First non-buisness use of CI software
May 02, 2015 04:38
Working for a web agency, I have access to many premium services for all parts of the development process which leads to two things when it comes to working on my personal projects at home.
1: I am more fussy about the quality of tools and services that I use than I was before I went from just messing around with programming to having a developer job.
2: I really don't want to pay a single fee or any kind of subscription to services as after using them all day at work I find it hard to justify personally paying a premium to use them for a bit of time at home after work.
However with Code ship neither of these things caused any issues as I found it to be very high quality and free.
On the subject of it being free, I know there are other CI solutions that are free however if you wish to use it with a private repository then unless you already have private Github repos then the fact that Code Ship integrates with Bitbucket can be extremely convenient as it means you can set up your personal projects with free private repository and a free CI / testing solution for absolutely free.
Overall Codeship has really impressed me in every way from its pricing to its clean and simple UI and its ease of use.
Extremly Easy and Cost Saving
August 20, 2014 05:38
Setting up continuous integration is complex and time consuming. I've used Codeship for 1 year now and I would never go back to previous systems such as self hosted Jenkins for any kind of web applications. The ability to change developer access on a per repository basis with the click of a button is very helpful and integration with all our services such as Github and Heroku make testing and deployment happen in the background so we can concentrate on our application and not worry about what state the live code is in. We also find the Slack integration (and flowdock before that) to be a great way to share the current code status with the whole team without getting spammed with emails on each commit and build state change while testing prototype branches or working on pull-requests.
Flexible repeatability!
April 25, 2015 08:56
Like most developers I'd love it if my deployment processes were always the same for every project so I never had to think about deployment. However, that's probably never going to happen unless we stop having clients. Codeship allows me to organize all of my deployments into one place and set them up once so that I don't have to remember the process for every nuance of every client.
Whether it's deploying a Drupal or Wordpress site to a private server, a Meteor.js app to Modulus, or just about anything else Codeship gives me the flexibility of writing my own shell scripts for custom jobs (private server) but also one-click solutions for common problems (deployment to Modulus).
Highly recommend them!
Pipelines for free (to start)
April 29, 2015 15:53
It's not easy to differentiate a CI/CD service because integrations matter so much more than the service itself. Didn't even need to read any docs, it just works exactly as you expect it to.
Pros:
Cons:
WP the way God intended
April 28, 2015 09:40
I spent half a day grepping CodeShip and now I have a sweet deployment process for WP sites. After a month of wrestling with Bamboo I decided to give CodeShip a try thanks to an article by CodeShip's Roman Kuba about deploying WP sites
I am now killin' WP development with my CodeShip + WPEngine setup. This is also making WP development/deployment fun for the first time. CodeShip f*cking rocks.
andrewgatenby uses Codeship
We use this as a CI tool when working on our API and related tools. The setup is relatively painless and it hooks directly into our Github repo's to provide reports and feedback.
RentChek uses Codeship
Runs a full test suite whenever we push changes to master and if everything is good, automatically deploys our changes to production.
nerogit uses Codeship
μλ CircleCI μ°λ€κ° κ°μκΈ° μ¬λμΌλ‘ μλ¦Όμ€λκ² μλΌμ Codeship μ°λ μ€ Circle CIκ° λ νΈν¨