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We welcome contributions from anyone, but for the benefit of Jenkins users we ask that you look for plugins solving the same or similar problems to see whether you can join forces with existing maintainers. You can find an overview of existing plugins on https://plugins.jenkins.io. Feel free to ask on the jenkinsci-dev mailing list to see whether anyone is aware of another plugin implementing something similar to what you’re planning to do.
Make sure your plugin follows the naming conventions.
All plugins distributed by the Jenkins project need to be free and open source software.
This applies to the plugin source code as well as all its dependencies.
Make sure to specify the license both in the pom.xml
file, as well as a LICENSE
file in your repository.
We recommend use of the MIT license which is used for Jenkins core and most plugins and libraries, but any OSI-approved open source license will do.
Jenkins plugins distributed via Jenkins project update sites need to be hosted in the jenkinsci GitHub organization, so you will need a user account on GitHub.
To actually release your plugin, you will need a Jenkins community account that will give you access to the issue tracker, wiki, and Maven repository.