In situations where you want a user friendly URL, different public ports, or to terminate SSL connections before they reach Jenkins, you may find it useful to run Jenkins (or the servlet container that Jenkins runs in) behind HAProxy. This section discusses some of the approaches for doing this.
This 6 minute video tutorial from Darin Pope configures an HAProxy reverse proxy.
Using HAProxy 2.6.7, here is an example HAProxy.cfg to proxy over plain HTTP:
# If you already have an haproxy.cfg file, you can probably leave the
# global and defaults section as-is, but you might need to increase the
# timeouts so that long-running CLI commands will work.
global
maxconn 4096
log stdout local0 debug
defaults
log global
option httplog
option dontlognull
option forwardfor
maxconn 20
timeout connect 5s
timeout client 60s
timeout server 60s
frontend http-in
log stdout format raw local0 debug #for additional logging
bind *:80
mode http
acl prefixed-with-jenkins path_beg /jenkins
# Use http-request redirect prefix to add /jenkins prefix to URL's location
# to ensure jenkins base url (context path) is working properly.
http-request redirect code 301 prefix /jenkins unless prefixed-with-jenkins
use_backend jenkins if prefixed-with-jenkins
backend jenkins
log stdout format raw local0 debug
mode http
server jenkins1 127.0.0.1:8080 check
http-request replace-path /jenkins(/)?(.*) /\2
http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Port %[dst_port]
http-request add-header X-Forwarded-Proto https if { ssl_fc }
http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Host %[req.hdr(Host)]
This assumes Jenkins is running locally on port 8080.
This assumes that you are using the /jenkins context path for both the site exposed from HAProxy and Jenkins itself. If this is not the case, you will need to adjust the configuration. Refer to the HAProxy documentation on traffic routing for more information.
If you are experiencing the following error when attempting to run long
CLI commands in Jenkins, and Jenkins is running behind HAProxy,
it is probably due to HAProxy timing out the CLI connection.
You can increase the timeout client
and timeout server
settings as
necessary so the command will complete successfully.
WARNING: null
hudson.cli.DiagnosedStreamCorruptionException
Read back: 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x1e 0x07
'Started reverse-proxy-test #68'
0x00 0x00 0x00 0x01 0x07 0x0a
Read ahead:
Diagnosis problem:
java.io.IOException: Premature EOF
at sun.net.www.http.ChunkedInputStream.readAheadBlocking(ChunkedInputStream.java:565)
...
at hudson.cli.FlightRecorderInputStream.analyzeCrash(FlightRecorderInputStream.java:82)
at hudson.cli.PlainCLIProtocol$EitherSide$Reader.run(PlainCLIProtocol.java:153)
Caused by: java.io.IOException: Premature EOF
at sun.net.www.http.ChunkedInputStream.readAheadBlocking(ChunkedInputStream.java:565)
...
at java.io.DataInputStream.readInt(DataInputStream.java:387)
at hudson.cli.PlainCLIProtocol$EitherSide$Reader.run(PlainCLIProtocol.java:111)
Using HAProxy 2.6.7, here is an example HAProxy.cfg to connect to the proxy using SSL, terminate the SSL connection, and then talk to Jenkins using plain HTTP:
# If you already have an haproxy.cfg file, you can probably leave the
# global and defaults section as-is, but you might need to increase the
# timeouts so that long-running CLI commands will work.
global
maxconn 4096
log stdout local0 debug
defaults
log global
option httplog
option dontlognull
option forwardfor
maxconn 20
timeout connect 5s
timeout client 5m
timeout server 5m
frontend http-in
log stdout format raw local0 debug
bind *:80
bind *:443 ssl crt /usr/local/etc/haproxy/ssl/server.pem
mode http
acl prefixed-with-jenkins path_beg /jenkins
http-request redirect code 301 prefix /jenkins unless prefixed-with-jenkins
redirect scheme https if !{ ssl_fc } # Redirect http requests to https
use_backend jenkins if prefixed-with-jenkins
backend jenkins
log stdout format raw local0 debug
mode http
server jenkins1 127.0.0.1:8080 check
http-request replace-path /jenkins(/)?(.*) /\2
http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Port %[dst_port]
http-request add-header X-Forwarded-Proto https if { ssl_fc }
http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Host %[req.hdr(Host)]
The context path is the prefix of a URL path.
The Jenkins controller and the reverse proxy must use the same context path.
For example, if the Jenkins controller URL is https://www.example.com/jenkins/ then the --prefix=/jenkins
argument must be included in the Jenkins controller command line arguments.
Set the context path when using the Linux packages by running systemctl edit jenkins
and adding the following:
[Service]
Environment="JENKINS_PREFIX=/jenkins"
Set the context path on Windows controllers by including the --prefix
command line argument in the jenkins.xml
file in the installation directory.
Ensure that Jenkins is running at the context path where your reverse proxy is serving Jenkins. You will have the least pain if you keep to this principle.
The --prefix
command line argument is not needed if the context path is empty.
For example, the URL https://jenkins.example.com/ has an empty context path.
Please submit your feedback about this page through this quick form.
Alternatively, if you don't wish to complete the quick form, you can simply indicate if you found this page helpful?
See existing feedback here.