Best Continuous Delivery Software for OverOps

Find and compare the best Continuous Delivery software for OverOps in 2024

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top Continuous Delivery software for OverOps on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    Jenkins Reviews
    Jenkins, the most popular open-source automation server, provides hundreds of plugins that can be used to build, deploy, and automate any project. Jenkins is an extensible automation server that can be used to create CI servers or become the continuous delivery hub for any project. Jenkins is a Java-based program that can be run straight out of the box. It includes packages for Windows, Linux and macOS, as well as other Unix-like operating system packages. Jenkins is easy to set up and configure via its web interface. It also includes built-in help and on-the-fly error checking. Jenkins can be integrated with almost every tool in the Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery toolchain thanks to the hundreds of plugins available in the Update Center. Jenkins' plugin architecture allows for almost unlimited possibilities. Jenkins makes it easy to distribute work across multiple machines. This helps drive builds, tests, and deployments across multiple platforms more quickly.
  • 2
    GitHub Reviews
    Top Pick
    GitHub is the most trusted, secure, and scalable developer platform in the world. Join millions of developers and businesses who are creating the software that powers the world. Get the best tools, support and services to help you build with the most innovative communities in the world. There's a free option for managing multiple contributors: GitHub Team Open Source. We also have GitHub Sponsors that help you fund your work. The Pack is back. We have partnered to provide teachers and students free access to the most powerful developer tools for the school year. Work for a government-recognized nonprofit, association, or 501(c)(3)? Receive a discount Organization account through us.
  • 3
    GitLab Reviews
    Top Pick

    GitLab

    GitLab

    $29 per user per month
    14 Ratings
    GitLab is a complete DevOps platform. GitLab gives you a complete CI/CD toolchain right out of the box. One interface. One conversation. One permission model. GitLab is a complete DevOps platform, delivered in one application. It fundamentally changes the way Security, Development, and Ops teams collaborate. GitLab reduces development time and costs, reduces application vulnerabilities, and speeds up software delivery. It also increases developer productivity. Source code management allows for collaboration, sharing, and coordination across the entire software development team. To accelerate software delivery, track and merge branches, audit changes, and enable concurrent work. Code can be reviewed, discussed, shared knowledge, and identified defects among distributed teams through asynchronous review. Automate, track, and report code reviews.
  • 4
    Chef Reviews
    Chef transforms infrastructure into code. Chef automates how you build, deploy and manage your infrastructure. Your infrastructure can be as easily modified, tested, and repeated as application code. Chef Infrastructure Management automates infrastructure management automation to ensure configurations are consistently applied in all environments. Chef Compliance makes it easy for the enterprise to enforce and maintain compliance. Chef App Delivery enables you to deliver consistent, high-quality application results at scale. Chef Desktop allows IT teams automate the deployment, management and ongoing compliance for IT resources.
  • 5
    Bamboo Reviews

    Bamboo

    Atlassian

    $10 for up to 10 jobs
    2 Ratings
    Bamboo provides first-class support for continuous delivery. Bamboo's deployment projects take the tedious work out of releasing into each environment and allow you to control the flow using per-environment permissions.
  • 6
    TeamCity Reviews

    TeamCity

    JetBrains

    $299.00/year
    Powerful Continuous Integration right out of the box You can define up to 100 job-based build configurations and run unlimited builds. You can run up to three builds simultaneously. If necessary, add additional agents. All TeamCity features can be used to their full potential. This product has the same features as our largest customers. You can get peer support via the forum or file a bug report or feature request and vote in our public issue tracker. Unlimited users, unlimited build times. There are no strings attached. You can run automated tests on the server before you commit your changes. This keeps your code base clean. You don't have to wait for a build finish to find out if something is wrong. To inherit parent settings and permissions, create a project tree. You can create templates with common settings to inherit multiple build configurations.
  • 7
    Puppet Enterprise Reviews

    Puppet Enterprise

    Puppet

    $120 per month
    Puppet is changing the way continuous operations can be done. Automate your environment with products that are responsive, predictive and predictive. 90% of the US's largest companies use Puppet's infrastructure to simplify complex IT infrastructure. Puppet is redefining continuous operations. Our platform empowers IT operations teams to automate their infrastructure. This allows them to deliver at cloud speed, cloud scale. Our flexible approach to infrastructure automation allows teams to innovate quickly, while ensuring security and compliance. We are leading the charge in predicting at scale and moving beyond find-and-fix. No more surprises. We work at the speed of business and deliver infrastructure automation software that promises your business and gives your employees back their time. Peace of mind.
  • 8
    Concourse Reviews
    Concourse is an open-source continuous-thing-doer. Concourse is based on the basic mechanics of tasks and resources. It offers a general approach for automation that is great for CI/CD. A Concourse pipeline works in the same way as a continuous, distributed Makefile. Each job has a buildplan that outlines the job's input resources as well as what to do with them when they change. The web UI allows you to visualize your pipeline. It takes only one click to go from a failed job to see why it failed. The visualization gives you a "gut check" feedback loop. If it looks wrong, it probably has. Configuring passed constraints can make jobs depend on each other. The resultant chain of jobs and resources is a dependency diagram that propels your project forward from source code to production. Fly CLI is used for all configuration and administration. Fly set-pipeline pushes the configuration up to Concourse. Once the file looks good, you can check it in to source control.
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