Difference between revisions of "GitHub Actions"
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↑ https://techcrunch.com/2018/10/16/github-launches-actions-its-workflow-automation-tool/
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− | [[wikipedia:Github Actions]] allows building [[continuous integration]] and [[continuous deployment]] pipelines for testing, releasing and deploying software without the use of third-party websites/platforms. | + | [[wikipedia:Github Actions]] (2018)<ref>https://techcrunch.com/2018/10/16/github-launches-actions-its-workflow-automation-tool/</ref> allows building [[continuous integration]] and [[continuous deployment]] pipelines for testing, releasing and deploying software without the use of third-party websites/platforms. |
Revision as of 13:22, 25 April 2021
wikipedia:Github Actions (2018)[1] allows building continuous integration and continuous deployment pipelines for testing, releasing and deploying software without the use of third-party websites/platforms.
See also
- GitHub, GitHub Actions, GitHub Actions Runner, Events, CodeQL, GitHub Desktop, GitHub organization, base permissions, GitHub Copilot,
.gitignore
, GitHub Codespaces, GitHub Marketplace, GitHub Apps, GitHub Enterprise Server, GitHub CLI (gh
), Dependabot, GitHub security,.github/
, GitHub code scanning, GitHub Pages, GitHub Packages, GitHub Advanced Security, GitHub Mobile, GitHub Importer, GitHub versions, SSH keys - 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
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