Quality and Productivity Outcomes Relating to Continuous Integration in Github
CI/CD explained
CI/CD automates your builds, testing, and deployment so you can ship code changes faster and more reliably.
Automation is a core principle for achieving DevOps success and CI/CD is a critical component. CI/CD comprises of continuous integration and continuous delivery or continuous deployment. Put together, they form a "CI/CD pipeline"—a series of automated workflows that help DevOps teams cut down on manual tasks:
- Continuous integration (CI) automatically builds, tests, and integrates code changes within a shared repository; then
- Continuous delivery (CD) automatically delivers code changes to production-ready environments for approval; or
- Continuous deployment (CD) automatically deploys code changes to customers directly.
A CI/CD pipeline
Continuous delivery vs. continuous deployment
When someone says CI/CD, the "CD" they're referring to is usually continuous delivery, not continuous deployment. What's the difference? In a CI/CD pipeline that uses continuous delivery, automation pauses when developers push to production. A human—your operations, security, or compliance team—still needs to manually sign off before final release, adding more delays. On the other hand, continuous deployment automates the entire release process. Code changes are deployed to customers as soon as they pass all the required tests.
Continuous deployment is the ultimate example of DevOps automation. That doesn't mean it's the only way to do CI/CD, or the "right" way. Since continuous deployment relies on rigorous testing tools and a mature testing culture, most software teams start with continuous delivery and integrate more automated testing over time.
Why CI/CD?
The short answer: Speed. The State of DevOps report found organizations that have "mastered" CI/CD deploy 208 times more often and have a lead time that is 106 times faster than the rest. While faster development is the most well-known benefit of CI/CD, a continuous integration and continuous delivery pipeline enables much more.
Learn more about the benefits of CI/CD
Development velocity
Ongoing feedback allows developers to commit smaller changes more often, versus waiting for one release.
Stability and reliability
Automated, continuous testing ensures that codebases remain stable and release-ready at any time.
Business growth
Freed up from manual tasks, organizations can focus resources on innovation, customer satisfaction, and paying down technical debt.
The mindset we carry is that we always want to automate ourselves into a better job. We want to make sure that the task we're doing manually today becomes mostly automated.
Version control
CI begins in shared repositories, where teams collaborate on code using version control systems (VCS) like Git. A VCS keeps track of code changes and makes them easy to revert if something breaks. It also enables configuration as code, which allows teams to manage testing, infrastructure, and more as versioned artifacts.
Version control stack
Shared coding environments, version control
Learn more about version control
Builds
CI build tools automatically package up files and components into release artifacts and run tests for quality, performance, and other requirements. After clearing required checks, CD tools send builds off to the operations team for further testing and staging.
Continuous integration stack
General automation, build tools, package managers, testing and code coverage tools
Learn more about CI testing
Reviews and approvals
Treating code review as a best practice improves code quality, encourages collaboration, and helps even the most experienced developers make better commits. In a CI/CD workflow, teams review and approve code in pull requests or leverage integrated development environments for pair programming.
Code review stack
Collaborative coding, code review tools, automated reminders, pull requests
Learn more about code review
Environments
CI/CD tests and deploys code in environments, from where developers build code to where operations teams make applications publicly available. Environments often have their own specific variables and protection rules to meet security and compliance requirements.
Protected environments stack
Environments for testing, staging, and production, required reviewers and branch protection rules
Learn more about protected environments
Example CI/CD workflow
CI/CD doesn't have to be complicated, or mean adding a host of tools on top of your current workflow. At mabl, developers deploy to production about 80 times a week using only two CI/CD integrations: The mabl testing suite and GitHub Actions. Here's how it works. ✨
- Developers open pull requests to trigger initial builds and unit tests
- Approved commits are deployed to a preview environment
- Custom-built GitHub Actions install the mabl CLI and run headless tests
- GitHub Apps provide live check results within pull requests
- Approved commits are merged to the main branch for additional tests or deployed to production
See more CI/CD workflow examples
What makes CI/CD successful
You'll find different tools and integrations everywhere you look, but effective CI/CD workflows all share the same markers of success.
Automation
CI/CD can be done manually—but that's not the goal. A good CI/CD workflow automates builds, testing, and deployment so you have more time for code, not more tasks to do.
Transparency
If a build fails, developers need to be able to quickly assess what went wrong and why. Logs, visual workflow builders, and deeply integrated tooling make it easier for developers to troubleshoot, understand complex workflows, and share their status with the larger team.
Speed
CI/CD contributes to your overall DevOps performance, particularly speed. DevOps experts gauge speed using two DORA metrics: Lead time for changes (how quickly commits are made to code in production) and deployment frequency (how often you commit code).
Resilience
When used with other approaches like test coverage, observability tooling, and feature flags, CI/CD makes software more resistant to errors. DORA measures this stability by tracking mean time to resolution (how quickly incidents are resolved) and change failure rate (the number of software rollbacks).
Security
Automation includes security. With DevSecOps gaining traction, a future-proof CI/CD pipeline has checks in place for code and permissions, and provides a virtual paper trail for auditing failures, security breaches, non-compliance events.
What can you do with CI/CD?
See how DevOps teams put continuous automation into practice.
Start building your CI/CD workflow
Whether you're ready to dive in or still have questions, we've got you covered.
Source: https://resources.github.com/ci-cd/
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