Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Welcome #1

Open
github-learning-lab bot opened this issue Feb 11, 2019 · 0 comments
Open

Welcome #1

github-learning-lab bot opened this issue Feb 11, 2019 · 0 comments

Comments

@github-learning-lab
Copy link

Welcome

In this repository, we'll be diving into the world of Continuous Integration. Continuous Integration, or CI, can benefit your projects and change how you work on GitHub. If you're new to Continuous Integration, you may be thinking, "What exactly is it, and do I need it in my project?"

What is CI? Why should you care?

CI can help you stick to your team’s quality standards by running tests and reporting the results on GitHub. CI tools run builds and tests, triggered by commits. The results post back to GitHub in the pull request. This reduces context switching for developers, and improves consistency for testing. The goal is fewer bugs in production and faster feedback while developing.

There are several CI providers that integrate with GitHub. You can find some examples in the GitHub Marketplace. With so many options, you can pick the best tool for the job.

The following diagram shows the relative percentage of the top 10 CI tools used with GitHub.com.

image

Our analysis also shows that many repositories use more than one CI service. This allows individuals within teams to use their favorites, instead of feeling stuck on one option.

The tools that will work best for your project depend on many factors, including:

  • Programming language and application architecture
  • Operating system and browsers you plan to support
  • Your team’s experience and skills
  • Scaling capabilities and plans for growth
  • Geographic distribution of dependent systems and the people who use them
  • Packaging and delivery goals

Using CI and Learning Lab

In other courses, you may have noticed that some actions take me longer to respond to than others. In this course, many of the actions will be related to builds. Those builds sometimes take longer to build, up to several minutes. Don't be concerned if I take a few minutes to respond, or if I respond too quickly. Sometimes, I'll let you know what the build will say before it finishes! Please wait for the builds to finish before moving on to your next step.

Step 1: Enable Continuous Integration

Ready to see how CI can fit into your workflow? Let's install CircleCI, and start our very first CI build!

Note: When you integrate with other services, private repositories may have additional costs. You can change the publicity of your repository in the Settings on GitHub.

⌨️ Activity: Enable CircleCI and run your first build

  1. Navigate to CircleCI's sign in page in a separate tab.
  2. Sign in with GitHub and set up a build on CircleCI for this repository. You can ignore the prompts to add a config.yml file, as I'll add one for you in just a moment.
  3. Under the ADD PROJECTS option in the side-bar menu, click the Set up Project button next to the continuous-integration-circle project.
    Can't find your repository? Make sure you select your username from the drop-down on the top left. organization selection on CircleCI
  4. Click the Start building button on step 5.

If the build is queued for a long period of time, I recommend to click Cancel Job and click Rebuild.


I'll respond below for your next step

I'll need to wait for the CircleCI build status to complete before I will respond. If you don't see my response after the build completes, wait a few seconds and refresh the page for your next steps.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

0 participants