Changelog

New pipelines will have a default branch of 'main' from April

Update: This change has now been completed.

Over the past two years, GitHub, GitLab, and other Git services have updated their default branch names from "master" to "main" – you can read more about the motivation for the change in this statement from the Software Freedom Conservancy.

In line with this change, we will be updating the default branch for newly created pipelines from "master" to "main" from April 1st, 2023. This will not impact existing pipelines.

You can configure a given pipeline's default branch through the user interface, as well as the REST API and GraphQL.

Pipeline default branch

If you would like to retain "master" as the default branch of new pipelines, you may set an organization-level default branch in Pipeline Settings, which will then be used for new pipelines:

Organization default branch

David

UI Improvements

If you've ever thought "I need more purple in my life" then we've got some exciting news for you... 💜

Thumb.png

We've made some changes to make navigation as simple and obvious as possible across all parts of the product. We've introduced a more familiar navigation pattern to Test Analytics, updated the global nav to clearly identify where you are in the app, and introduced a new visual style to the sidebar. It's a coat of paint, but also a foundation for the features and improvements you can expect in the coming months.

We're focused on the next-generation of Buildkite—from small improvements to whole new products and experience–so you can consider this just a taste of what's to come.

Read the full post

Buzz

Updated docs navigation

We've updated the navigation in the documentation to help you find the content you need quickly. 🎉

docs-nav-refresh.png

These changes include:

  • Having the on-page navigation highlight which section you're reading.
  • Revamping the style of the global navigation bar to a single row.
  • Focusing on up-to-date and high-value pages like security while deemphasizing deprecated content.
  • Highlighting the Overview page and Getting started guide for Pipelines.
  • Updating the typography to improve readability.

Try out the new navigation

Michael

New builds now default to the current branch

Pipelines now considers your current branch when surfacing options for a new build. This removes the friction of a new build defaulting to main.

This has been a highly-requested feature from our customers, and we’re so excited to share that the change is now live.

Screenshot 2023-03-24 at 2.22.06 pm.png

Oz

New docs for using GitHub merge queues

We’ve added a guide to help you set up merge queues in your pipelines. Merge queues are a feature of GitHub to improve development velocity on busy branches. ✨

Screenshot of GitHub merge queue docs

See Using GitHub merge queues to learn more. 📚

Michael

Agent v3.43.1 + Elastic Stack v5.16.1 release

The v3.43.1 version of the buildkite-agent and the v5.16.1 version of the AWS elastic stack are now available.

Agent v3.43.1 fixes a bug introduced in v3.43.0 where jobs running on agents in --acquire-job mode will fail after about ~4.5 minutes. Agents running in non-acquire mode are not affected, and most of our customers don't use --acquire-job mode.

AWS Elastic Stack v5.16.1 upgrades the agent to this new version. Most elastic stack installations will not be affected by the above agent bug, but we still recommend upgrading to the latest version.

For a full list of additions, changes, and fixes, see the buildkite-agent changelog and the elastic-ci-stack-for-aws changelog on GitHub.

Benno

Agent v3.43.0 and AWS Elastic Stack v5.16.0 release (addressing Git CVEs)

The 3.43.0 version of the buildkite-agent and the 5.16.0 version of the AWS elastic stack are now available.

This agent release fixes a panic that was accidentally added in v3.42.0, adds a flag to allow empty results with doing an artifact search, and Docker images for linux/arm64. Also, start --acquire-job now retries while the job is locked.

This agent release has been added to the 5.16.0 release of the elastic stack, which also includes Git v2.39.1 to address recent security vulnerabilities in Git, and now pushes access logs to Cloudwatch for Linux instances.

Two weeks ago we released the 3.42.0 version of the agent and the 5.15.0 version of the AWS elastic stack. This agent has added an experimental inbuilt status page, and a new agent-startup hook. The 5.15.0 release of the elastic stack added a parameter to enable server side encryption on s3 buckets created in the stack.

For a full list of additions, changes, and fixes, see the buildkite-agent changelog and the elastic-ci-stack-for-aws changelog on GitHub.

Josh

Configure your SSO session duration

configure_session_duration.png

Customers using SSO authentication can now easily configure the SSO session duration via the settings UI–enabling greater control over your security posture.

Once the specified duration elapses, the user session will expire requiring re-authentication to access Buildkite.

Learn more about how to set up your SSO session duration

James

Announcing the Developer plan

We’ve released the Developer plan, which replaces the legacy Free plan. The Developer plan continues to be free-of-charge, with the following updates:

  • Continue to use the Buildkite platform to build, test, and deploy software at scale, with your team of up to 3 users
  • Retain your builds for up to 30 days

You can learn more about our plans on our pricing page.

James

Agent v3.41.0 and AWS Elastic Stack v5.14.0 release

The 3.41.0 version of the buildkite-agent and the 5.14.0 version of the AWS elastic stack are now available.

The agent has added the ability to set a name for tracing, and experimental support to request OIDC tokens from the Buildkite backend. This agent release has been added to the 5.14.0 release of the elastic stack, as well as a parameter to encrypt EBS volumes and, "Desired Capacity" has been added to the list of Cloudwatch metrics collected from the stack's Autoscaling Group.

For a full list of additions, changes, and fixes, see the buildkite-agent changelog and the elastic-ci-stack-for-aws changelog on GitHub.

Narthana

Introducing: Themed Job Logs

Job logs now have the addition of light theme on build summaries – ensuring those that find lower contrast easy-to-read have an alternative option.

Job log showing both light and dark themes

Unblocking engineers - and your work – is the core theme of how we think of everything here at Buildkite, including usability. The new light theme was inspired by Ethan Schoonover's Solarized theme. Now, when you open a job log, you’ll see a new “Theme” control – enabling you to switch between our current dark mode theme and the new light theme. Your preference will be saved for future views, with the option for you to switch views.

"Theme" button at the top of a job for switching job log themes

As always, we'd love your feedback. Drop into our Slack community, or send us an email: hello@buildkite.com 👋

Kalo

Agent v3.40.0 and AWS Elastic Stack v5.13.0 release

The 3.40.0 version of the buildkite-agent and the 5.13.0 version of the AWS elastic stack are now available.

This release adds agent binaries for Windows/arm64, and fixes a few minor security issues. This agent release has been added to the release of the elastic stack.

For full list of additions, changes, and fixes, see the buildkite-agent changelog and the elastic-ci-stack-for-aws changelog on GitHub.

Josh

Multiple GitHub Enterprise Servers support

Today we’re introducing the ability to configure multiple GitHub Enterprise Servers.

Screenshot 2022-11-09 at 10.42.56 am.png

Some of our bigger teams with different requirements for source control have multiple GitHub Enterprise Server installations. We’ve only supported one per Buildkite organization — until now. If you’re on a compatible plan, you can now add as many different servers as you like from the repository providers page in your organization settings.

We love feedback! If you use this feature and love it, or it doesn’t quite do what you need, drop into our Slack community, or send us an email: hello@buildkite.com 👋

Samuel

Buildkite and OpenSSL (CVE-2022-3786, CVE-2022-3602)

Last week a serious vulnerability (CVE-2022-3786, CVE-2022-3602), was disclosed in the OpenSSL library. We’ve ensured that Buildkite internal systems, and our open source projects, are not vulnerable to this exploit.

We've performed an audit on our internal software and infrastructure, and we have no instances of OpenSSL 3.0.x in use directly or via dependencies, and therefore are not vulnerable to this exploit.

Additionally we've reviewed our open source projects (including the Buildkite Agent and the Elastic CI Stack for AWS) and have verified they also don't have any use of OpenSSL 3.0.x and are not vulnerable to (CVE-2022-3786, CVE-2022-3602).

If you have any further questions please contact support@buildkite.com.

James

Agent v3.39.1 and AWS Elastic Stack v5.11.2 release

The 3.39.1 version of the buildkite-agent and the 5.11.2 version of the AWS Elastic Stack are now available.

The 3.39.1 version of the buildkite agent is a security update that addresses the security advisory, that was previously disclosed here. This advisory applied to agents running in the same environment as the recently-released bash 5.2.

The 5.11.2 version of the AWS Elastic Stack updates the buildkite-agent to v3.39.1 and also fixes an issue with the date command in the log collector.

For the full list of additions, changes, and fixes, see the buildkite-agent changelog and the elastic-ci-stack-for-aws changelog on GitHub.

Narthana

Security Advisory for Buildkite Agent and Bash 5.2

UPDATE: Agent 3.39.1 and AWS Elastic Stack for Buildkite 5.11.2 have been released to resolve this issue. We recommend you update to these versions if you are running Bash 5.2.

Bash 5.2 and the Buildkite Agent have a compatibility issue. This issue may reveal the values of environment variables exported by hooks that contain multiple lines. We recommend avoiding updating Bash until the Agent has been updated as well.

This new version of Bash was released 16 days ago. It includes an update that changes how environment variables are exported. When variables contain multiple lines Bash now exports them using $'...' style quoting.

The Buildkite Agent allows using hooks to customise how jobs are run. These hooks are Bash scripts. Hooks can change environment variables, and those changes are propagated into later hooks and commands. This is done by exporting the variables from the Bash script and parsing that output. It doesn't yet understand this new style of quoting, so environment variables with newlines are currently parsing incorrectly, and so are being lost between hooks and commands.

The Agent will print the names of environment variables which are changed by hooks. This new style of quote is mis-parsed, however, and the value may be considered part of the name. This can cause an escaped version of the value to be printed within the job log by mistake.

Log output showing a multi-line environment value in the new quoting style

We're working on a fix to the agent, and should have a release out shortly.

In the meantime, we recommend remaining on Bash 5.1 or lower. You can check your Bash version with bash --version.

If you are running Bash 5.2 already, we recommend auditing your environment variables to see if any secrets contain newlines. If so, we recommend revoking those secrets, and rotating them to new values once you have downgraded Bash, or upgraded the Agent.

Samuel

Introducing: The Build Issues Tab

Failed builds now jump straight to a new Issues tab on the build page 🗂

Build page with Issues tab highlighted showing an error annotation and failed job

Builds with hundreds of jobs can hide what really matters. Instead of scrolling through the noise, Issues shows you only the failed annotations and jobs in a build. This helps you get your code shipping faster. And the rest of your jobs are only a tab click away.

Check out the blog post to learn more about this change.

As always, we'd love your feedback. Drop into our Slack community, or say hi: hello@buildkite.com 👋

Samuel

Build Retention

Update, Sep 2023: We are no longer offering per pipeline build retention. For more information on retention per plan, see check out the docs.

Today, we're introducing build retention controls for pipelines so you can automatically remove old builds ⏰🧨

Build retention configuration panel showing options including time period and number of builds to keep

You can now configure pipelines to keep builds for a certain period of time. There's also an option to always keep a minimum number of the latest builds, so you don't lose context on pipelines that don't move quite so fast. These are available today — find any pipeline, then go to Settings, Builds, and look for the Build Retention section.

This change is currently optional, but we'll be announcing a broader rollout for build retention soon.

We'd love to hear from you if you find these controls useful, or if they don't quite fit your needs first. Drop into our Slack community, or send us an email: hello@buildkite.com 👋

Samuel

Finding failures faster

Today we're rolling out some updates to Buildkite Pipelines that put developer productivity front and center by making failures more bold, and helping you find and fix failures faster:

Focused screenshot of some build steps in different states

Pipelines has grown many features over the years, with some of those additions making it harder to identify a failed build and figure out how to fix it. Check out the blog post to learn more about this first step, and our plans to deliver greater context within builds and across builds over time.

We'd love to hear what you think! Whether you reckon this is fresh as, or it’s missed the mark, drop into our Slack community, or send us an email: hello@buildkite.com 👋

Samuel

New GraphQL API schema browser

We've released a new schema browser for our GraphQL API 🎉

Screenshot of the schema browser showing the Agent object pm.png

You can now easily browse the entire structure of the API right there in the docs, without needing to log in first

Sam

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