How to Plan and Define Your Continuous Deployment Pipeline - Patxi Gortázar thumbnail

How to Plan and Define Your Continuous Deployment Pipeline - Patxi Gortázar

03 Apr 2019
  • Locked
Planning and defining a complete continuous integration/deployment (CI/CD) process for an application is not easy if one has no previous experience. In the session, I will explain the basics: from code to deployment, stage by stage, and how we can assess each of the stages and automate them in our CI/CD pipeline.  
The session will start by presenting the basics of the life-cycle of a project, with a focus on development and testing with no CI/CD process involved. Then, we will discuss how and when we could be interested in running automation like compilation, testing, packaging, and distribution of assets from our project. We will see real examples in Jenkins, the popular CI/CD server, with reference to other CI systems, on premises or as a service (like TravisCI).
We will then discuss testing environments, when to deploy to a testing environment and the needs (packaging the application, publishing in package repositories, deploying). In connection to this, we will discuss when to do testing: online testing vs nightly testing. Pros and cons of both and when it could be interesting to choose one over another.
Finally, options for deployment to production will be presented: either with some additional QA process involved in the middle or directly publishing our product once all automated tests have passed. 
At the end, a complete pipeline, from commit to the code repository to deployment to production will be presented.

Comments

Sign in to comment
Explore MoT
QA Leadership Summit - The AI-Native Edge: Leading the Future of QA image
QALS Summer 2026: a leadership summit to move beyond AI testing pilots and build production-ready, AI-first QA organizations - powered by the BrowserStack AI Test Platform and 25+ connected AI agents
Modern integration testing: Tools, techniques, and strategies for continuous quality image
Go beyond with modern integration testing—with faster feedback, simpler debugging, improved scalability and maintainability. Take the step to implement new test types including contract testing of course.
This Week in Quality image
Debrief the week in Quality via a community radio show hosted by Simon Tomes and members of the community
Subscribe to our newsletter