Branch Filtering & PR Discovery
This document explains how Jenkins controls which branches and pull requests are built in multibranch pipelines. Correct configuration prevents unnecessary builds and reduces load.
Why Branch Filtering Matters​
Without filtering:
- Every branch triggers jobs
- Controller load increases
- Noise hides real failures
- Costs increase (agents, time)
Filtering ensures Jenkins builds only what matters.
Branch Discovery (High-Level)​
Branch discovery controls:
- Which branches Jenkins detects
- Whether to build branches automatically
Typical options:
- Discover all branches
- Discover branches with Jenkinsfile
- Exclude branches by name or pattern
Branch Name Filtering​
Use include/exclude patterns to control branches.
Examples:
- Include:
main|develop|release/.* - Exclude:
feature/.*|experimental/.*
Benefits:
- Fewer jobs
- Faster indexing
- Clear CI signal
Pull Request (PR) Discovery​
PR discovery allows Jenkins to:
- Detect open PRs
- Run validation pipelines
- Report status back to SCM
Common PR strategies:
- Build PR head only
- Build PR with target branch merge
- Both (costly)
PR Build Strategies (Conceptual)​
- Head only: Tests PR changes alone
- Merge with target: Tests how PR behaves after merge (safer)
Enterprise pipelines usually prefer merge-based PR builds.
Forked Repository PRs​
Special considerations:
- Limited credentials
- Reduced permissions
- Higher security risk
Best practice:
- Use restricted credentials
- Avoid exposing secrets to forks
Jenkinsfile Path Filtering​
Jenkins can be configured to:
- Look for Jenkinsfile in custom paths
- Ignore branches without Jenkinsfile
This reduces accidental builds.
Common Misconfigurations​
- Building every branch by default
- No PR validation
- Using merge strategy without understanding cost
- Exposing secrets to forked PRs
Performance Tips​
- Filter branches aggressively
- Avoid building archived branches
- Use webhook-triggered indexing
- Limit PR strategies
Interview Focus Areas​
- Branch discovery vs filtering
- PR head vs merge strategy
- Security risks with forked PRs