TeamCity
Developer(s) | JetBrains |
---|---|
Stable release | 9.1.6 / January 29, 2016 |
Written in | Java |
Operating system | server-based Web application |
Type | Continuous integration |
License | Proprietary commercial software, Freeware for teams meeting supplier conditions |
Website |
www |
TeamCity is a Java-based build management and continuous integration server from JetBrains. It was first released on October 2, 2006.[1] TeamCity is commercial software and licensed under a proprietary license. A Freemium license for up to 20 build configurations and 3 free Build Agent licenses is available. Open Source projects can request a free license.
Notable features
- Gated Commits (prevents developers from breaking sources in a version control system by running the build remotely for local changes prior to commit)
- Build Grid. Allows running multiple builds and tests under different platforms and environments simultaneously
- Integrated code coverage, inspections and duplicates search
- Integration with IDEs: Eclipse, IntelliJ IDEA, Visual Studio
- Platforms supported: Java, .NET and Ruby
Supported version control systems
TeamCity supports the following version control systems:
- Subversion
- Perforce
- CVS
- Borland StarTeam
- IBM Rational ClearCase (Base and UCM)
- Team Foundation Server (2005, 2008, 2010)
- Microsoft Visual SourceSafe
- Git
- Mercurial
- SourceGear Vault [2]
See also
References
External links
- Official TeamCity website
- Continuous Integration, Martin Fowler, 2006-05-01
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