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问题描述

这三个术语有什么区别?我的大学提供以下定义:

持续集成基本上只是意味着开发者的工作副本每天与共享主线同步几次.

持续交付被描述为持续集成的逻辑演变:始终能够将产品投入生产!

持续部署被描述为持续交付后合乎逻辑的下一步:只要产品通过 QA,就自动将产品部署到生产中!

它们还提供了一个警告:有时持续部署"这个词会被称为持续部署".如果您能够持续部署到测试系统,也可以使用.

这一切都让我感到困惑.感谢任何更详细(或附带示例)的解释!

解决方案

持续集成

我同意贵校的定义.持续集成是开发人员如何将代码持续集成到主线的一种策略——而不是频繁地.

您可能会声称这只是您的版本控制系统中的一种分支策略.

这与您分配给开发人员的任务的大小有关;如果一项任务预计需要 4-5 个工作日,那么开发人员将不会在接下来的 4-5 天内鼓励交付任何东西,因为他还没有完成任何事情.

所以大小很重要:

小任务=持续集成大任务=频繁集成

理想的任务规模不超过一天的工作量.这样一来,开发人员自然会每天至少进行一次集成.

持续交付

在持续交付中基本上有三个学校:

持续交付是持续集成的自然延伸

这所学校,查看

持续集成过程是状态转换图中的前两个动作.哪个 - 如果成功 - 将启动实现 done 的定义的持续交付管道.部署只是此管道中必须连续完成的众多操作之一.理想情况下,从开发人员提交到 VCS 到管道确认我们拥有有效的候选发布版本,整个过程都是自动化的.

What is the difference between these three terms? My university provides the following definitions:

Continuous Integration basically just means that the developer's working copies are synchronized with a shared mainline several times a day.

Continuous Delivery is described as the logical evolution of continuous integration: Always be able to put a product into production!

Continuous Deployment is described as the logical next step after continuous delivery: Automatically deploy the product into production whenever it passes QA!

They also provide a warning: Sometimes the term "Continuous Deployment" is also used if you are able to continuously deploy to the test system.

All this leaves me confused. Any explaination that is a little more detailed (or comes with an example) is appreciated!

解决方案

Continuous Integration

I Agree with your university's definition. Continuous Integration is a strategy for how a developer can integrate code to the mainline continuously - as opposed to frequently.

You might claim that it's merely a branching strategy in your version control system.

It has to do with the size of the tasks you assign to a developer; If a task is estimated to take 4-5 man-days then the developer will have no incitement to deliver anything for the next 4-5 days, because he's not done with anything - yet.

So size matters:

small task = continuous integration
big task   = frequent integration

The ideal task size is not bigger than a day's work. This way a developer will naturally have at least one integration per day.

Continuous Delivery

There are basically three schools within Continuous Delivery:

Continuous Delivery is a natural extension of Continuous Integration

This school, looks at the Addison-Wesley "Martin Fowler" signature series and makes the assumption that since the 2007 release was called "Continuous Integration" and the one that followed in 2011 was called "Continuous Delivery" they are probably volume 1+2 of the same conceptual idea that has to do with continuous something.

Continuous Delivery has to do with Agile Software Development

This school takes off-set in the idea that Continuous Delivery is all about being able to support the principles in the agile movement, not just as a conceptual idea or a letter of intent but for real - in real life.

Taking offset in the first principle in the Agile Manifesto where the term "continuous delivery" is actually used for the first time:

This school claims that "Continuous Delivery" is a paradigm that embraces everything required to implement an automated verification of your "definition of done".

This school accepts that "Continuous Delivery" and the buzz word or megatrend "DevOps" are flip sides of the same coin, in the sense that they both try to embrace or encapsulate this new paradigm or approach and not just a technique.

Continuous Delivery is a synonym to Continuous Deployment

The third school advocates that Continuous Deployment and Continuous Delivery can be used interchangeably to mean the same thing.

When something is ready in the hands of the developers, it's immediately delivered to the end-users, which in most cases will mean that it should be deployed to the production environment. Hence "Deploy" and "Deliver" means the same.

Which school to join

Your university clearly joined the first school and claims that we're referring to volume 1+2 of the same publication series. My opinion is that this is a misuse of the term Continuous Delivery.

I personally advocate for the understanding that Continuous Delivery is related to implementing a real-life support for the ideas and concepts stated by the agile movement. So I joined the school that says the term embraces a whole paradigm - like "DevOps".

The school that uses delivery as a synonym to deploy is mostly advocated by tool vendors who create deployment consoles, trying to get a bit of hype from the more widespread use of the term Continuous Delivery.

Continuous Deployment

The focus on Continuous Deployment is mostly relevant in domains where the end user's access to software updates relies on the update of some centralized source for this information and where this centralized source is not always easy to update because it's monolithic or has (too) high coherence by nature (web, SOA, Databases etc.).

For a lot of domains that produces software where there is no centralized source of information (devices, consumer products, client installations etc.) or where the centralized source for information is easy to update (app stores artifact management systems, Open Source repositories etc.), there is almost no hype about the term Continuous Deployment at all. They just deploy; it's not a big thing - it's not a pain that requires special focus.

The fact that Continuous Deployment is not something that is generically interesting to everyone is also an argument that the school that claims that "delivery" and "deploy" are synonyms got it all wrong. Because Continuous Delivery actually makes perfectly good sense to everyone - even if you are doing embedded software in devices or releasing Open Source plugins for a framework.

Your university's definition that Continuous Deployment is a natural next step of Continuous Delivery implicitly assumes that every delivery that is QA'ed should go become available to the end-users immediately, is closer to the definition that my tribe use to describe the term "Continous Release", which, in turn, is another concept that doesn't generically makes sense to everyone either.

A release can be a very strategic or political thing and there is no reason to assume that everybody would want to do this all the time (unless they are an online bookstore a streaming service type of company). Nevertheless, companies that don't blindly release everything all the time may have any number of reasons why they would want to be masters of deployment anyway, so they too do Continuous Deployment. Not of release to production, but of release-candidates to production-like environments.

Again I believe your university got it wrong. They are mistaking "Continuous Deployment" for "Continuous Release".

Continuous deployment is simply the discipline of continuously being able to move the result of a development process to a production-like environment where functional testing can be executed in full scale.

The Continuous Delivery Storyline

In the picture it all comes alive:

The Continuous Integration process is the first two actions in the state-transition diagram. Which - if successful - kicks off the Continuous Delivery pipeline that implements the definition of done. Deployment is just one of the many actions that will have to be done continuously in this pipeline. Ideally, the process is automated from the point where the developer commits to the VCS to the point where the pipeline has confirmed that we have a valid release candidate.

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08-06 08:29