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I'm curious how the developer community finds their Continuous Integration/Continuous Delivery experience, and how their tooling contributes to that.

I've tried Jenkins, Circle, and Travis. Jenkins costs more than it benefits in my experience, while Circle and Travis benefit more than they cost (although I still expect to spend an hour or two on maintaining them monthly.)

I've heard about Concourse and Drone but haven't used them myself.

I imagine there's other solutions I've never heard of.

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  • 5
    This would be useful with the language/framework you use. Some CI are known for being more powerful if used with a specific language in mind.
    – Braiam
    Sep 21, 2018 at 21:39
  • 6
    What are Jenkins, Circle, Travis, Concourse, Drone, CI, and CD?
    – TylerH
    Sep 22, 2018 at 20:35
  • 1
    And the non-comedy explanation? Sep 22, 2018 at 20:53
  • 5
    Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery. CI is usually as simple as having some automated process build your app on every commit to source control. CD is automating the delivery of the built code to one or more environments (e.g. UAT or Production)
    – DavidG
    Sep 22, 2018 at 22:51
  • "I'm curious how the developer community finds their CI/CD experience and how their tooling contributes to that." Just ask that on SO. Should be on topic if worded appropriately.
    – Trilarion
    Sep 23, 2018 at 19:10
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    @Trilarion I don't think it would, since it's ultimately asking for opinions.
    – AStopher
    Sep 23, 2018 at 19:13
  • @cybermonkey Many questions in the surveys do not ask for opinions, it's more like "What do you use?" but with more statistical power. One could probably ask a few "What CI/CD services exist?" "Which CI/CD services can do a particular task?" questions without getting into opinions. Or is this question here just asking for which CI/CD systems are most popular right now?
    – Trilarion
    Sep 23, 2018 at 19:20
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    @Trilarion See stackoverflow.com/help/dont-ask and you will find pretty much exactly your wording as don'ts. The point is - SO question should have a "right" answer. Unless the project you want to set up CI/CD for is well-known, the "best tool" cannot be determined, because as it always is, each tool has different usecases it is ideal for, typically as a result from the trade-off "convention" vs. "configuration".
    – LWChris
    Sep 23, 2018 at 22:57
  • @LWChris I'm a bit confused. I didn't really ask for the best in the two examples. But I wonder now if the asker here only wants to know what are popular CI/CD services or what exactly he would be interested to know? Actually, I think now that my problem is that it doesn't seem clear from this question which question exactly should be part of the developer survey, at least to me. The suggestion was, that maybe some of the questions that the asker wants to know can already be solved by directly asking on SO.
    – Trilarion
    Sep 24, 2018 at 7:23
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    @Trilarion what cybermonkey and LWChris are trying to explain to you is that your suggestion to "just ask that on SO" is wrong.
    – user247702
    Sep 24, 2018 at 8:32
  • @Stijn Yes, got that.
    – Trilarion
    Sep 24, 2018 at 10:34
  • @DavidG Thanks. I guess "Build & Publish" in Visual Studio is like Manual Integration, then?
    – TylerH
    Sep 24, 2018 at 13:56
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    @Trilarion My wording would be Rank your experience with the following Continuous Integration / Continuous Delivery platforms. (Never used / Used and dissatisfied / Used and ambivalent / Used and satisfied)
    – Plato
    Sep 24, 2018 at 20:59
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    The "Loved/Dreaded/Wanted" division like they did for some technologies last year would also do. I just requested the same for version control systems: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/378565/207791 Jan 4, 2019 at 20:51

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