CruiseControl

This article is about CruiseControl, including CruiseControl.NET (CCNet). For other uses of CCNet, see CCNet (disambiguation). For the car feature, see Cruise control.
CruiseControl
Developer(s) CruiseControl development team
Initial release March 30, 2001 (2001-03-30)[1]
Stable release
2.8.4 / September 15, 2010 (2010-09-15)
Repository svn.code.sf.net/p/cruisecontrol/code/
Development status dormant
Written in Java
Operating system Cross-platform
Type continuous integration
License BSD-style license
Website cruisecontrol.sourceforge.net

In software development, CruiseControl is a Java-based framework for a continuous build process. It includes, but is not limited to, plugins for email notification, Ant, and various source control tools. A web interface is provided to view the details of the current and previous builds. It allows one to perform a continuous integration of any software development process.

CruiseControl is free, open-source software, distributed under a BSD-style license. It was originally created by employees of ThoughtWorks to allow for continuous integration on a project they were working on. It was later extracted into a stand-alone application.

There is a version of CruiseControl for .NET called CruiseControl.NET (aka CCNet) and a version for Ruby called CruiseControl.rb.

The current version is 2.8.4, released in 2010.

Build loop

The build loop is designed to run as a daemon process, which periodically checks the revision control system for changes to the codebase, builds if necessary, and publishes a notice regarding the status of the software build.

Build reporting

CruiseControl provides two ways of reporting build status. The first (classic) reporting is the reporting JSP and the second is the dashboard.

Results JSP

The build reporting is designed to present the results of the CruiseControl build loop. It is based on a HTML report managed by a JSP page. The left side of the page displays whether CruiseControl is currently building a project, and provides links to the details of previous builds. The right side of the page presents the results of the build—including compilation errors, test results and details about what files have changed since the last build.

Dashboard

The dashboard was introduced in the 2.7 release. The dashboard is a web page to enable visualising the project build statuses. Previous project build results are colour-coded providing a snapshot of how the projects are doing at that moment. Users can hover the cursor over icons to see the name and information about the project. The 'Builds' tab of the dashboard shows all projects (colour-coded) sorted by name providing some more information.

References

  1. ↑ "cruisecontrol". sourceforge.net. Retrieved 20 December 2013.

External links

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