Setting up Jenkins 1 on Windows

Installing Jenkins

Download the Jenkins Windows Installer from https://jenkins.io/

The installer configures Jenkins to run as a service using the SYSTEM user which can be dangerous, it’s safer to change the user’s service to a non priviledged one:

http://antagonisticpleiotropy.blogspot.fr/2012/08/running-jenkins-in-windows-with-regular.html

Configuring Jenkins

Installing JDK 8

Through Jenkins administration, add a JDK 8 automatic installer.

Installing Maven

Through Jenkins administration, add a Maven automatic installer from Apache’s site.

Installing PhantomJS

Install binaries from http://phantomjs.org/download.html

Check that the executable is included in PATH:

phantomjs --version
2.1.1

Installing NodeJS

Jenkins NodeJS plugin does not work on Windows, so we’ll do a manual installation.

Download latest LTS (Long Term Support) 64-bit version from http://nodejs.org/

Don’t install NodeJS to the default directory C:\Program Files\nodejs as it requires administration rights, prefer a simpler path like c:\nodejs.

Edit C:\nodejs\node_modules\npm\npmrc to replace

prefix=${APPDATA}\npm

by

prefix=C:\nodejs\node_modules\npm

Add the ‘C:\nodejs\node_modules\npm’ folder to the PATH environment variable, remove the one that was added by the installer: ‘C:\Users<user>\AppData\Roaming\npm’

npm may require Git, install it from https://git-for-windows.github.io/

Add Bower and Gulp:

npm install -g bower gulp
bower --version
gulp --version

It can be useful to have multiple versions of NodeJS on the same machine but nvm equivalents on Windows focus more on development environment than continuous integration. So if a job requires another version of NodeJS, change its PATH variable.