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Learning Continuous Integration with Jenkins

You're reading from   Learning Continuous Integration with Jenkins A beginner's guide to implementing Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery using Jenkins 2

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788479356
Length 362 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Nikhil Pathania Nikhil Pathania
Author Profile Icon Nikhil Pathania
Nikhil Pathania
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Concepts of Continuous Integration 2. Installing Jenkins FREE CHAPTER 3. The New Jenkins 4. Configuring Jenkins 5. Distributed Builds 6. Installing SonarQube and Artifactory 7. Continuous Integration Using Jenkins 8. Continuous Delivery Using Jenkins 9. Continuous Deployment Using Jenkins 10. Supporting Tools and Installation Guide

Distributed build and test


In the following section let us learn a little bit about the distributed build and testing. Imagine you have a really fat unit test or integration test suite. If you can divide them in small parts then you can run them in parallel. To run them in parallel you need multiple clones of your build/test machines. If you have them in place either using Docker or using some other mechanism, then the remaining thing to do is to make them a Jenkins slave agent.

The following illustration shows how a Jenkins pipeline to build, unit test and integration test utilizes the distributed build/test farm in Jenkins. You can see, we have two categories of Jenkins slave agents: Standalone Jenkins slave for build and unit test, and standalone Jenkins slave for integration test.

The unit testing is distributed across three Jenkins slave agents for build and unit test (category 1), and the integration testing is distributed across two Jenkins slave agents for integration testing (category...

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