Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

Suzie Prince - Continuous Integration: a bitter...

Suzie Prince - Continuous Integration: a bittersweet love story

devopsdaysraleigh

October 06, 2016
Tweet

More Decks by devopsdaysraleigh

Other Decks in Technology

Transcript

  1. Head of Product for ThoughtWorks Products Product Manager for Snap

    CI 10+ years experience with agile, CI and CD practices Tweeting @pm_suzie
  2. – Jez Humble, continuousdelivery.com “CI developers integrate all their work

    into trunk (also known as mainline or master) on a regular basis (at least daily).”
  3. 1996 Steve McConnell describes the "Daily Build and Smoke Test"

    technique 2000 Martin Fowler’s first published his comprehensive Continuous Integration article 2010 Book “Continuous Delivery” by Humble and Farley published Our story so far….. 1993 Grady Booch used the phrase “continuous integration” in Object-Oriented Analysis and Design with Applications 2007 Book “Continuous Integration” by Duvall published 2016 Wikipedia lists 15+ continuous integration Tools 2001 The first continuous integration server Cruise Control is released 2015 CI described as “most essential technical practice” in SAFe 1998 Continuous integration is cited as a core practice of Extreme Programming ❤
  4. 3% 5% 6% 18% Daily 68% Daily Weekly Monthly Other

    Never http://stackoverflow.com/research/developer-survey-2016#work-checking-in-code How often do you check in or commit code?
  5. What do people know about Continuous Integration? Do they practice

    Continuous Integration? How do they practice Continuous Integration? What tools do people use to practice Continuous Integration? How do people define Continuous Integration?
  6. You commit some code, something picks it up and builds

    and makes sure it still builds I push the code to the master branch after it's been tested on the test branch. That in return triggers something and gets deployed …testing your code all the time. Executing the code that you write all the time, making sure the code doesn't go stale
  7. https://blog.snap-ci.com/blog/2016/07/26/continuous-delivery-integration-devops-research/ We tend to do anywhere between 15 and 50

    branches in a push The most challenging thing is when you end up with a lot of features piled together in one commit Anytime a feature is finally complete then it get’s merged into master