Rev up IT with continuous delivery and DevOps
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Source – techtarget.com
Humans love to go fast. That thrill can extend to software code with the pairing of continuous integration/continuous delivery and DevOps.
Continuous integration (CI), continuous delivery (CD) and continuous deployment all focus on getting newly created code onto production systems as quickly as possible — without breaking anything. The terms can be segmented by steps:
- CI facilitates and automates code creation, verification and management before it is an executable product.
- CD brings executable code through automated and manual tests and releases steps to prepare it for production.
- Continuous deployment takes code through testing and onto production systems.
DevOps doesn’t perform any of these steps, exactly. Instead, the methodology guides developers, testers and IT operations teams to create code that’s easy to test, builds that are easy to deploy and production IT systems that are easy to manage. The CI/CD process gives DevOps the tools to accomplish these goals.
Speak the language
Get a continuing education on continuous topics
New to continuous delivery and DevOps? Start with the terminology that full-stack developers, IT automation specialists, continuous testers and their teammates use. Once you understand these terms, you’ll have a solid foundation to build continuous processes upon.
Rush delivery
The tools and principles of CD
CD isn’t easy. New adopters should understand the principles of continuous delivery and DevOps culture and the benefits of a CD pipeline. If you already have a strategic mindset and are ready for the next step, review CI/CD tool options. Compare your CD maturity to the five levels described at the end of this section to decide where to go next.
Ongoing improvement
Move the needle with continuous deployment
Continuous delivery and DevOps are enough to give most software product teams the speed and production readiness they need. But for those advanced teams that crave automation and top-speed releases, the next step is continuous deployment and related measures, such as continuous security and testing.
Containers deploy anywhere
Supporting technology spotlight: Containers
For DevOps to work, developers, testers and operations managers all have to see the same thing with the code. DevOps aims to destroy the works-on-my-machine syndrome that throws up walls between these steps in software delivery.