$ podman pull registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-jenkins:<v4.3.0>
OpenShift Container Platform provides a container image for running Jenkins. This image provides a Jenkins server instance, which can be used to set up a basic flow for continuous testing, integration, and delivery.
The image is based on the Red Hat Universal Base Images (UBI).
OpenShift Container Platform follows the LTS release of Jenkins. OpenShift Container Platform provides an image that contains Jenkins 2.x.
The OpenShift Container Platform Jenkins images are available on Quay.io or registry.redhat.io.
For example:
$ podman pull registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-jenkins:<v4.3.0>
To use these images, you can either access them directly from these registries or push them into your OpenShift Container Platform container image registry. Additionally, you can create an image stream that points to the image, either in your container image registry or at the external location. Your OpenShift Container Platform resources can then reference the image stream.
But for convenience, OpenShift Container Platform provides image streams in the openshift
namespace for the core Jenkins image as well as the example Agent images provided for OpenShift Container Platform integration with Jenkins.
You can manage Jenkins authentication in two ways:
OpenShift Container Platform OAuth authentication provided by the OpenShift Container Platform Login plugin.
Standard authentication provided by Jenkins.
OAuth authentication is activated by configuring options on the Configure Global Security panel in the Jenkins UI, or by setting the OPENSHIFT_ENABLE_OAUTH
environment variable on the Jenkins Deployment configuration to anything other than false
. This activates the OpenShift Container Platform Login plugin, which retrieves the configuration information from pod data or by interacting with the OpenShift Container Platform API server.
Valid credentials are controlled by the OpenShift Container Platform identity provider.
Jenkins supports both browser and non-browser access.
Valid users are automatically added to the Jenkins authorization matrix at log in, where OpenShift Container Platform roles dictate the specific Jenkins permissions that users have. The roles used by default are the predefined admin
, edit
, and view
. The login plugin executes self-SAR requests against those roles in the project or namespace that Jenkins is running in.
Users with the admin
role have the traditional Jenkins administrative user permissions. Users with the edit
or view
role have progressively fewer permissions.
The default OpenShift Container Platform admin
, edit
, and view
roles and the Jenkins permissions those roles are assigned in the Jenkins instance are configurable.
When running Jenkins in an OpenShift Container Platform pod, the login plugin looks for a config map named openshift-jenkins-login-plugin-config
in the namespace that Jenkins is running in.
If this plugin finds and can read in that config map, you can define the role to Jenkins Permission mappings. Specifically:
The login plugin treats the key and value pairs in the config map as Jenkins permission to OpenShift Container Platform role mappings.
The key is the Jenkins permission group short ID and the Jenkins permission short ID, with those two separated by a hyphen character.
If you want to add the Overall Jenkins Administer
permission to an OpenShift Container Platform role, the key should be Overall-Administer
.
To get a sense of which permission groups and permissions IDs are available, go to the matrix authorization page in the Jenkins console and IDs for the groups and individual permissions in the table they provide.
The value of the key and value pair is the list of OpenShift Container Platform roles the permission should apply to, with each role separated by a comma.
If you want to add the Overall Jenkins Administer
permission to both the default admin
and edit
roles, as well as a new Jenkins role you have created, the value for the key Overall-Administer
would be admin,edit,jenkins
.
The |
Jenkins users' permissions that are stored can be changed after the users are initially established. The OpenShift Container Platform Login plugin polls the OpenShift Container Platform API server for permissions and updates the permissions stored in Jenkins for each user with the permissions retrieved from OpenShift Container Platform. If the Jenkins UI is used to update permissions for a Jenkins user, the permission changes are overwritten the next time the plugin polls OpenShift Container Platform.
You can control how often the polling occurs with the OPENSHIFT_PERMISSIONS_POLL_INTERVAL
environment variable. The default polling interval is five minutes.
The easiest way to create a new Jenkins service using OAuth authentication is to use a template.
Jenkins authentication is used by default if the image is run directly, without using a template.
The first time Jenkins starts, the configuration is created along with the administrator user and password. The default user credentials are admin
and password
. Configure the default password by setting the JENKINS_PASSWORD
environment variable when using, and only when using, standard Jenkins authentication.
Create a Jenkins application that uses standard Jenkins authentication:
$ oc new-app -e \
JENKINS_PASSWORD=<password> \
openshift4/ose-jenkins
The Jenkins server can be configured with the following environment variables:
Variable | Definition | Example values and settings |
---|---|---|
|
Determines whether the OpenShift Container Platform Login plugin manages authentication when logging in to Jenkins. To enable, set to |
Default: |
|
The password for the |
Default: |
|
These values control the maximum heap size of the Jenkins JVM. If
By default, the maximum heap size of the Jenkins JVM is set to 50% of the container memory limit with no cap. |
|
|
These values control the initial heap size of the Jenkins JVM. If By default, the JVM sets the initial heap size. |
|
|
If set, specifies an integer number of cores used for sizing numbers of internal JVM threads. |
Example setting: |
|
Specifies options to apply to all JVMs running in this container. It is not recommended to override this value. |
Default: |
|
Specifies Jenkins JVM garbage collection parameters. It is not recommended to override this value. |
Default: |
|
Specifies additional options for the Jenkins JVM. These options are appended to all other options, including the Java options above, and may be used to override any of them if necessary. Separate each additional option with a space; if any option contains space characters, escape them with a backslash. |
Example settings: |
|
Specifies arguments to Jenkins. |
|
|
Specifies additional Jenkins plugins to install when the container is first run or when |
Example setting: |
|
Specifies the interval in milliseconds that the OpenShift Container Platform Login plugin polls OpenShift Container Platform for the permissions that are associated with each user that is defined in Jenkins. |
Default: |
|
When running this image with an OpenShift Container Platform persistent volume (PV) for the Jenkins configuration directory, the transfer of configuration from the image to the PV is performed only the first time the image starts because the PV is assigned when the persistent volume claim (PVC) is created. If you create a custom image that extends this image and updates the configuration in the custom image after the initial startup, the configuration is not copied over unless you set this environment variable to |
Default: |
|
When running this image with an OpenShift Container Platform PV for the Jenkins configuration directory, the transfer of plugins from the image to the PV is performed only the first time the image starts because the PV is assigned when the PVC is created. If you create a custom image that extends this image and updates plugins in the custom image after the initial startup, the plugins are not copied over unless you set this environment variable to |
Default: |
|
When running this image with an OpenShift Container Platform PVC for the Jenkins configuration directory, this environment variable allows the fatal error log file to persist when a fatal error occurs. The fatal error file is saved at |
Default: |
|
Setting this value overrides the image that is used for the default Node.js agent pod configuration. A related image stream tag named |
Default Node.js agent image in Jenkins server: |
|
Setting this value overrides the image used for the default maven agent pod configuration. A related image stream tag named |
Default Maven agent image in Jenkins server:
|
|
Setting this value overrides the image used for the |
Default:
|
|
Setting this value overrides the image used for the |
Default:
|
|
Setting this value overrides the image used for the |
Default:
|
If you are going to run Jenkins somewhere other than your same project, you must provide an access token to Jenkins to access your project.
Identify the secret for the service account that has appropriate permissions to access the project Jenkins must access:
$ oc describe serviceaccount jenkins
Name: default
Labels: <none>
Secrets: { jenkins-token-uyswp }
{ jenkins-dockercfg-xcr3d }
Tokens: jenkins-token-izv1u
jenkins-token-uyswp
In this case the secret is named jenkins-token-uyswp
.
Retrieve the token from the secret:
$ oc describe secret <secret name from above>
Name: jenkins-token-uyswp
Labels: <none>
Annotations: kubernetes.io/service-account.name=jenkins,kubernetes.io/service-account.uid=32f5b661-2a8f-11e5-9528-3c970e3bf0b7
Type: kubernetes.io/service-account-token
Data
====
ca.crt: 1066 bytes
token: eyJhbGc..<content cut>....wRA
The token parameter contains the token value Jenkins requires to access the project.
The Jenkins image can be run with mounted volumes to enable persistent storage for the configuration:
/var/lib/jenkins
is the data directory where Jenkins stores configuration files, including job definitions.
To customize the official OpenShift Container Platform Jenkins image, you can use the image as a source-to-image (S2I) builder.
You can use S2I to copy your custom Jenkins jobs definitions, add additional plugins, or replace the provided config.xml
file with your own, custom, configuration.
To include your modifications in the Jenkins image, you must have a Git repository with the following directory structure:
plugins
This directory contains those binary Jenkins plugins you want to copy into Jenkins.
plugins.txt
This file lists the plugins you want to install using the following syntax:
pluginId:pluginVersion
configuration/jobs
This directory contains the Jenkins job definitions.
configuration/config.xml
This file contains your custom Jenkins configuration.
The contents of the configuration/
directory is copied to the /var/lib/jenkins/
directory, so you can also include additional files, such as credentials.xml
, there.
apiVersion: build.openshift.io/v1
kind: BuildConfig
metadata:
name: custom-jenkins-build
spec:
source: (1)
git:
uri: https://github.com/custom/repository
type: Git
strategy: (2)
sourceStrategy:
from:
kind: ImageStreamTag
name: jenkins:2
namespace: openshift
type: Source
output: (3)
to:
kind: ImageStreamTag
name: custom-jenkins:latest
1 | The source parameter defines the source Git repository with the layout described above. |
2 | The strategy parameter defines the original Jenkins image to use as a source image for the build. |
3 | The output parameter defines the resulting, customized Jenkins image that you can use in deployment configurations instead of the official Jenkins image. |
The OpenShift Container Platform Jenkins image includes the pre-installed Kubernetes plugin that allows Jenkins agents to be dynamically provisioned on multiple container hosts using Kubernetes and OpenShift Container Platform.
To use the Kubernetes plugin, OpenShift Container Platform provides images that are suitable for use as Jenkins agents, including the Base, Maven, and Node.js images.
Both the Maven and Node.js agent images are automatically configured as Kubernetes pod template images within the OpenShift Container Platform Jenkins image configuration for the Kubernetes plugin. That configuration includes labels for each of the images that can be applied to any of your Jenkins jobs under their Restrict where this project can be run setting. If the label is applied, jobs run under an OpenShift Container Platform pod running the respective agent image.
In OpenShift Container Platform 4.10 and later, the recommended pattern for running Jenkins agents using the Kubernetes plugin is to use pod templates with both With this update, in OpenShift Container Platform 4.10 and later, the non-sidecar |
The Jenkins image also provides auto-discovery and auto-configuration of additional agent images for the Kubernetes plugin.
With the OpenShift Container Platform sync plugin, the Jenkins image on Jenkins startup searches for the following within the project that it is running or the projects specifically listed in the plugin’s configuration:
Image streams that have the label role
set to jenkins-agent
.
Image stream tags that have the annotation role
set to jenkins-agent
.
Config maps that have the label role
set to jenkins-agent
.
When it finds an image stream with the appropriate label, or image stream tag with the appropriate annotation, it generates the corresponding Kubernetes plugin configuration so you can assign your Jenkins jobs to run in a pod that runs the container image that is provided by the image stream.
The name and image references of the image stream or image stream tag are mapped to the name and image fields in the Kubernetes plugin pod template. You can control the label field of the Kubernetes plugin pod template by setting an annotation on the image stream or image stream tag object with the key agent-label
. Otherwise, the name is used as the label.
Do not log in to the Jenkins console and change the pod template configuration. If you do so after the pod template is created, and the OpenShift Container Platform Sync plugin detects that the image associated with the image stream or image stream tag has changed, it replaces the pod template and overwrites those configuration changes. You cannot merge a new configuration with the existing configuration. Consider the config map approach if you have more complex configuration needs. |
When it finds a config map with the appropriate label, it assumes that any values in the key-value data payload of the config map contain Extensible Markup Language (XML) that is consistent with the configuration format for Jenkins and the Kubernetes plugin pod templates. One key benefit of using config maps, rather than image streams or image stream tags, is that you can control all the parameters of the Kubernetes plugin pod template.
jenkins-agent
kind: configmap
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: jenkins-agent
labels:
role: jenkins-agent
data:
template1: |-
<org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.PodTemplate>
<inheritFrom></inheritFrom>
<name>template1</name>
<instanceCap>2147483647</instanceCap>
<idleMinutes>0</idleMinutes>
<label>template1</label>
<serviceAccount>jenkins</serviceAccount>
<nodeSelector></nodeSelector>
<volumes/>
<containers>
<org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.ContainerTemplate>
<name>jnlp</name>
<image>openshift/jenkins-agent-maven-35-centos7:v3.10</image>
<privileged>false</privileged>
<alwaysPullImage>true</alwaysPullImage>
<workingDir>/tmp</workingDir>
<command></command>
<args>${computer.jnlpmac} ${computer.name}</args>
<ttyEnabled>false</ttyEnabled>
<resourceRequestCpu></resourceRequestCpu>
<resourceRequestMemory></resourceRequestMemory>
<resourceLimitCpu></resourceLimitCpu>
<resourceLimitMemory></resourceLimitMemory>
<envVars/>
</org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.ContainerTemplate>
</containers>
<envVars/>
<annotations/>
<imagePullSecrets/>
<nodeProperties/>
</org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.PodTemplate>
The following example shows two containers that reference image streams that are present in the openshift
namespace. One container handles the JNLP contract for launching Pods as Jenkins Agents. The other container uses an image with tools for building code in a particular coding language:
kind: configmap
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: jenkins-agent
labels:
role: jenkins-agent
data:
template2: |-
<org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.PodTemplate>
<inheritFrom></inheritFrom>
<name>template2</name>
<instanceCap>2147483647</instanceCap>
<idleMinutes>0</idleMinutes>
<label>template2</label>
<serviceAccount>jenkins</serviceAccount>
<nodeSelector></nodeSelector>
<volumes/>
<containers>
<org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.ContainerTemplate>
<name>jnlp</name>
<image>image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000/openshift/jenkins-agent-base:latest</image>
<privileged>false</privileged>
<alwaysPullImage>true</alwaysPullImage>
<workingDir>/home/jenkins/agent</workingDir>
<command></command>
<args>\$(JENKINS_SECRET) \$(JENKINS_NAME)</args>
<ttyEnabled>false</ttyEnabled>
<resourceRequestCpu></resourceRequestCpu>
<resourceRequestMemory></resourceRequestMemory>
<resourceLimitCpu></resourceLimitCpu>
<resourceLimitMemory></resourceLimitMemory>
<envVars/>
</org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.ContainerTemplate>
<org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.ContainerTemplate>
<name>java</name>
<image>image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000/openshift/java:latest</image>
<privileged>false</privileged>
<alwaysPullImage>true</alwaysPullImage>
<workingDir>/home/jenkins/agent</workingDir>
<command>cat</command>
<args></args>
<ttyEnabled>true</ttyEnabled>
<resourceRequestCpu></resourceRequestCpu>
<resourceRequestMemory></resourceRequestMemory>
<resourceLimitCpu></resourceLimitCpu>
<resourceLimitMemory></resourceLimitMemory>
<envVars/>
</org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.ContainerTemplate>
</containers>
<envVars/>
<annotations/>
<imagePullSecrets/>
<nodeProperties/>
</org.csanchez.jenkins.plugins.kubernetes.PodTemplate>
If you log in to the Jenkins console and make further changes to the pod template configuration after the pod template is created, and the OpenShift Container Platform Sync plugin detects that the config map has changed, it will replace the pod template and overwrite those configuration changes. You cannot merge a new configuration with the existing configuration. Do not log in to the Jenkins console and change the pod template configuration. If you do so after the pod template is created, and the OpenShift Container Platform Sync plugin detects that the image associated with the image stream or image stream tag has changed, it replaces the pod template and overwrites those configuration changes. You cannot merge a new configuration with the existing configuration. Consider the config map approach if you have more complex configuration needs. |
After it is installed, the OpenShift Container Platform Sync plugin monitors the API server of OpenShift Container Platform for updates to image streams, image stream tags, and config maps and adjusts the configuration of the Kubernetes plugin.
The following rules apply:
Removing the label or annotation from the config map, image stream, or image stream tag results in the deletion of any existing PodTemplate
from the configuration of the Kubernetes plugin.
If those objects are removed, the corresponding configuration is removed from the Kubernetes plugin.
Either creating appropriately labeled or annotated configmap
, ImageStream
, or ImageStreamTag
objects, or the adding of labels after their initial creation, leads to creating of a PodTemplate
in the Kubernetes-plugin configuration.
In the case of the PodTemplate
by config map form, changes to the config map data for the PodTemplate
are applied to the PodTemplate
settings in the Kubernetes plugin configuration and overrides any changes that were made to the PodTemplate
through the Jenkins UI between changes to the config map.
To use a container image as a Jenkins agent, the image must run the agent as an entry point. For more details, see the official Jenkins documentation.
If in the config map the <serviceAccount>
element of the pod template XML is the OpenShift Container Platform service account used for the resulting pod, the service account credentials are mounted into the pod. The permissions are associated with the service account and control which operations against the OpenShift Container Platform master are allowed from the pod.
Consider the following scenario with service accounts used for the pod, which is launched by the Kubernetes Plugin that runs in the OpenShift Container Platform Jenkins image.
If you use the example template for Jenkins that is provided by OpenShift Container Platform, the jenkins
service account is defined with the edit
role for the project Jenkins runs in, and the master Jenkins pod has that service account mounted.
The two default Maven and NodeJS pod templates that are injected into the Jenkins configuration are also set to use the same service account as the Jenkins master.
Any pod templates that are automatically discovered by the OpenShift Container Platform sync plugin because their image streams or image stream tags have the required label or annotations are configured to use the Jenkins master service account as their service account.
For the other ways you can provide a pod template definition into Jenkins and the Kubernetes plugin, you have to explicitly specify the service account to use. Those other ways include the Jenkins console, the podTemplate
pipeline DSL that is provided by the Kubernetes plugin, or labeling a config map whose data is the XML configuration for a pod template.
If you do not specify a value for the service account, the default
service account is used.
Ensure that whatever service account is used has the necessary permissions, roles, and so on defined within OpenShift Container Platform to manipulate whatever projects you choose to manipulate from the within the pod.
Templates provide parameter fields to define all the environment variables with predefined default values. OpenShift Container Platform provides templates to make creating a new Jenkins service easy. The Jenkins templates should be registered in the default openshift
project by your cluster administrator during the initial cluster setup.
The two available templates both define deployment configuration and a service. The templates differ in their storage strategy, which affects whether the Jenkins content persists across a pod restart.
A pod might be restarted when it is moved to another node or when an update of the deployment configuration triggers a redeployment. |
jenkins-ephemeral
uses ephemeral storage. On pod restart, all data is lost. This template is only useful for development or testing.
jenkins-persistent
uses a Persistent Volume (PV) store. Data survives a pod restart.
To use a PV store, the cluster administrator must define a PV pool in the OpenShift Container Platform deployment.
After you select which template you want, you must instantiate the template to be able to use Jenkins.
Create a new Jenkins application using one of the following methods:
A PV:
$ oc new-app jenkins-persistent
Or an emptyDir
type volume where configuration does not persist across pod restarts:
$ oc new-app jenkins-ephemeral
With both templates, you can run oc describe
on them to see all the parameters available for overriding.
For example:
$ oc describe jenkins-ephemeral
In the following example, the openshift-jee-sample
BuildConfig
object causes a Jenkins Maven agent pod to be dynamically provisioned. The pod clones some Java source code, builds a WAR file, and causes a second BuildConfig
, openshift-jee-sample-docker
to run. The second BuildConfig
layers the new WAR file into a container image.
BuildConfig
that uses the Jenkins Kubernetes pluginkind: List
apiVersion: v1
items:
- kind: ImageStream
apiVersion: image.openshift.io/v1
metadata:
name: openshift-jee-sample
- kind: BuildConfig
apiVersion: build.openshift.io/v1
metadata:
name: openshift-jee-sample-docker
spec:
strategy:
type: Docker
source:
type: Docker
dockerfile: |-
FROM openshift/wildfly-101-centos7:latest
COPY ROOT.war /wildfly/standalone/deployments/ROOT.war
CMD $STI_SCRIPTS_PATH/run
binary:
asFile: ROOT.war
output:
to:
kind: ImageStreamTag
name: openshift-jee-sample:latest
- kind: BuildConfig
apiVersion: build.openshift.io/v1
metadata:
name: openshift-jee-sample
spec:
strategy:
type: JenkinsPipeline
jenkinsPipelineStrategy:
jenkinsfile: |-
node("maven") {
sh "git clone https://github.com/openshift/openshift-jee-sample.git ."
sh "mvn -B -Popenshift package"
sh "oc start-build -F openshift-jee-sample-docker --from-file=target/ROOT.war"
}
triggers:
- type: ConfigChange
It is also possible to override the specification of the dynamically created Jenkins agent pod. The following is a modification to the preceding example, which overrides the container memory and specifies an environment variable.
BuildConfig
that uses the Jenkins Kubernetes Plugin, specifying memory limit and environment variablekind: BuildConfig
apiVersion: build.openshift.io/v1
metadata:
name: openshift-jee-sample
spec:
strategy:
type: JenkinsPipeline
jenkinsPipelineStrategy:
jenkinsfile: |-
podTemplate(label: "mypod", (1)
cloud: "openshift", (2)
inheritFrom: "maven", (3)
containers: [
containerTemplate(name: "jnlp", (4)
image: "openshift/jenkins-agent-maven-35-centos7:v3.10", (5)
resourceRequestMemory: "512Mi", (6)
resourceLimitMemory: "512Mi", (7)
envVars: [
envVar(key: "CONTAINER_HEAP_PERCENT", value: "0.25") (8)
])
]) {
node("mypod") { (9)
sh "git clone https://github.com/openshift/openshift-jee-sample.git ."
sh "mvn -B -Popenshift package"
sh "oc start-build -F openshift-jee-sample-docker --from-file=target/ROOT.war"
}
}
triggers:
- type: ConfigChange
1 | A new pod template called mypod is defined dynamically. The new pod template name is referenced in the node stanza. |
2 | The cloud value must be set to openshift . |
3 | The new pod template can inherit its configuration from an existing pod template. In this case, inherited from the Maven pod template that is pre-defined by OpenShift Container Platform. |
4 | This example overrides values in the pre-existing container, and must be specified by name. All Jenkins agent images shipped with OpenShift Container Platform use the Container name jnlp . |
5 | Specify the container image name again. This is a known issue. |
6 | A memory request of 512 Mi is specified. |
7 | A memory limit of 512 Mi is specified. |
8 | An environment variable CONTAINER_HEAP_PERCENT , with value 0.25 , is specified. |
9 | The node stanza references the name of the defined pod template. |
By default, the pod is deleted when the build completes. This behavior can be modified with the plugin or within a pipeline Jenkinsfile.
Upstream Jenkins has more recently introduced a YAML declarative format for defining a podTemplate
pipeline DSL in-line with your pipelines. An example of this format, using the sample java-builder
pod template that is defined in the OpenShift Container Platform Jenkins image:
def nodeLabel = 'java-buidler'
pipeline {
agent {
kubernetes {
cloud 'openshift'
label nodeLabel
yaml """
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
labels:
worker: ${nodeLabel}
spec:
containers:
- name: jnlp
image: image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000/openshift/jenkins-agent-base:latest
args: ['\$(JENKINS_SECRET)', '\$(JENKINS_NAME)']
- name: java
image: image-registry.openshift-image-registry.svc:5000/openshift/java:latest
command:
- cat
tty: true
"""
}
}
options {
timeout(time: 20, unit: 'MINUTES')
}
stages {
stage('Build App') {
steps {
container("java") {
sh "mvn --version"
}
}
}
}
}
When deployed by the provided Jenkins Ephemeral or Jenkins Persistent templates, the default memory limit is 1 Gi
.
By default, all other process that run in the Jenkins container cannot use more than a total of 512 MiB
of memory. If they require more memory, the container halts. It is therefore highly recommended that pipelines run external commands in an agent container wherever possible.
And if Project
quotas allow for it, see recommendations from the Jenkins documentation on what a Jenkins master should have from a memory perspective. Those recommendations proscribe to allocate even more memory for the Jenkins master.
It is recommended to specify memory request and limit values on agent containers created by the Jenkins Kubernetes plugin. Admin users can set default values on a per-agent image basis through the Jenkins configuration. The memory request and limit parameters can also be overridden on a per-container basis.
You can increase the amount of memory available to Jenkins by overriding the MEMORY_LIMIT
parameter when instantiating the Jenkins Ephemeral or Jenkins Persistent template.
See Base image options for more information on the Red Hat Universal Base Images (UBI).