How to load data from Jenkins to MongoDB
Learn how to use Airbyte to synchronize your Jenkins data into MongoDB within minutes.


Building your pipeline or Using Airbyte
Airbyte is the only open source solution empowering data teams to meet all their growing custom business demands in the new AI era.
Building in-house pipelines
- Inconsistent and inaccurate data
- Laborious and expensive
- Brittle and inflexible
After Airbyte
- Reliable and accurate
- Extensible and scalable for all your needs
- Deployed and governed your way
Start syncing with Airbyte in 3 easy steps within 10 minutes



Take a virtual tour
Demo video of Airbyte Cloud
Demo video of AI Connector Builder
Setup Complexities simplified!
Simple & Easy to use Interface
Airbyte is built to get out of your way. Our clean, modern interface walks you through setup, so you can go from zero to sync in minutes—without deep technical expertise.
Guided Tour: Assisting you in building connections
Whether you’re setting up your first connection or managing complex syncs, Airbyte’s UI and documentation help you move with confidence. No guesswork. Just clarity.
Airbyte AI Assistant that will act as your sidekick in building your data pipelines in Minutes
Airbyte’s built-in assistant helps you choose sources, set destinations, and configure syncs quickly. It’s like having a data engineer on call—without the overhead.
What sets Airbyte Apart
Modern GenAI Workflows
Streamline AI workflows with Airbyte: load unstructured data into vector stores like Pinecone, Weaviate, and Milvus. Supports RAG transformations with LangChain chunking and embeddings from OpenAI, Cohere, etc., all in one operation.
Move Large Volumes, Fast
Quickly get up and running with a 5-minute setup that enables both incremental and full refreshes for databases of any size, seamlessly scaling to handle large data volumes. Our optimized architecture overcomes performance bottlenecks, ensuring efficient data synchronization even as your datasets grow from gigabytes to petabytes.
An Extensible Open-Source Standard
More than 1,000 developers contribute to Airbyte’s connectors, different interfaces (UI, API, Terraform Provider, Python Library), and integrations with the rest of the stack. Airbyte’s AI Connector Builder lets you edit or add new connectors in minutes.
Full Control & Security
Airbyte secures your data with cloud-hosted, self-hosted or hybrid deployment options. Single Sign-On (SSO) and Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) ensure only authorized users have access with the right permissions. Airbyte acts as a HIPAA conduit and supports compliance with CCPA, GDPR, and SOC2.
Fully Featured & Integrated
Airbyte automates schema evolution for seamless data flow, and utilizes efficient Change Data Capture (CDC) for real-time updates. Select only the columns you need, and leverage our dbt integration for powerful data transformations.
Enterprise Support with SLAs
Airbyte Self-Managed Enterprise comes with dedicated support and guaranteed service level agreements (SLAs), ensuring that your data movement infrastructure remains reliable and performant, and expert assistance is available when needed.
What our users say

Raman Singh
Predictable, straightforward pricing model that simplified budgeting and significantly reduced overall spend

Chase Zieman

“Airbyte helped us accelerate our progress by years, compared to our competitors. We don’t need to worry about connectors and focus on creating value for our users instead of building infrastructure. That’s priceless. The time and energy saved allows us to disrupt and grow faster.”

Rupak Patel
"With Airbyte, we could just push a few buttons, allow API access, and bring all the data into Google BigQuery. By blending all the different marketing data sources, we can gain valuable insights."
How to Sync to Manually
Step 1: Set Up Jenkins Job
Start by creating or configuring a Jenkins job that generates or holds the data you want to transfer. This could be part of a build process, a post-build action, or a standalone job. Ensure the data is stored in a file format like JSON, CSV, or any text-based format that MongoDB can easily process.
Step 2: Install MongoDB on the Jenkins Server
If MongoDB is not already installed on your Jenkins server, install it. You can download the appropriate version from the MongoDB website and follow the installation instructions for your operating system. This allows your Jenkins server to interact directly with the MongoDB instance.
Step 3: Export Data from Jenkins
Configure your Jenkins job to export the necessary data to a file. Use build steps within Jenkins, such as executing a shell script, to output data to a file format that MongoDB can read. For example, you can use a script to output build metrics or logs to a JSON file.
Step 4: Write a Script to Import Data into MongoDB
Create a script that will read the exported data file and insert it into MongoDB. You can use a language like Python with the PyMongo library or a shell script with MongoDB's `mongoimport` tool. Ensure your script handles authentication and connects to the correct MongoDB database and collection.
Step 5: Integrate the Script into Jenkins
Add a build step in your Jenkins job to execute the script you wrote in the previous step. This can be done by adding a shell build step that runs the script, passing any necessary parameters like file paths or database credentials.
Step 6: Schedule or Trigger Data Transfer
Decide how and when the data transfer should occur. You might want to schedule the Jenkins job to run at specific intervals using Jenkins' built-in scheduling capabilities or set it to trigger after certain events, like a successful build completion.
Step 7: Verify Data Transfer and Monitor for Errors
Ensure that data is being correctly transferred to MongoDB by checking the database contents and logging any errors that occur during the process. You can add a post-build action in Jenkins to send notifications or log status messages. Continuously monitor the logs on both Jenkins and MongoDB for any discrepancies or failures, adjusting your scripts as necessary to handle errors gracefully.
By following these steps, you can effectively transfer data from Jenkins to MongoDB without using third-party connectors or integrations.