The Jenkins project was originally named
Hudson, and was renamed in 2011 after a dispute with
Oracle, which had
forked the project and claimed rights to the project name. The Oracle fork,
Hudson, continued to be developed for a time before being donated to the
Eclipse Foundation. Oracle's Hudson is no longer maintained and was announced as obsolete in February 2017. Around 2007 Hudson became known as a better alternative to
Cruise Control and other open-source build-servers. At the
JavaOne conference in May 2008 the software won the Duke's Choice Award in the Developer Solutions category. During November 2010, after the acquisition of
Sun Microsystems by
Oracle, an issue arose in the Hudson community with respect to the infrastructure used, which grew to encompass questions over the stewardship and control by Oracle. Negotiations between the principal project contributors and Oracle took place, and although there were many areas of agreement a key sticking point was the
trademarked name "Hudson," after Oracle claimed the right to the name and applied for a trademark in December 2010. As a result, on January 11, 2011, a call for votes was made to change the project name from "Hudson" to "Jenkins." The proposal was overwhelmingly approved by a community vote on January 29, 2011, creating the Jenkins project. On February 1, 2011, Oracle said that they intended to continue development of Hudson, and considered Jenkins a fork rather than a rename. Jenkins and Hudson therefore continued as two independent projects, each claiming the other was the fork. As of June 2019, the Jenkins organization on
GitHub had 667 project members and around 2,200 public repositories, compared with Hudson's 28 project members and 20 public repositories with the last update in 2016. In 2011, creator
Kohsuke Kawaguchi received an
O'Reilly Open Source Award for his work on the Hudson/Jenkins project. On April 20, 2016, version 2 was released with the
Pipeline plugin enabled by default. The plugin allows for writing build instructions using a domain specific language based on
Apache Groovy. Jenkins replaced Hudson since February 8, 2017 in Eclipse. with support for different cloud providers including AWS EKS among others. Later, Jenkins X became an independent project under the
Continuous Delivery Foundation. In March 2019, Jenkins joined the
Continuous Delivery Foundation, a new subsidiary of the
Linux Foundation, as a founding project. In August 2020, Jenkins reached the graduated status in the foundation. == Builds ==