2024-03-29T01:31:11Z
https://repository.de.dariah.eu/1.0/oaipmh/oai
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFE-4
2018-03-27T17:33:43Z
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
Malte Vogl
2018-03-27T19:33:43.820
Two of the cornerstones of modern software development, Continuous Integration (CI) and Continuous Delivery (CD) are practices to support collaborative and fast development through automation.
With CI, software is built and tested on every code push. Using triggers from version control systems, code is compiled and tested against defined criteria, such as unit and integration tests. This ensures that the latest changes to the code base are compatible with the existing code base, i.e. they integrate well.
On top of this, CD is the practices of packaging and publishing the build artifact of a successful integration run. In an optimal setup, this allows the immediate delivery of the latest successfully built version to a production environment.
In our first Virtual Workshop we will be hearing from Malte Vogl on his experience using Gitlab CI for Django projects. Expanding on Malte’s introduction, Julia Damerow and Carsten Thiel will open up the general discussion with their experiences using Travis-CI and Jenkins.
video/mp4
doi:10.20375/0000-000B-CAFE-4
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFE-4
English
DHtech
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
[Recording] Gitlab CI/CD for Django
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
2018-03-27T17:33:40Z
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
Julia Damerow
2018-03-27T19:33:40.760
Two of the cornerstones of modern software development, Continuous Integration (CI) and Continuous Delivery (CD) are practices to support collaborative and fast development through automation.
With CI, software is built and tested on every code push. Using triggers from version control systems, code is compiled and tested against defined criteria, such as unit and integration tests. This ensures that the latest changes to the code base are compatible with the existing code base, i.e. they integrate well.
On top of this, CD is the practices of packaging and publishing the build artifact of a successful integration run. In an optimal setup, this allows the immediate delivery of the latest successfully built version to a production environment.
In our first Virtual Workshop we will be hearing from Malte Vogl on his experience using Gitlab CI for Django projects. Expanding on Malte’s introduction, Julia Damerow and Carsten Thiel will open up the general discussion with their experiences using Travis-CI and Jenkins.
text/vnd.dariah.dhrep.collection+turtle
doi:10.20375/0000-000B-CAFD-5
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
English
DHtech
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
DHtech Workshop: Gitlab CI/CD for Django
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CB00-0
2018-03-27T17:34:02Z
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
Malte Vogl
2018-03-27T19:34:02.001
application/pdf
doi:10.20375/0000-000B-CB00-0
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CB00-0
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
[Slides] Gitlab CI/CD for Django
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFF-3
2018-03-27T17:33:58Z
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
Malte Vogl
2018-03-27T19:33:58.190
audio/x-m4a
doi:10.20375/0000-000B-CAFF-3
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFF-3
English
DHtech
hdl:21.11113/0000-000B-CAFD-5
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
[Audio] Gitlab CI/CD for Django