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You're reading from  Implementing CI/CD Using Azure Pipelines

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Published inDec 2023
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781804612491
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Piti Champeethong
Piti Champeethong
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Piti Champeethong

Piti Champeethong is a senior consulting engineer at MongoDB, Singapore. He has been a part of the software development community for over 20 years and specializes in database application development and CI/CD implementation. He is a Microsoft Certified Trainer, lecturer, and community leader. He lives in Thailand and engages with Thai tech communities, such as the MongoDB Thailand User Group and the Thailand .NET community by speaking at various events. He has made significant contributions to public repositories on .NET and MongoDB technologies, supporting the growth of the Thai tech community.
Read more about Piti Champeethong

Roberto Mardeni
Roberto Mardeni
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Roberto Mardeni

Roberto Mardeni has been working in the IT industry for over two decades. He specializes in software development, architecture, and DevSecOps practices around many different application platforms and CI/CD tools, typically focusing on Microsoft .NET and other open source programming languages. He has been working since 2017 as an application innovation specialist on the enterprise sales side at Microsoft, supporting their cloud business. He lives in the United States and helps some of the largest independent software vendors to adopt the Azure platform. This is his first foray into technical writing, but he has contributed to the open source community in different GitHub public repositories of his own and contributed to others as well.
Read more about Roberto Mardeni

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Creating a build pipeline with a single job

After preparing the build and deployment agent in the previous chapter, this section will explain how to create a first build pipeline on the Azure DevOps portal. Before creating a first build pipeline, you must create an Azure repo for the source code repository. There are two options to create a build pipeline – the classic editor, which is the GUI editor for dragging and dropping and dropping the components to build a pipeline, and Yet Another Markup Language (YAML), which customizes the advanced Azure pipeline by the markup language. In this chapter, we will focus on using the classic editor.

Let’s create an empty job to see how it works:

  1. Click on your project name from the web portal, and then click Pipelines | Create Pipeline:
Figure 2.1 – Creating a new pipeline

Figure 2.1 – Creating a new pipeline

  1. Click on Use the classic editor:
Figure 2.2 – Using the classic editor

Figure 2.2 – Using the classic...

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Implementing CI/CD Using Azure Pipelines
Published in: Dec 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781804612491

Authors (2)

author image
Piti Champeethong

Piti Champeethong is a senior consulting engineer at MongoDB, Singapore. He has been a part of the software development community for over 20 years and specializes in database application development and CI/CD implementation. He is a Microsoft Certified Trainer, lecturer, and community leader. He lives in Thailand and engages with Thai tech communities, such as the MongoDB Thailand User Group and the Thailand .NET community by speaking at various events. He has made significant contributions to public repositories on .NET and MongoDB technologies, supporting the growth of the Thai tech community.
Read more about Piti Champeethong

author image
Roberto Mardeni

Roberto Mardeni has been working in the IT industry for over two decades. He specializes in software development, architecture, and DevSecOps practices around many different application platforms and CI/CD tools, typically focusing on Microsoft .NET and other open source programming languages. He has been working since 2017 as an application innovation specialist on the enterprise sales side at Microsoft, supporting their cloud business. He lives in the United States and helps some of the largest independent software vendors to adopt the Azure platform. This is his first foray into technical writing, but he has contributed to the open source community in different GitHub public repositories of his own and contributed to others as well.
Read more about Roberto Mardeni