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Mastering Jenkins

You're reading from   Mastering Jenkins Configure and extend Jenkins to architect, build, and automate efficient software delivery pipelines

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784390891
Length 334 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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jmcallister - jmcallister -
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jmcallister -
Jonathan McAllister Jonathan McAllister
Author Profile Icon Jonathan McAllister
Jonathan McAllister
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Setup and Configuration of Jenkins FREE CHAPTER 2. Distributed Builds – Master/Slave Mode 3. Creating Views and Jobs in Jenkins 4. Managing Views and Jobs in Jenkins 5. Advanced Automated Testing 6. Software Deployments and Delivery 7. Build Pipelines 8. Continuous Practices 9. Integrating Jenkins with Other Technologies 10. Extending Jenkins Index

Standardizing build outputs


The build process (especially the packaging and publishing phases) marks a foundational corner stone for automated deployments. For this reason, it is important to understand the basic lifecycle of a typical build process. The aim of the build process is generally to automate the validation of compilation quality of source-controlled assets, automate the creation of viable artifacts, and provide a software product that engineering can potentially hand to the business. While the technology stack may vary across organizations, typical build processes will follow a similar set of automation patterns. Let's look at the basic flow of a generic build process:

  1. Obtain a clean copy of the source code from source control.

  2. Fetch any dependencies (preferably from an artifact repository).

  3. Version stamp any necessary code (may be a pre-compile or post-compile step, depending on the technology stack).

  4. Compile the source code and verify syntax.

  5. Execute unit tests (unit-based validation...

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