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(The Why)
 
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= Why =
#REDIRECT [[CI]]
 
== The Vision ==
 
There are hundreds of packages which make up the Operating System.
Making sure that they all work together as a whole is not an easy
task. This becomes even harder as the number of packages and their
inter-dependencies grows. An extensive testing is required before
a new version of the operating system is released to ensure it is
stable enough. That is the past.
 
Imagine an '''Always Ready Operating System''' which consists of
packages which are constantly kept in a good shape.  Integrated
and stable thanks to an extensive test coverage which is
continuously executed upon changes in individual packages, in this
way allowing to prepare a new release in much shorter time, or
even in no time.
 
Imagine an operating system distribution which you could release
at any moment. This is where we are heading. Here comes the CI,
Continuous Integration, as an invaluable tool to ensure everything
is working together as expected in every point of time.
 
== CI Manifesto ==
 
Continuous integration aims to ensure broken changes are revealed
as soon as possible and do not affect other developers, packagers,
maintainers or users. The feedback that continuous integration
provides is vital for fast paced agile delivery of software. Late
testing, long after a change occurs, does not scale to the pace of
Fedora. Learn about the steps that are crucial for a working
Continuous Integration in the [[CI/Manifesto|CI Manifesto]].

Latest revision as of 10:38, 8 December 2018

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