RSS FeedOpen Source

Open source Hudson spin-off Jenkins gets commercial

Open source Hudson spin-off Jenkins gets commercial

CloudBees offers enterprise version of continuous integration server

Java platform-as-a-service cloud provider CloudBees has launched a commercial version of the Jenkins continuous integration platform, the company announced.

An increasing number of enterprises that use Jenkins for their application development are using the software in production settings, said Steve Harris, who is CloudBees' senior vice president of products. The company had surveyed Jenkins users and found that 80 percent deploy Jenkins in "mission critical" duties.


Related Articles

 

Virtualisation, Big Data and BYOD

Check out our Business IT Hub for opinions and briefings. Read more


The Jenkins Enterprise software subscription, designed to be deployed on internal networks, includes formal technical support and a commitment by CloudBees that the release will be updated for a full year, which is longer than the three months of upgrades that the open source community guarantees for the software.

In addition to the core Jenkins program, Jenkins Enterprise also offers a number of additional plugins to aid its use in the enterprise, including ones that would aid in security, large installations and usage optimisation. Jenkins Enterprise is based on the Jenkins Nectar 11.10 release.

Built to run on a Java application server, Jenkins provides a platform for managing large development projects. "As developers check in code to a source code repository, Jenkins kicks off the build process," Harris said. The software manages multiple teams working on different aspects of the project, coordinating cross-platform testing and other routines of complex code development.

Jenkins is an offshoot of the Hudson CI platform. The maintainers of the Hudson platform spun out Jenkins after becoming frustrated when Oracle did not incorporate their proposed changes to the software in a timely manner. Although Hudson is open source, Oracle owns the Hudson trademark, which it acquired as part of last year's purchase of Sun Microsystems, developer of the software.

Oracle subsequently contributed Hudson to the Eclipse Foundation, though the two projects now are unlikely to be merged back into one entity. CloudBees, which also offers Jenkins as a hosted service, argues that Hudson's developer and user momentum has moved to Jenkins.

"The bulk of the community is committed to Jenkins," he said.

Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:


PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

HP Business Answers

Join the discussion today

The HP Business Answers group is a vibrant community of small and medium sized business owners and employees. HP provides independent and expert advice in fields such as design, branding, taxation, technology, marketing or manufacturing so join today to network with over 6500 like-minded professionals.

Join the HP Business Answers Linkedin Community

Read the most recent discussions

Read more at the HP Business Answers Linkedin Community


ComputerWorldUK Resources

ComputerworldUK
Share
x
Open
* *