Book Image

Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment

By : Sander Rossel
Book Image

Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment

By: Sander Rossel

Overview of this book

The challenge faced by many teams while implementing Continuous Deployment is that it requires the use of many tools and processes that all work together. Learning and implementing all these tools (correctly) takes a lot of time and effort, leading people to wonder whether it's really worth it. This book sets up a project to show you the different steps, processes, and tools in Continuous Deployment and the actual problems they solve. We start by introducing Continuous Integration (CI), deployment, and delivery as well as providing an overview of the tools used in CI. You'll then create a web app and see how Git can be used in a CI environment. Moving on, you'll explore unit testing using Jasmine and browser testing using Karma and Selenium for your app. You'll also find out how to automate tasks using Gulp and Jenkins. Next, you'll get acquainted with database integration for different platforms, such as MongoDB and PostgreSQL. Finally, you'll set up different Jenkins jobs to integrate with Node.js and C# projects, and Jenkins pipelines to make branching easier. By the end of the book, you'll have implemented Continuous Delivery and deployment from scratch.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Gulp basics

In abstract terms, a task runner takes some input, works with that, and produces an output. That output could then be used for further processing. For example, a JavaScript file could be the input, a minifying job could be the process (that is making your JavaScript unreadable, but very compact), and the minified JavaScript would be the output. Now, the minified JavaScript could be input to a new test process, which would have some report as its output. Gulp does exactly this. Gulp is a little different from other task runners in a way that it keeps intermediate results in memory instead of writing them to disk.

Installing Gulp is as easy as doing npm install. We also want the Gulp CLI for easy use:

npm install gulp --save-dev
npm install gulp-cli -g

The next thing we need is a so-called gulpfile. In the root of your project, Chapter06, in the book's GitHub repository...