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Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins

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

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838552183
Length 350 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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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 FREE CHAPTER
2. Introducing Continuous Delivery 3. Introducing Docker 4. Configuring Jenkins 5. Section 2: Architecting and Testing an Application
6. Continuous Integration Pipeline 7. Automated Acceptance Testing 8. Clustering with Kubernetes 9. Section 3: Deploying an Application
10. Configuration Management with Ansible 11. Continuous Delivery Pipeline 12. Advanced Continuous Delivery 13. Best practices 14. Assessment 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Exercises

You've learned a lot about how to configure the Continuous Integration process. Since practice makes perfect, I recommend doing the following exercises:

  1. Create a Python program that multiplies two numbers passed as the command-line parameters. Add unit tests and publish the project on GitHub:
    1. Create two files: calculator.py and test_calculator.py
    2. You can use the unittest library at https://docs.python.org/library/unittest.html
    3. Run the program and the unit test
  1. Build the Continuous Integration pipeline for the Python calculator project:
    1. Use Jenkinsfile to specify the pipeline
    2. Configure the trigger so that the pipeline runs automatically in case of any commit to the repository
    3. The pipeline doesn't need the Compile step since Python is an interpretable language
    4. Run the pipeline and observe the results
    5. Try to commit the code that breaks each stage of the...
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