It's also worth looking at circleci and buildbot, where the latter is run locally, which has its own pros and cons, and the former has had a lot of hype because of support for parallelism. Travis has good integration with slack though which is cool, and it has a lot of community support.
On Fri, 2 Sep 2016, 19:58 Andy Robinson, <a...@reportlab.com> wrote: > Re-subjecting... > > On 2 September 2016 at 19:30, Stestagg <stest...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi Andy > > > > We use travis to build the site. You can see the travis yaml file and > build > > scripts in our repo: > ... > > If you can make your repo public, I would recommend travis as a great > way to > > build your site. > We can > > If you've any questions, please ask on or off list. > > Thanks for this. I have never touched Travis, but it's time I learned. > > If I understand correctly, it's a hosted service which can do pretty > much anything you want when it sees a commit; in this case > - pull from jobs repo > - generate output files > - push back the finished HTML up to the GitHub repo > > ? > Cool! > > (Yes, I've been under a rock for about 10 years) > > I am embarking on a rather ambitious project to modernise an entire > sport. Thousands of clubs have the problem of somewhere between zero > and one webmasters at any one time, and the dynamic things they need > to do - fixture lists, race results - can just about all he handled by > Javascript these days. With some nice reusable widgets and standards, > no need for database server. And GitHub solves the problem of letting > multiple people access the repo and write/edit stories with no coding > skill. > > Speaking of which, is or was anyone on this site involved with > athletics or running? > > - Andy > _______________________________________________ > python-uk mailing list > python-uk@python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-uk >
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