I\'m trying to login remotely to a Jenkins server using Java.
I didn\'t found some documentation on how this should be securely done.
For my local server usi
Documention from jenkins wiki
Should work with your Basic Authentication type.
Java example with httpclient 4.3.x
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URI;
import org.apache.http.HttpHost;
import org.apache.http.HttpResponse;
import org.apache.http.auth.AuthScope;
import org.apache.http.auth.UsernamePasswordCredentials;
import org.apache.http.client.AuthCache;
import org.apache.http.client.ClientProtocolException;
import org.apache.http.client.CredentialsProvider;
import org.apache.http.client.methods.HttpGet;
import org.apache.http.client.protocol.HttpClientContext;
import org.apache.http.impl.auth.BasicScheme;
import org.apache.http.impl.client.BasicAuthCache;
import org.apache.http.impl.client.BasicCredentialsProvider;
import org.apache.http.impl.client.CloseableHttpClient;
import org.apache.http.impl.client.HttpClients;
import org.apache.http.util.EntityUtils;
public class JenkinsScraper {
public String scrape(String urlString, String username, String password) throws ClientProtocolException, IOException {
URI uri = URI.create(urlString);
HttpHost host = new HttpHost(uri.getHost(), uri.getPort(), uri.getScheme());
CredentialsProvider credsProvider = new BasicCredentialsProvider();
credsProvider.setCredentials(new AuthScope(uri.getHost(), uri.getPort()), new UsernamePasswordCredentials(username, password));
// Create AuthCache instance
AuthCache authCache = new BasicAuthCache();
// Generate BASIC scheme object and add it to the local auth cache
BasicScheme basicAuth = new BasicScheme();
authCache.put(host, basicAuth);
CloseableHttpClient httpClient = HttpClients.custom().setDefaultCredentialsProvider(credsProvider).build();
HttpGet httpGet = new HttpGet(uri);
// Add AuthCache to the execution context
HttpClientContext localContext = HttpClientContext.create();
localContext.setAuthCache(authCache);
HttpResponse response = httpClient.execute(host, httpGet, localContext);
return EntityUtils.toString(response.getEntity());
}
}
The Http/Html way is the most cumbersome! I would use jenkins cli or remote api. If you still insist using Java with http then you need to use basic http-authentication and if you plan on trigger more steps inside jenkins use a proper Http/Html Java library like Java-Selenium or HttpUnit.
Best and simple solution for using http basic auth in Java I found here: Http Basic Authentication in Java using HttpClient?
Also check, if your use case can be covered by jenkins cli: https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Jenkins+CLI
How to use jenkins cli from the command line:
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar -s yourserver.com help [command]
The cli works with username & password and also can handle certificates for https connection.
Also check the Remote API: https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Remote+access+API