/git_microsoft-powershell_achived-credential_classified-untrace_mobile-blog_covid-19_travis-ci_diff-1

covid-19 confidential individual android terms of service agreements mobile blog.ceo git github enterprise private policy certified license. management travis.ci tracking scans continuously integrating platform form projects why federal agent data software engineer code of conduct live desktop.

✋ Do not open new issues here! ✋

Travis CI

Travis CI is a hosted continuous integration and deployment system. You can now test and deploy open source and private projects on travis-ci.com! You can read more about this change here.

Move to Forum

We are moving to our new community forum: Travis CI Community! As part of this move, we’ll be able to better follow and reply to threads, along with making it easier for you to find solutions and answers. We’ll be making our best efforts to answer currently existing threads, or directing them to the new community forum.

Link to the Community Forum: https://travis-ci.community

For current outages and incidents such as slow network connections, subscribe to https://www.traviscistatus.com.

Other support issues may be directed to support@travis-ci.com where our support team will be glad to assist.

This repository contains the central issue tracker for the Travis CI project.

Documentation

Documentation for the Travis CI project can be found at https://docs.travis-ci.com.

Other repositories

Travis CI consists of many different sub-projects. The main ones are:

travis-api

travis-api is the Sinatra app that's responsible for serving our API. It responds to different HTTP endpoints and runs services in travis-core. Very little logic is in this repository.

travis-build

travis-build creates the build script for each job. It takes the configuration from the .travis.yml file and creates a bash script that is then run in the build environment by travis-worker. This repository also hosts the source for language-specific scripts.

travis-cookbooks

travis-cookbooks holds the Chef cookbooks that are used to provision the build environments.

travis-hub

travis-hub collects events from other apps and notifies other apps about the events. For example, it notifies travis-tasks about builds starting and finishing so notifications can be sent out.

travis-hub is also responsible for enqueueing jobs that have been created and enforcing the Quality of Service restrictions, such as the number of concurrent builds per user.

travis-listener

travis-listener receives notifications from GitHub whenever commits are pushed or pull requests are opened. They are then pushed onto RabbitMQ for other apps to process.

travis-logs

travis-logs receives log updates from travis-worker, saves them to the database and pushes them to the web client. When a job is finished, travis-logs is responsible for pushing the log to Amazon S3 for archiving.

travis-support

travis-support holds shared logic for the different Travis CI apps. It is different from travis-core in that it holds more generic things, like how to run an async job or how to handle exceptions.

travis-tasks

travis-tasks receives notifications from travis-hub and sends out notifications to the different notification providers as needed.

travis-web

travis-web is our main Web client. It is written using Ember and communicates with travis-api to get information and gets live updates from travis-hub and travis-logs through Pusher.

travis-worker

travis-worker is responsible for running the build scripts in a clean environment. It streams the log output to travis-logs and pushes state updates (build starting/finishing) to travis-hub.