Jenkins monitors executions of repeated jobs, such as building a software project or jobs run by cron. Among those things, current Jenkins focuses on the following two jobs:
1. Building/testing software projects continuously, just like CruiseControl or DamageControl. In a nutshell, Jenkins provides an easy-to-use so-called continuous integration system, making it easier for developers to integrate changes to the project, and making it easier for users to obtain a fresh build. The automated, continuous build increases the productivity.
2. Monitoring executions of externally-run jobs, such as cron jobs and procmail jobs, even those that are run on a remote machine. For example, with cron, all you receive is regular e-mails that capture the output, and it is up to you to look at them diligently and notice when it broke. Jenkins keeps those outputs and makes it easy for you to notice when something is wrong.
Get Jenkins and give it a try to see how useful it can actually be for you!
What's New in This Release:
· Log cluttered with irrelevant warnings about build timestamps when running on Windows on Java 6.
· Fingerprint action deserialization problem fixed.
· Updating the master computer's configuration from the slave list UI had no immediate effect.
· Improved the tracking of queued jobs and their eventual builds in the REST API.
· Configured log recorders can now pick up messages logged from slaves.
· Added a new extension point to contribute custom plexus components into Maven for the maven project type.
· Remoting classloader performance improvement upon reconnection to the same slave.