Skip to main content

Deploying / Continuous integration of a Symfony 2 application with Jenkins/Hudson


I've developed an application which uses the Symfony 2 framework. The application code resides in a Bundle, and on my local machine I just downloaded the Symfony2 Standard Distribution and added the Bundle to the src folder as the tutorials describe, before editing the config / routing files appropriately. That's served me well from a development perspective.



I'm now starting to think about how to handle the framework dependencies with regards to deploying to a production environment / a continuous integration setup. Should I continue as I have to date, using a distribution and perhaps a build tool like Phing to check out my bundle and any other dependencies? Or should I be checking out only the Symfony source from Github, and maintain a custom 'distribution' for my application?



I'm hoping someone else has had to do a similar thing and can recommend a solution that works with minimum fuss!



Thanks.


Source: Tips4allCCNA FINAL EXAM

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Slow Android emulator

I have a 2.67 GHz Celeron processor, 1.21 GB of RAM on a x86 Windows XP Professional machine. My understanding is that the Android emulator should start fairly quickly on such a machine, but for me it does not. I have followed all instructions in setting up the IDE, SDKs, JDKs and such and have had some success in staring the emulator quickly but is very particulary. How can I, if possible, fix this problem?

Java Urban Myths

Along the line of C++ Urban Myths and Perl Myths : What are the Java Urban Myths? That is, the ideas and conceptions about Java that are common but have no actual roots in reality . As a Java programmer, what ideas held by your fellow Java programmers have you had to disprove so often that you've come to believe they all learned at the feet of the same drunk old story-teller? Ideally, you would express these myths in a single sentence, and include an explanation of why they are false.