More info -
Training - http://bit.ly/scmgalaxy-trainingCalender - http://bit.ly/scmgalaxy-calender
Lab Setup Details - Prerequisites
Operating Systems - Windows 7 or Linux(RHEL 7.X or Ubantu)
JDK 1.7 or Higher
SCM Tool Clients Installed (SVN, GIT, Perforce)
Servlet container like GlassFish and Tomcat (If one wants to host Jenkins outside) – Optional
[If trainee is having any specific learning agenda to be addressed in this training apart from the table of Content as below; please email me @ info@scmgalaxy.com]
Table of Content
Continuous Integration with Jenkins
- What is Software Configuration Management
- What is Build and Release Engineering
- Introduction of Version Control Management?
- Basic usage of Subversion
- Basic usage of git
- Introduction of Build Management?
- How to write ant script?
- How to write Maven script?
- How to write MSBuild Script?
- Introduction of Release Management?
- Benefit of Continuous Integration?
- Different Continuous Integration Tools?
- Focus on Jenkins
- Installation and Setup of Jenkinks
- Configure a Job to Build the Project using SVN /GIT and ANT/Maven
- Using Build Script (Ant, Maven and MSBuild) with Jenkins
- Authentication and Authorization in Jenkins
- Lab and Assignment
- Nodes Setup in Jenkins
- Labels, Tags and Notification using Jenkins
- Empowered with Plugins in Jenkins
- 20 Popular Plugins and Their Usage
- Integrating Jenkins with Junit for automated testing
- Integrating Jenkins with HP-QC for automated testing
- Integrating Jenkins with Cobertura for test Coverage
- Integrating Jenkins with Sonar for static code analysis
- Release and Deployments using Jenkins and Nexus
- Advance Jenkins
- Jenkins Scripting
- Jenkins Command line
- Reporting and Dashboard using Jenkins
- Lab and Assignment
I read this article about build and release training with Jenkins and found it very easy to understand. It explained in simple words what the training covers and how it can help someone learn Jenkins step by step. I liked how the points were clear so that even someone new to Jenkins or DevOps could follow without feeling confused. It helped me see that real training with examples and hands‑on practice can make learning much easier and useful for real work. This post is helpful for beginners who want to grow their skills and feel more confident using Jenkins in projects. Thank you for writing this in a clear and simple way — it made the idea of training easy to think about and try.
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