Book Image

Hands-On Continuous Integration and Delivery

By : Jean-Marcel Belmont
Book Image

Hands-On Continuous Integration and Delivery

By: Jean-Marcel Belmont

Overview of this book

Hands-On Continuous Integration and Delivery starts with the fundamentals of continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery (CD) and where it fits in the DevOps ecosystem. You will explore the importance of stakeholder collaboration as part of CI/CD. As you make your way through the chapters, you will get to grips with Jenkins UI, and learn to install Jenkins on different platforms, add plugins, and write freestyle scripts. Next, you will gain hands-on experience of developing plugins with Jenkins UI, building the Jenkins 2.0 pipeline, and performing Docker integration. In the concluding chapters, you will install Travis CI and Circle CI and carry out scripting, logging, and debugging, helping you to acquire a broad knowledge of CI/CD with Travis CI and CircleCI. By the end of this book, you will have a detailed understanding of best practices for CI/CD systems and be able to implement them with confidence.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Comparing CircleCI and Jenkins

Jenkins is a self-contained and open source automation server that is customizable and requires setup and configuration at the organization level. Remember in the Jenkins CI chapters, we spent some time installing Jenkins in the Windows, Linux, and macOS operating systems. We also had the ability to configure Jenkins however we wanted. While this is great for software companies with dedicated teams in operations, DevOps, and so on, it is not as great for open source projects where often lone developers are setting up environments for their personal projects.

CircleCI was designed around the principle of open source development and for ease of use. CircleCI can be set up within minutes of creating a project in the GitHub and Bitbucket platforms. Although CircleCI is not as customizable as Jenkins CI in this respect, it has the distinct advantage of...