this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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Programming
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I never said to do this..
Hm? no, definitely don't do this. We've literally spent half a decade at my current company trying to get rid of the system that previous devs that thought this was a good idea, and this is exactly what they did. Your integration tests and system level tests should not depend on the environment you run them in. You should be able to execute them from anywhere and have them run the same. Depending on CI to do that for you means that you are tightly tied to not only your CI, but whomever maintains that infrastructure, the resources around that infrastructure, whether those are build machines, secrets, or even the workflows themselves.
That... has nothing to do with CI/CD.. You're just not using your build management tool (which is built to execute tests) to execute your tests...
I do not understand what you're saying here. You're going to have to explain more.
And is that because you're not actually updating your dependencies that are in your parent POM? Because we update dependencies multiple times a week. Not really sure where you're going with this though.
I don't think I ever recommended either of those things. For one, gitflow is a terrible workflow, and two, why would you need to integrate CD into the gradle file? Your pipeline calls your gradle tasks to perform the things your build needs. Not making gradle into a CI tool.