	hudson.lifecycle.Lifecycle#onStatusUpdate: Stopping Jenkins
   7.766 [id=27]	INFO	hudson.lifecycle.Lifecycle#onStatusUpdate: Jenkins stopped

Still got a bit of stack trace from generic handling, but it is reasonably short - the ultimate pipeline devs won't have to scroll up a couple of screenfuls just to learn that their script was too long or complex.

Now that the message is visible to end users, I am open to suggestions how to make it more actionable, and/or if the RuntimeException is the right re-throw wrapper, and of course which color should the bike shed be (or this can all be part of another PR) :D

e.g. to explain about script length or its coding complexity and what to do about it (nesting, amount of stages, separation of methods into JSL classes, etc.); maybe point to a knowledge-base URL for a better maintainable article on the subject (don't want to replace one wall of text in the logs with another, right?)

@jglick jglick requested a review from a team March 5, 2024 12:22
…unt to satisfy different CI platforms

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
…uggestions for pipeline devs

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
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jimklimov commented Mar 5, 2024

Out of curiosity, what output does this give you and how is it helpful?

Until today, it was helpful to myself and a few colleagues who may/can/do follow traces of the Jenkins server logs when developing pipelines (testing in private Jenkins instances and those wrapped by IDEs notwithstanding).

After the review comments some months ago (thanks, and sorry for not noticing) and a coding effort today, this should be better visible and more "actionable" to a more general population - now shown as a smaller wall of text right in the pipeline build logs:

   5.380 [test0 #1] Started
   5.975 [test0 #1] java.lang.RuntimeException: FAILED to parse WorkflowScript
       (the pipeline script) due to MethodTooLargeException; please refactor to
       simplify code structure and/or move logic to a Jenkins Shared Library:
       Method too large: WorkflowScript.___cps___1 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
   5.975 [test0 #1] 	at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.parseScript(CpsFlowExecution.java:703)
   5.975 [test0 #1] 	at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.start(CpsFlowExecution.java:584)
   5.975 [test0 #1] 	at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.job.WorkflowRun.run(WorkflowRun.java:335)
   5.975 [test0 #1] 	at hudson.model.ResourceController.execute(ResourceController.java:101)
   5.975 [test0 #1] 	at hudson.model.Executor.run(Executor.java:442)
   6.011 [test0 #1] Finished: FAILURE

...which is IMHO a bit more comprehensible than the original (especially the first time you see it):

...
 > git checkout -f c391f78bf7ac0d4afffab4f312a3d81cc41577d1 # timeout=10
Commit message: "..."
 > git rev-list --no-walk c391f78bf7ac0d4afffab4f312a3d81cc41577d1 # timeout=10
org.codehaus.groovy.control.MultipleCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
General error during class generation: Method too large: WorkflowScript.___cps___20692 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;

groovyjarjarasm.asm.MethodTooLargeException: Method too large: WorkflowScript.___cps___20692 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
        at groovyjarjarasm.asm.MethodWriter.computeMethodInfoSize(MethodWriter.java:2087)
        at groovyjarjarasm.asm.ClassWriter.toByteArray(ClassWriter.java:447)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit$17.call(CompilationUnit.java:850)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.applyToPrimaryClassNodes(CompilationUnit.java:1087)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.doPhaseOperation(CompilationUnit.java:624)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.processPhaseOperations(CompilationUnit.java:602)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.compile(CompilationUnit.java:579)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader.doParseClass(GroovyClassLoader.java:323)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader.parseClass(GroovyClassLoader.java:293)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyShell.parseClass(GroovyShell.java:677)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyShell.parse(GroovyShell.java:689)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsGroovyShell.doParse(CpsGroovyShell.java:142)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsGroovyShell.reparse(CpsGroovyShell.java:127)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.parseScript(CpsFlowExecution.java:554)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.start(CpsFlowExecution.java:506)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.job.WorkflowRun.run(WorkflowRun.java:335)
        at hudson.model.ResourceController.execute(ResourceController.java:101)
        at hudson.model.Executor.run(Executor.java:442)

1 error

        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.ErrorCollector.failIfErrors(ErrorCollector.java:309)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.applyToPrimaryClassNodes(CompilationUnit.java:1107)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.doPhaseOperation(CompilationUnit.java:624)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.processPhaseOperations(CompilationUnit.java:602)
        at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.compile(CompilationUnit.java:579)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader.doParseClass(GroovyClassLoader.java:323)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader.parseClass(GroovyClassLoader.java:293)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyShell.parseClass(GroovyShell.java:677)
        at groovy.lang.GroovyShell.parse(GroovyShell.java:689)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsGroovyShell.doParse(CpsGroovyShell.java:142)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsGroovyShell.reparse(CpsGroovyShell.java:127)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.parseScript(CpsFlowExecution.java:554)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.start(CpsFlowExecution.java:506)
        at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.job.WorkflowRun.run(WorkflowRun.java:335)
        at hudson.model.ResourceController.execute(ResourceController.java:101)
        at hudson.model.Executor.run(Executor.java:442)
Finished: FAILURE

...and requires less scrolling to get to the crux of the issue =D

jimklimov and others added 2 commits March 5, 2024 15:52
…ethods (class complexity) from maxTryCatch (nesting depth)

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
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The logic here is pretty convoluted and seems excessive when we do not really need to make things particularly pretty, we just need to offer some clue beyond what there is today. Would suffice to do something along the lines of

if (Functions.printThrowable(x).containsString("MethodTooLargeException")) {
    throw new IllegalArgumentException("…your hint here…", x);
} else {
    throw x;
}

jimklimov and others added 2 commits June 11, 2024 08:57
…wExecution.java


Do not log to server console log (not all server admins are those who run the projects with issues).

Co-authored-by: Jesse Glick <[email protected]>
Comment on lines 690 to 701
if (ecCount > 1) {
// Not squashing with explicit MethodTooLargeException
// re-thrown below, in this codepath we have other errors.
throw new RuntimeException(msg, x);
} else {
// Do not confuse pipeline devs by a wall of text in the
// build console, but let the full context be found in
// server log with some dedication.
LOGGER.log(Level.FINE, mtlEx.getMessage());
//throw new RuntimeException(msg, mtlEx);
throw new RuntimeException(msg);
}
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Regarding the concern of "pretty convoluted logic" - this block is largely why I did it so: groovy can return a MultipleCompilationErrorsException with an attached collection of one or more errors (broadly speaking), so we need to count if we only had the MethodTooLargeException one way or another here (and then print the pretty log), or also something else and then better print everything for human devs to sift through it diligently.

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Sorry it took a while to notice that there was finally a new review here - too many browser tabs open to keep track of such :D

Thanks for doing it!

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jimklimov commented Jun 17, 2024

Hm, got another use-case to handle: managed to get a step definition too large (aka "global variable", anyhow in JSL as vars/cloudBranch.groovy)!

So the pipeline chugged along until it called that step - and that's where the job crashed, with a different exception:

[Pipeline] End of Pipeline
Also:   org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.actions.ErrorAction$ErrorId: a1490d3b-63d7-4555-ae55-3a0d6856aee6
org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
General error during class generation: Method too large: cloudBranch.___cps___586328 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;

groovyjarjarasm.asm.MethodTooLargeException: Method too large: cloudBranch.___cps___586328 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
	at groovyjarjarasm.asm.MethodWriter.computeMethodInfoSize(MethodWriter.java:2087)
	at groovyjarjarasm.asm.ClassWriter.toByteArray(ClassWriter.java:447)
	at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit$17.call(CompilationUnit.java:850)
	at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.applyToPrimaryClassNodes(CompilationUnit.java:1087)
...
<no further pointers to the class in question>
...
	at java.base/java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:642)
	at java.base/java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:1583)

1 error

	at org.codehaus.groovy.control.ErrorCollector.failIfErrors(ErrorCollector.java:309)
	at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.applyToPrimaryClassNodes(CompilationUnit.java:1107)
	at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.doPhaseOperation(CompilationUnit.java:624)
	at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.processPhaseOperations(CompilationUnit.java:602)
	at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.compile(CompilationUnit.java:579)
	at groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader.doParseClass(GroovyClassLoader.java:323)
...
	at org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.LoggingInvoker.getProperty(LoggingInvoker.java:121)
	at com.cloudbees.groovy.cps.impl.PropertyAccessBlock.rawGet(PropertyAccessBlock.java:20)
	at WorkflowScript.run(WorkflowScript:428)
	at com.cloudbees.groovy.cps.CpsDefaultGroovyMethods.each(CpsDefaultGroovyMethods:2125)
	at com.cloudbees.groovy.cps.CpsDefaultGroovyMethods.each(CpsDefaultGroovyMethods:2110)
	at com.cloudbees.groovy.cps.CpsDefaultGroovyMethods.each(CpsDefaultGroovyMethods:2163)
	at WorkflowScript.run(WorkflowScript:385)
	at ___cps.transform___(Native Method)
	at com.cloudbees.groovy.cps.impl.PropertyishBlock$ContinuationImpl.get(PropertyishBlock.java:73)
	at com.cloudbees.groovy.cps.LValueBlock$GetAdapter.receive(LValueBlock.java:30)
	at com.cloudbees.groovy.cps.impl.PropertyishBlock$ContinuationImpl.fixName(PropertyishBlock.java:65)
...
	at java.base/java.util.concurrent.Executors$RunnableAdapter.call(Executors.java:572)
	at java.base/java.util.concurrent.FutureTask.run(FutureTask.java:317)
	at java.base/java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor.runWorker(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:1144)
	at java.base/java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:642)
	at java.base/java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:1583)
Finished: FAILURE

Note there are actually two lines at WorkflowScript.run(WorkflowScript:NNN), pipeline code at line 385 starts an ...each {} closure to iterate several repos this job processes, and the line 428 actually calls the cloudBranch() method.

Gotta look into the structure of CpsCompilationErrorsException to see how to best parse it here (and know if "method too large" was the only error, so the report can be trimmed), and also consider that not only WorkflowScript can have such troubles.

jimklimov and others added 2 commits June 24, 2024 18:00
Notably, the latter is a Throwable but not an Exception so e.g. LinkageError might be not handled.

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
…excerpts - only add a newline before final wrapper if not present in wrapped text

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
…eraction" with ContinuationGroup.fixupStackTrace()

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
…x in the end, use a dedicated "RuntimeException rtex" object

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
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jimklimov commented Jun 28, 2024

Updated screenshots, now with some detail learned about MTL issues happening in the JSL also:

  • Pipeline script too large:
...
Executing git in workdir C:\Users\klimov\.jenkins\workspace\test-MethodTooLarge@libs\3fbaa4c2a74a618783608223aa05bcd2484d251d9f183ec393764a9458686f38
java.lang.RuntimeException: FAILED to parse WorkflowScript (the pipeline script) due to MethodTooLargeException; please refactor to simplify code structure and/or move logic to a Jenkins Shared Library:
-----
org.codehaus.groovy.control.MultipleCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
General error during class generation: Method too large: WorkflowScript.___cps___5112 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
groovyjarjarasm.asm.MethodTooLargeException: Method too large: WorkflowScript.___cps___5112 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
-----

Complete details can be seen in server log at FINE/FINER level (Jenkins admin access for org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.MethodTooLargeLogging is required)
Finished: FAILURE
  • JSL step:
...
[Pipeline] End of Pipeline
Also:   org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.actions.ErrorAction$ErrorId: e5f57f7d-1081-49cf-a579-0644086eead0
java.lang.RuntimeException: FAILED to parse presumed JSL step 'cloudBranch' due to MethodTooLargeException; please refactor to simplify code structure:
-----
org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
General error during class generation: Method too large: cloudBranch.___cps___1028 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
groovyjarjarasm.asm.MethodTooLargeException: Method too large: cloudBranch.___cps___1028 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
-----

Complete details can be seen in server log at FINE/FINER level (Jenkins admin access for org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.MethodTooLargeLogging is required)
Finished: FAILURE
  • JSL class:
...
[Pipeline] End of Pipeline
Also:   org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.actions.ErrorAction$ErrorId: 9338d5ab-bd20-4f09-b81a-2d13b2eaf911
java.lang.RuntimeException: FAILED to parse presumed JSL class 'com/myprovys/ci/BranchResync' due to MethodTooLargeException; please refactor to simplify code structure:
-----
org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
General error during class generation: Method too large: com/myprovys/ci/BranchResync.___cps___2123 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
groovyjarjarasm.asm.MethodTooLargeException: Method too large: com/myprovys/ci/BranchResync.___cps___2123 ()Lcom/cloudbees/groovy/cps/impl/CpsFunction;
-----

Complete details can be seen in server log at FINE/FINER level (Jenkins admin access for org.jenkinsci.plugins.workflow.cps.CpsFlowExecution.MethodTooLargeLogging is required)
Finished: FAILURE

Notably, code was made to trace the messages I've seen (and posted earlier above) with "bread-crumbs" to see the code path through the pipeline script and groovy (JSL) files and line numbers (for steps/classes with code too large), only to discover this is slapped on later via ContinuationGroup.fixupStackTrace() called from PropertyishBlock.ContinuationImpl.get() :\

Probably some refactoring can be due to take advantage of that bit. At least, the groovy-cps code is now in the same plugin.

@jglick jglick requested a review from a team July 5, 2024 22:40
}
actionableMsg.append("; please refactor to simplify code structure");
if (overflowedClassNameReport.contains("WorkflowScript") || CLASSNAME_SCRIPTNUM_PATTERN.matcher(overflowedClassName).find())
actionableMsg.append(" and/or move logic to a Jenkins Shared Library");
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BTW the terminology in https://www.jenkins.io/doc/book/pipeline/shared-libraries/ is unfortunate. By definition a “library” is “shared”; why else would you create a library? The plugin itself uses the term Pipeline Groovy library.

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Updated to mention both terminologies, hopefully that makes it clearer to both populations of readers.

OTOH, I often see (and use) the acronym JSL though, but never saw a PGL...

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Although I would say that code-sharing is one aspect. Code offloading (into a separate compilable unit) is another :)
Some organizations might want the looks of a declarative pipeline for some job with their custom logic behind it, so the logic is in a library (trusted, un-sandboxed and all) while the pipeline seems to call a few steps with a clean interface. But it may be the only consumer (the not-quite-sharing aspect of this).


static final Logger TIMING_LOGGER = Logger.getLogger(CpsFlowExecution.class.getName() + ".timing");

static final Logger METHOD_TOO_LARGE_LOGGER = Logger.getLogger(CpsFlowExecution.class.getName() + ".MethodTooLargeLogging");
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Is there some reason not to simply use

private static final Logger LOGGER = Logger.getLogger(CpsFlowExecution.class.getName());
?

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Something about keeping the possibly large messages out of sight unless truly wanted in troubleshooting.

.append(METHOD_TOO_LARGE_LOGGER.getName())
.append(" is required)");

//return new RuntimeException(actionableMsg.toString(), mtlEx);
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Do not leave commented-out code in a final PR (unless there is a real possibility it should be resurrected some day soonish and a preceding comment explains those circumstances).

} else if (x instanceof CpsCompilationErrorsException) {
// Defined in this plugin, to clone a message and stack trace
// from a MultipleCompilationErrorsException and be serializable.
// Grep it as text for "MethodTooLargeException" and "1 error"
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Would it not make more sense to just enrich CpsCompilationErrorsException with whatever information you need? AFAICT all you are looking for ultimately is the MethodTooLargeException.message. So, we could just keep that in a field?

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Interesting idea actually. At the time this was written, I did not realize such a possibility on one hand, and probably wanted the changes to not metastacize all over the codebase on another.

Comment on lines 95 to 96
@Test public void methodTooLargeExceptionFabricated() throws Exception {
// Fabricate a MethodTooLargeException which "normally" happens when evaluated
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Is there a reason to keep this test case, given the “realistic” test below?

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I think yes, this fabricated test is about coded reaction to the particular exception, which may be or not be the one thrown in realistic test below (if CPS VM does at all break such way there and with that amount of threads).

Comment on lines +123 to +124
// * java.lang.StackOverflowError varies per JDK platform
// (CI on Linux was unhappy with 255, on Windows with 1023)
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You can set a per-thread stack size, but unfortunately the unit of measurement is unspecified and presumably specific to JVM implementation details, so this is probably not that helpful.

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(Why would you would be getting a JVM-level SOE, anyway? This is all dealing with the CPS VM that does not use the native stack.)

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Saw some code in this plugin throwing it (for "excessively nested" cases at least), so thought it is worth keeping in mind.

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OK I think, though I can barely follow most of the code here. @dwnusbaum did you expect to review?

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dwnusbaum commented Mar 27, 2025

I have no plans to review this. My impression from a very brief look at the code was that it seemed quite complicated, but I am not blocking it. IMO creating a page like https://www.jenkins.io/doc/book/pipeline/cps-method-mismatches/ explaining the situation and recommendations in detail seems like it could help, and then perhaps this code could be simplified to only check the stack trace for the relevant class types and add a suppressed exception that links to that page, accepting potential false positives and not adding the additional context currently added by this PR (but maybe that context is critically useful, IDK).

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jglick commented Mar 27, 2025

only check the stack trace for the relevant class types and add a suppressed exception

#817 (review) more or less. IIUC this PR offers the same actionable information as was already there, but formatted differently?

links to that page

Actually a redirect URL like in jenkins-infra/jenkins.io#2290.

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jimklimov commented Apr 25, 2025

I'm not sure how the simple redirect to a wiki page would be better?

Do we not-print a wall of text and redirect to a wiki saying "sometimes the script is too big, guess which one of yours that is"?

Or do we print the wall of text and redirect to a wiki that says same and "here's how to look for a needle in the haystack"?

Currently the changeset pinpoints which pipeline, step or JSL class has upset the parser (finds those needles in the haystack for us), so I am not sure how the other options are better. Surely a Wiki link can be posted "in addition" to this, but "instead" - I am not so excited about that path (even not due to author bias - just due to loss of usability improvement we use for over a year).

UPDATE: Looking back at the comment trail (it has been a while overall), maybe there's a way to simplify code to achieve a similar effect. Also unit tests would be nice, although it can take a while to conjure up some test pipeline/var/class files that do not contain an internal codebase we hit this with.

Not sure when/if I'd get to this - got a big higher-priority backlog of work not yet completed at work and in other projects, and this code (and many similarly stalled PRs) is at least completed as far as practical effect is concerned... just 90% of work remains to fulfill the maintainability (or more esoteric ritual) requirements of the project du-jour...

I guess for now I'll keep remerging master into the PR to use incremental builds, maybe will come back to this eventually (hopefully before retirement), anyone beating me to it and bringing this to completion is very welcome though :)

jimklimov and others added 6 commits August 4, 2025 12:11
… to mention Pipeline Groovy library/PGL (plugin term)

@jglick> BTW the terminology in https://www.jenkins.io/doc/book/pipeline/shared-libraries/
is unfortunate. By definition a “library” is “shared”; why else would you create a library?
The plugin itself uses the term Pipeline Groovy library.

Signed-off-by: Jim Klimov <[email protected]>
Apply suggestion from @jglick

Co-authored-by: Jesse Glick <[email protected]>
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4 participants