Google Cloud Platform Blog
Jenkins, meet Google App Engine
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Today’s guest post comes from Ryan Campbell and Stephen Connolly, developers at
CloudBees
. CloudBees is a major supporter of Jenkins, the popular open source continuous integration server, and the creator of
DEV@Cloud
, a hosted version of Jenkins.
As development teams grow, it becomes increasingly hard to ensure that their work is in sync.
Jenkins
is one of the leading tools to combat this issue. Jenkins provides a process where work across your team is automated, so that building, testing and deployment are all centralized in one location. As a major supporter of Jenkins, CloudBees has helped companies streamline their build, test and deployment processes both on premise, and in the cloud via
CloudBees DEV@Cloud
.
Google App Engine users can now run Jenkins continuous integration in the cloud by signing up at
appengine.cloudbees.com
. Jenkins will monitor your projects’ source code for any changes, run the necessary builds and tests, and notify your team of any problems - or automatically deploy the application to Google App Engine if everything looks good. This process helps to prevent the deployment of broken code, and gives everyone a central record of what changes went into each deployment. If you’re new to continuous integration and Jenkins, the
Jenkins wiki
is a great place to get started.
The video below shows you how to setup a Jenkins Maven job that checks out the source code, builds the application, runs any tests, and then deploys to Google App Engine. Note that you can use virtually any source code service you like, including GitHub or CloudBees’ own Git and SVN servers.
Once you have a basic build working, you can integrate additional online services into your Jenkins workflow, like
Sauce Labs
for browser-based tests,
Sonar
for code analysis, or
JFrog Artifactory
as an artifact repository manager. These and several other CloudBees services can be automatically subscribed to using the Services link in your toolbar.
In summary, CloudBees Jenkins for Google App Engine is unique in several ways:
It's fully managed, which means you don't have to set up Jenkins or the build machines you need.
You always have enough build capacity -- we dynamically add more build machines as you need them.
CloudBees Jenkins is free to get started.
Sign up for CloudBees DEV@Cloud at
appengine.cloudbees.com
to have Jenkins monitor the health of your projects, and automatically deploy your applications to Google App Engine. You only need your Google App Engine account, no credit cards or command lines are required. Now, you can focus on delivering features, and rely on CloudBees to manage the development infrastructure.
- Contributed by Ryan Campbell and Stephen Connolly, developers at CloudBees.
No comments :
Post a Comment
Don't Miss Next '17
Use promo code NEXT1720 to save $300 off general admission
REGISTER NOW
Free Trial
GCP Blogs
Big Data & Machine Learning
Kubernetes
GCP Japan Blog
Labels
Announcements
56
Big Data & Machine Learning
91
Compute
156
Containers & Kubernetes
36
CRE
7
Customers
90
Developer Tools & Insights
80
Events
34
Infrastructure
24
Management Tools
39
Networking
18
Open Source
105
Partners
63
Pricing
24
Security & Identity
23
Solutions
16
Stackdriver
19
Storage & Databases
111
Weekly Roundups
16
Archive
2017
Feb
Jan
2016
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2015
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2014
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2013
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2012
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2011
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2010
Dec
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2009
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2008
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Feed
Subscribe by email
Technical questions? Check us out on
Stack Overflow
.
Subscribe to
our monthly newsletter
.
Google
on
Follow @googlecloud
Follow
Follow
No comments :
Post a Comment