Has anyone considered a modification to the git plugin (or other SCM plugins), to reduce the total number of checkouts physically required on a slave machine?
We run 6 mult-configuration projects (debug and release configurations) on a handful of computers. Each configuration requires one code checkout (2.1 G). That's 2.1*2*6 = 25.2 G on each slave machine, for the source code only. The master build machine requires another 12.6 G, because it checks out additional copies *outside* the scope of build directories (no one knows why). Forget about leaving "Advanced Project Options" > "Restrict where this project can be run" unchecked, because if the build is started on a different computer each time, the code has to be checked out at the top level (potentially adding the 12.6 G to each slave machine, if the load is shared). Perhaps these issues have already been addressed; we run Jenkins version 1.524. Suggestions: a) Live with redundant code checkouts b) Stop using the git plugin, and have my shell script handle code checkout c) Rewrite the git plugin, or add an option, to allow one checkout per project on a slave. Technically this is the minimum number of checkouts allowed, because each project is allowed to access a unique sha1 hash. d) Add an option to the Jenkins core to disregard the top-level code checkouts (which I gather are done for some kind of consistency check...we can live without that check I think). e) I don't know Java and don't have much free time, otherwise I would write a completely new git plugin. Thanks for any suggestions, especially if I am missing something obvious here. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Jenkins Users" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to jenkinsci-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.