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Beanstalk

87
270
+ 1
51
BinTray

51
59
+ 1
24
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Beanstalk vs BinTray: What are the differences?

Beanstalk: Private code hosting for teams. A single process to commit code, review with the team, and deploy the final result to your customers; BinTray: Deploy jar and binary files to a public server. Easy integration with Maven, Gradle, Yum and Apt. Bintray offers developers the fastest way to publish and consume OSS software releases. With Bintray's full self-service platform developers have full control over their published software and how it is distributed to the world.

Beanstalk and BinTray can be primarily classified as "Code Collaboration & Version Control" tools.

Some of the features offered by Beanstalk are:

  • Setup and manage repositories- Import or create Subversion and Git repositories that are instantly available to your team.
  • Invite team members, partners & clients- Restrict access to certain repos and provide read-only or full read/write permissions.
  • Browse files and changes- Every version of every file you’ve committed to Beanstalk is just a click away. See a timeline of who made changes and view the differences between revisions. Syntax highlighting for over 70 languages.

On the other hand, BinTray provides the following key features:

  • One place for all your Java, Yum and Apt packages
  • Use smart REST API to retrieve and search for binaries
  • Easy integration with Maven, Gradle, Yum and Apt

"Ftp deploy" is the top reason why over 13 developers like Beanstalk, while over 8 developers mention "Free for opensource packages" as the leading cause for choosing BinTray.

According to the StackShare community, Beanstalk has a broader approval, being mentioned in 21 company stacks & 8 developers stacks; compared to BinTray, which is listed in 4 company stacks and 6 developer stacks.

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Pros of Beanstalk
Pros of BinTray
  • 14
    Ftp deploy
  • 9
    Deployment
  • 8
    Easy to navigate
  • 4
    Code Editing
  • 4
    HipChat Integration
  • 4
    Integrations
  • 3
    Code review
  • 2
    HTML Preview
  • 1
    Security
  • 1
    Blame Tool
  • 1
    Cohesion
  • 9
    Free for opensource packages
  • 6
    Easy to use
  • 4
    Cool new UI
  • 3
    Fast CDN
  • 2
    Just because it's great DaaS

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What is Beanstalk?

A single process to commit code, review with the team, and deploy the final result to your customers.

What is BinTray?

Bintray offers developers the fastest way to publish and consume OSS software releases. With Bintray's full self-service platform developers have full control over their published software and how it is distributed to the world.

Need advice about which tool to choose?Ask the StackShare community!

What companies use Beanstalk?
What companies use BinTray?
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What tools integrate with Beanstalk?
What tools integrate with BinTray?

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What are some alternatives to Beanstalk and BinTray?
AWS Elastic Beanstalk
Once you upload your application, Elastic Beanstalk automatically handles the deployment details of capacity provisioning, load balancing, auto-scaling, and application health monitoring.
Heroku
Heroku is a cloud application platform – a new way of building and deploying web apps. Heroku lets app developers spend 100% of their time on their application code, not managing servers, deployment, ongoing operations, or scaling.
Beanstalkd
Beanstalks's interface is generic, but was originally designed for reducing the latency of page views in high-volume web applications by running time-consuming tasks asynchronously.
Kubernetes
Kubernetes is an open source orchestration system for Docker containers. It handles scheduling onto nodes in a compute cluster and actively manages workloads to ensure that their state matches the users declared intentions.
Git
Git is a free and open source distributed version control system designed to handle everything from small to very large projects with speed and efficiency.
See all alternatives