Is a CI server required for continous integration?
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In order to facilitate continous integration you need to automate the build, distribution, and deploy processes. Each of these steps is possible without any specialized CI-Server. Coordinating these activities can be done through file notifications and other low level mechanisms; however, a database driven backend (a CI-Server) coordinating these steps greatly enhances the reliability, scalability, and maintainability of your systems. |
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You don't need a dedicated server, but a build machine of some kind is invaluable, otherwise there is no single central place where the code is always being built and tested. Although you can mimic this affect using a developer machine, there's the risk of overlap with the code that is being changed on that machine. BTW I use Hudson, which is pretty light weight - doesn't need much to get it going. |
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It's important to use a dedicated machine so that you get independent verification, without corruption. For small projects, it can be a pretty basic machine, so don't let hardware costs get you down. You probably have an old machine in a closet that is good enough. You can also avoid dedicated hardware by using a virtual machine. Best bet is to find a server that is doing something else but is underloaded, and put the VM on it. |
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A separate machine is really necessary if you have more than one developer on the project. If you're using the .NET technology stack here's some pointers:
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Before I ever heard the term "continuous-integration" (This was back in 2002 or 2003) I wrote a nightly build script that connected to cvs, grabbed a clean copy of the main project and the five smaller sub-projects, built all the jars via ant then built and redeployed a WAR file via a second ant script that used the tomcat ant tasks. It ran via cron at 7pm and sent email with a bunch of attached output files. We used it for the entire 7 months of the project and it stayed in use for the next 20 months of maintenance and improvements. It worked fine but I would prefer hudson over bash scripts, cron and ant. |
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