TeamCity Training
Developing software involves many processes to get code from development into a production environment. TeamCity helps you automate every step of this process. In this course, Getting Started with TeamCity, you’ll learn how to set up application builds to compile, test and package your apps. First, you’ll see how to kick off this process every time someone checks in code and get notifications when something fails. Next, you’ll explore how to get high-level reporting about failures. Finally, you’ll learn how to create templates for reusable build processes and how to rapidly automate an entire delivery pipeline. By the time you’re done with this course, you’ll have everything you need to automate taking your software from development through to production with TeamCity.
Can’t find a batch you were looking for?
This course is a foundation to anyone who aspires to become a DevOps Engineer, a Service Engineer in the field of Enterprise Infrastructures. The following professionals are the key beneficiaries of this course :
- DevOps Engineer
- Build and Release Engineer
- AppOps Engineer
- Site Reliability Engineer
- System Administrator
- Operations Engineer
- Automation Engineer
Recommended Experience
- Basic Linux Familiarity
- Simple LAN Networking
Recommended Equipment
- Virtualization Platform, or Several Servers with Networking Equipment
TeamCity Training Enroll Now
Structure your learning and get a certificate to prove it.
1. Introduction to Continuous Integration
Practices
Benefits
Continuous deployment and Continuous Delivery
The build pipeline
2. Introduction to TeamCity
Licensing
Features
First-class support for various technologies
Lots of plugins
REST API
Comprehensive VCS support
A nice dashboard UI and build history
Ease of setup and comprehensive documentation
Build pipeline/chains
Agents and build grids
IDE integrations
3. TeamCity and its competitors
Jenkins
ThoughtWorks’ Go
4. Summary
1. Installing on Windows
Installing the server and the default agent
Installing additional agents
2. Installation on Mac OS X
Running the TeamCity server and the default agent
Setting up the TeamCity server as a daemon
Installing additional agents
3. Installation on Linux
Running the server and the default agent
Running the TeamCity server as a daemon
Installing additional agents
4. Summary
1. Introducing version control systems
Centralized versus distributed VCSs
VCSs and CI
VCS used in this book
2. Setting up CI
1. The sample project
2. Creating a project in TeamCity
Subprojects
3. Adding build configurations
VCS roots and VCS settings
Introducing the build steps
Running our first build
Build failure conditions
Triggering the build on VCS changes
4. Build chains
1. Deploying to Heroku
2. Adding functional tests
Parameters and build parameters
3. Setting up the build chain
Snapshot dependencies
The Finish build trigger
The Build chain view
5. Fine-tuning our setup
1. Adding coverage and unit test reports
Publishing reports as artifacts
XML report processing
Report tabs
Build and project statistics
Shared resources
Agent Requirements
1. Using Ant with TeamCity
Installing Ant
Building with Ant build files
Building with Ant in a build configuration
Adding some unit tests
Setting up code coverage
Build scripts versus TeamCity features
System properties and Ant
2. Using Maven with TeamCity
Installing Maven
Creating a Maven project
Introducing the Project Object Model (POM)
Building the project
Using Maven in a build configuration
Setting version number
Setting up code coverage for our build
Maven on TeamCity, beyond the build runner
Creating a Maven build configuration
Global Maven settings file
Setting up Maven-based triggers
3. Using Gradle with TeamCity
Installing Gradle
Building with Gradle on TeamCity
4. Introducing database migration tools
5. Summary
1. Getting started with NAnt on TeamCity
Installing NAnt
Building NAnt with NAnt
Building on TeamCity
Adding NUnit report processing
Configuring agent requirements
2. Building with MSBuild
Installing MSBuild
Starting an MSBuild project
Building with MSBuild on TeamCity
Adding an NUnit build runner
Running NUnit tests using NUnit task
Running NUnit tests using the task provided by TeamCity
Configuring code coverage with MSBuild
3. NuGet and TeamCity
Installing the NuGet command-line client
Installing NuGet.exe on TeamCity agents
TeamCity as a NuGet server
NuGet-based build runners
NuGet dependency trigger
4. Introducing PowerShell
PowerShell-based build tools
PowerShell build runner in TeamCity
5. Database migrations with .NET
6. Summary
1. Getting started with Rails
Managing Ruby versions
Introducing Bundler
Installing Rails using Bundler
Introducing Rake
Setting up the build on TeamCity
Setting up Ruby interpreter
Running Capybara- and Selenium-based feature tests
2. Summary
1. CI for Android projects
Generating the APK
Running Calabash tests
2. Building iOS projects on TeamCity
3. Installing TeamCity plugins
Installing the Python runner plugin
Building with the Python build runner
Introduction to TeamCity.Node plugin
4. Summary
1. IDE integrations
IntelliJ platform IDEs integration
Installing the plugin
Configuring notifications
Managing projects from the IDE
Opening files and patches in IDE
Remote Run
Visual Studio integrations
2. GitHub integrations
GitHub webhooks and services
Using the TeamCity.GitHub plugin
Support for pull requests
Integrating with GitHub issue tracker
3. Build monitors
Team Piazza
Project Monitor
Build lights
4. Notifications
5. Summary
1. Managing projects of interest
Hiding projects
Hiding build configurations
2. Navigating across projects
3. Investigating investigations
Assigning investigations
Viewing active investigations
Managing current and muted problems
4. TeamCity universal search
5. Actions on build configurations
Pausing triggers in a build configuration
Checking for pending changes
Enforcing clean checkout
6. Summary
1. Build configuration templates
Creating templates from scratch
Creating build configurations from the template
Creating templates from existing build configurations
2. Going meta with Meta-Runners
Using Meta-Runners
3. Build result actions
Commenting on build results
Tagging build results
Pinning build results
Promoting builds
Marking the build as successful or failed
Removing builds
4. Build history cleanup
Cleanup rules
Archiving projects
5. Configuring build priorities
6. Interacting with TeamCity from build scripts
Service messages
Creating teamcity-info.xml
7. Summary
1. What is Continuous Delivery?
2. Why Continuous Delivery?
3. The deployment pipeline
4. Implementing the deployment pipeline in TeamCity
Publishing and consuming artifacts
Build chain for CI
Deploying to environments
Environments as gates
Identifying the build that is deployed in an environment
Deploying any version to an environment
Limiting deployment permissions to certain users
Passing sensitive information during deployment
Feature branching and feature toggling
5. Summary
1. Using TeamCity with an external database
Configuring PostgreSQL as an external database
Migrating from one database to another
2. Backup and restore
Taking backups from the server UI
Backing up and restoring data using the maintainDB tool
A manual backup
3. Handling upgrades
Updating a server installed via an archive
Updating TeamCity using the Windows installer
Updating the agents
4. Monitoring resource usage, performance, and logs
Disk space usage
TeamCity server diagnostics
5. Tweaking the TeamCity JVM
6. Summary
If you have any Query