Book Image

Learning Continuous Integration with Jenkins - Second Edition

By : Nikhil Pathania
Book Image

Learning Continuous Integration with Jenkins - Second Edition

By: Nikhil Pathania

Overview of this book

In past few years, agile software development has seen tremendous growth. There is a huge demand for software delivery solutions that are fast yet flexible to numerous amendments. As a result, Continuous Integration (CI) and Continuous Delivery (CD) methodologies are gaining popularity. This book starts off by explaining the concepts of CI and its significance in the Agile. Next, you'll learn how to configure and set up Jenkins in many different ways. The book exploits the concept of "pipeline as code" and various other features introduced in the Jenkins 2.x release to their full potential. We also talk in detail about the new Jenkins Blue Ocean interface and the features that help to quickly and easily create a CI pipeline. Then we dive into the various features offered by Jenkins one by one, exploiting them for CI and CD. Jenkins' core functionality and flexibility allows it to fit in a variety of environments and can help streamline the development process for all stakeholders. Next, you'll be introduced to CD and will learn how to achieve it using Jenkins. Through this book's wealth of best practices and real-world tips, you'll discover how easy it is to implement CI and CD using Jenkins.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we learned how to add and configure Jenkins slaves on standalone Windows and Linux machines (physical/VMs), using two widely used methods: Launching Jenkins slave via SSH and Launching Jenkins Slave via Java Web Start. We also learned how to install and configure the Docker plugin for Jenkins that allows us to create on-demand Docker containers (Jenkins slaves) for our CI.

In the next chapter, we will learn how to implement continuous integration using Jenkins, and we will utilize the distributed build farm using Jenkins Docker containers (Jenkins slaves) to perform our CI.