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I'm a developer working for a large multinational corporation whose primary function is not technology but still employs a large number of developers. I'm interested to know other peoples experiences of how development tools are provisoned in your company and your thoughts on whether it is effective or not.

In our team we have picked tools we consider useful and set up our own instances which we we maintain ourselves, for instance Hudson and Sonar. However, when it comes to buying licenses for products we are forced/encouraged to use the tools that are centrally provisioned and maintained within the company. Also, for tasks like enterprise build and deploy it's been judged to not be practical to have a free for all where each team can have their own implementation of how to deploy to production.

On one hand you can tell all development teams to provision their own tools, give them some budget to buy them if required. The benefits are that each team gets what it needs and can be flexible. The downside is that you have a proliferation of tools within the company, increasing complexity and decreasing the internal mobility of the staff in your organization. There's also a lot of duplication of effort.

On the other hand you could provision all tools centrally. The potential benefits being reduced maintenance and licensing costs. A more consistent toolset encourages internal mobility and sharing of ideas. The downsides are a loss of flexibility in the toolset as changes would have to go through a management chain.

I would imagine most companies have something similar to ours where the approach is somewhere between the two. However, we have definitely not hit the sweet spot. There's a lot of duplication of effort and centrally provisioned one size fits all tools aren't really working.

Generally, what experiences have you had of this problem? Do you or have you worked at a place where they got it right? If so what do you think it was that worked?

I know this is a horrible cliche but Google are a big company, what do they do?

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Soliciting opinions is not suitable to the Stack Overflow format. – Oded Jan 27 at 17:34
Thats fair enough, what forum do you think would be most appropriate for this kind of question? – jelf Jan 27 at 19:46

closed as not constructive by Oded, Michael Petrotta, gnat, Romain Francois, Mario Jan 27 at 21:07

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1 Answer

In my company every developper is free to use their tools, text editors, OSes, etc... as long as the strictly conform with the coding style of the company. In other words, as long as they know how to configure it.

Pro: A new developer does not spend time learning a new development tool / OSes shortcuts / etc...

We're a french company, so we have some devs with AZERTY keyboards and others with QWERTY's, it seems SO unnatural for me to force someone to change his keymap for the right to work with us...

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