Great article by @mipsytipsy on CI/CD:https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/01/19/fulfilling-the-promise-of-ci-cd/ …
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Being in a company that wants to change the travel industry one small step at a time, I couldn't agree more. A couple of sentences hit home for me.
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"The goal of CI/CD is to reduce the lead time of software changes to an interval short enough that our human learning systems (adrenaline, dopamine, etc.) can map to the feedback loops of writing and shipping code."
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"If any engineer on your team can merge a set of changes to main, secure in the knowledge that 15 minutes later their changes will have been tested and deployed to production, with no human gates or manual intervention required, then congratulations! You’re doing CI/CD."
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If
@mipsytipsy allows me, I'd go a bit further and say that it doesn't even strictly need to be an engineer. Did a sales person edit one of the repos and put a PR to fix a typo in the website? Did a designer make a change? None of these people should live in fear1 reply 0 retweets 1 likeShow this thread -
of their changes going out to the customers. And the one that really says it all, especially for companies offering a service on the internet: > This is basic software hygiene. Yes! It is 2021 people, this is basic software hygiene.
@duffelhq we do CI/CD and we're proud of it1 reply 0 retweets 2 likesShow this thread
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