Octopus Deploy helps teams to manage releases, automate deployments, and operate applications with automated runbooks. It's free for small teams.
Octopus Deploy is a tool in the Continuous Deployment category of a tech stack.
What are some alternatives to Octopus Deploy?
Ansible is an IT automation tool. It can configure systems, deploy software, and orchestrate more advanced IT tasks such as continuous deployments or zero downtime rolling updates. Ansible’s goals are foremost those of simplicity and maximum ease of use.
With Terraform, you describe your complete infrastructure as code, even as it spans multiple service providers. Your servers may come from AWS, your DNS may come from CloudFlare, and your database may come from Heroku. Terraform will build all these resources across all these providers in parallel.
It is a zero-dependency module that loads environment variables from a .env file into process.env. Storing configuration in the environment separate from code is based on The Twelve-Factor App methodology.
Chef enables you to manage and scale cloud infrastructure with no downtime or interruptions. Freely move applications and configurations from one cloud to another. Chef is integrated with all major cloud providers including Amazon EC2, VMWare, IBM Smartcloud, Rackspace, OpenStack, Windows Azure, HP Cloud, Google Compute Engine, Joyent Cloud and others.
Azure DevOps, Jenkins, Azure DevOps, TeamCity, Jira and 6 more are some of the popular tools that integrate with Octopus Deploy. Here's a list of all 11 tools that integrate with Octopus Deploy.
Discover why developers choose Octopus Deploy. Read real-world technical decisions and stack choices from the StackShare community.Showing 4 of 6 discussions.
Feb 10, 2021
Jul 9, 2018