This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. S3 Deployment This page documents deployments using dpl v1 which currently is the default version. The next major version dpl v2 will be released soon, and we recommend starting to use it. Please see our blog post for details. dpl v2 documentation can be found here.
This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. GitHub Releases Uploading This page documents deployments using dpl v1 which currently is the default version. The next major version dpl v2 will be released soon, and we recommend starting to use it. Please see our blog post for details. dpl v2 documentation can be found here.
This documentation site is Open Source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. Travis CI relies on Open Source licensing information. The Google Chrome addon allows Travis CI builds to install Google Chrome at runtime. This addon supports both, Linux and macOS build environments. For Linux, you must be running on Ubuntu Xenial 16.04 or later build environments. Selecting a Ch
This documentation site is Open Source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. Travis CI relies on Open Source licensing information. What This Guide Covers # This guide provides an overview on the different environments in which Travis CI can run your builds, and why you might want to pick one over another. Virtualization environments # Each build runs in one of the followin
This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. GitHub Pages Deployment This page documents deployments using dpl v1 which currently is the default version. The next major version dpl v2 will be released soon, and we recommend starting to use it. Please see our blog post for details. dpl v2 documentation can be found here. Deploying to GitHub Pa
This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. A common way to customize the build process is to define environment variables, which can be accessed from any stage in your build process. The best way to define an environment variable depends on what type of information it will contain, and when you need to change it: if it does not contain sens
This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. We have separate documentation on encrypting files. A repository’s .travis.yml file can have “encrypted values”, such as environment variables, notification settings, and deploy api keys. These encrypted values can be added by anyone, but are only readable by Travis CI. The repository owner does no
This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. Please note that, due to the upcoming Docker Rate Limit announcement, users will be required to add their own authentication information to their build settings or build config as documented below. Travis CI builds can run and build Docker images, and can also push images to Docker repositories or
This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. Note that Debug builds are not currently supported on Windows. If you are having trouble resolving complex build errors, or you suspect there are significant differences between your local development environment and the Travis CI build environment, you can restart builds in debug mode to get shell
This documentation site is Open Source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. Travis CI relies on Open Source licensing information. Learn more about Travis CI for private repositories, our hosted continuous integration solution for private repositories. Does Travis CI for private repositories include a trial period? # Yes, of course! No need to put in your credit card detai
This documentation site is Open Source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. Travis CI relies on Open Source licensing information. What This Guide Covers # This guide covers headless GUI & browser testing using tools provided by the Travis CI environment. Most of the content is technology-neutral and does not cover all the details of specific testing tools (like Poltergeis
This documentation site is open source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. This guide covers setting up the most popular databases and other services in the Travis CI environment. You can check databases and services availability in the build environment you are using here. All services use default settings, with the exception of some added users and relaxed security sett
Compilers and Build toolchain # automake clang cmake gcc maven mercurial pkg-config wget xctool Languages # C C++ Go Java Nodejs Python Ruby Runtimes # Every worker has at least one version of Go, Java, Python, Ruby and NodeJS to accommodate projects that may need one of those runtimes during the build. Ruby versions/implementations # Default macOS Ruby (depends on macOS version) – You need to use
This documentation site is Open Source. The README in our Git repository explains how to contribute. Travis CI relies on Open Source licensing information. Heroku Deployment This page documents deployments using dpl v1 which currently is the default version. The next major version dpl v2 will be released soon, and we recommend starting to use it. Please see our blog post for details. dpl v2 docume
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