Difference between revisions of "Continuous integration"
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↑ https://about.gitlab.com/product/continuous-integration/
↑ https://about.gitlab.com/2015/09/22/gitlab-8-0-released/
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
* [[CloudBees]] | * [[CloudBees]] | ||
* [[Jenkins]] | * [[Jenkins]] | ||
− | * [[GitLab]] ([[2011]]) | + | * [[GitLab]] ([[2011]]), .<code>gitlab-ci.yml</code> |
* [[GitHub]] (2008) | * [[GitHub]] (2008) | ||
* Shippable | * Shippable |
Revision as of 06:03, 30 June 2020
CI is the practice of integrating code into a repository and building/testing each change automatically, as early as possible. There are several tools in the market to facilitate Continuous Integration / Continuous Delivery (CI/CD) practices, such as GitLab and Jenkins.
GitLab included by default CI functionalities[1] since 22/09/2015 in GitLab 8.0[2] and CD functionalities since 2016. GitLab CI/CD pipelines are configured using a YAML file called .gitlab-ci.yml
Other CI tools include:
- Azure DevOps
- Bamboo
- CircleCI
- CloudBees
- Jenkins
- GitLab (2011), .
gitlab-ci.yml
- GitHub (2008)
- Shippable
- JetBrains TeamCity (2006)
- AWS CodePipelines
- Travis (2011)
Activities
- Review wikipedia comparison of CI tools: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_continuous_integration_software
- Read StackOverflow CI questions: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/continuous-integration?tab=Votes
See also
- Continuous integration (Continuous delivery): GitLab CI, TeamCity, Travis CI, Jenkins, CloudBees, AWS CodePipelines, Azure Pipelines, XebiaLabs, Codefresh, GitHub, Pipeline, CircleCI, JFrog Pipelines, Concourse CI, Dagger, Bitbucket Pipelines, Buildkite, Google Cloud Build
- Kubernetes, Docker
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