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Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins, 3rd Edition

You're reading from   Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins, 3rd Edition Create secure applications by building complete CI/CD pipelines

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803237480
Length 374 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Rafał Leszko Rafał Leszko
Author Profile Icon Rafał Leszko
Rafał Leszko
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1 – Setting Up the Environment
2. Chapter 1: Introducing Continuous Delivery FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Introducing Docker 4. Chapter 3: Configuring Jenkins 5. Section 2 – Architecting and Testing an Application
6. Chapter 4: Continuous Integration Pipeline 7. Chapter 5: Automated Acceptance Testing 8. Chapter 6: Clustering with Kubernetes 9. Section 3 – Deploying an Application
10. Chapter 7: Configuration Management with Ansible 11. Chapter 8: Continuous Delivery Pipeline 12. Chapter 9: Advanced Continuous Delivery 13. Best Practices 14. Assessments 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

The commit pipeline

The most basic continuous integration process is called a commit pipeline. This classic phase, as its name indicates, starts with commit (or push in Git) to the main repository and results in a report about the build success or failure. Since it runs after each change in the code, the build should take no more than 5 minutes and should consume a reasonable amount of resources. The commit phase is always the starting point of the continuous delivery process and provides the most important feedback cycle in the development process – constant information if the code is in a healthy state.

The commit phase works as follows: a developer checks in the code to the repository, the continuous integration server detects the change, and the build starts. The most fundamental commit pipeline contains three stages:

  • Checkout: This stage downloads the source code from the repository.
  • Compile: This stage compiles the source code.
  • ...
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