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9.5

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Travis CI - Continuous Integration Software

Travis CI Reviews in June 2025: User Ratings, Pros & Cons

Continuous integration made effortless.

4.4

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Travis CI Reviews & Ratings

4.4

Very Good

Based on 326 ratings & 111 reviews

Rating Distribution

Excellent

(75)

Very Good

(32)

Good

(4)

Poor

(0)

Terible

(0)

Expert's Review

Travis CI stands out as a robust tool for managing continuous integration and deployment pipelines efficiently. Its seamless integration with GitHub simplifies automation tasks, saving valuable time for developers. The service excels in automating tests, ensuring code quality, and facilitating deployments across different platforms. Users appreciate the ease of ...Read more

Travis CI pros and cons

  • Simplifies continuous development pipeline tasks, freeing up mental resources for developers to focus on coding.

  • Easy to integrate with GitHub and various IDEs, enhancing productivity and workflow efficiency.

  • Supports automating tests in CI/CD projects, ensuring code quality and preventing broken builds.

  • Provides free support for public repos, making it cost-effective for open-source projects.

  • May experience intermittent outages and performance issues, potentially disrupting development workflow.

  • Lack of extensive customization options and advanced features compared to some competitors.

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Showing 81-90 out of 111

SI

Simeon I

01/26/16

5 out of 5

Super easy to use and extremely intuitive.

What do you like best? The GitHub/Slack integration. I managed to set it up in 5 minutes. The look is also great I can navigate very intuitively. What do you dislike? It's not very easy to get the JDK install Dir in a build slave. This is the only negative experience I've had so far. SO question here: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/30832526/get-the-jdk-install-dir-in-a-travisci-build What problems are you solving with the product? What benefits have you realized? We ...

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UI

User in Information Technology and Services

01/25/16

4.5 out of 5

The standard de-facto

What do you like best? Great UI A simple hidden configuration file to setup your project What do you dislike? Nothing much, actually you can get more speed just by paying :) What problems are you solving with the product? What benefits have you realized? Continuous Integration for my open-source projects. I can be sure that every revision I push passes the test and so the pull requests before I have a chance to merge them.

AI

Administrator in Computer Software

01/25/16

5 out of 5

Went from "would be cool to use" to "vital for our group" in under a month

What do you like best? Its really simple to get started with and how it integrates so seamlessly into github is a real selling point. What do you dislike? Sometimes its slow, however its most likely due to external services. Recommendations to others considering the product: If your on github you have no reason not to try it. What problems are you solving with the product? What benefits have you realized? Continuous integration and automated testing and feedback

MH

Micah H

01/23/16

4 out of 5

A great public continuous integration service

What do you like best? Travis CI is a great CI service for just about any Open Source (linux-based) project. Things they do well: • Dead simple setup and integration. • Easy integration with Github • Great documentation, I've never needed to file a support ticket. It has been a few years since I've looked into their private repository pricing, but their public service is top notch. What do you dislike? The wait times can sometimes get pretty long, but if you're not ...

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01/23/16

4 out of 5

A great public continuous integration service

What do you like best? Travis CI is a great CI service for just about any Open Source (linux-based project. Things they do well: • Dead simple setup and integration. • Easy integration with Github • Great documentation, I've never needed to file a support ticket. It has been a few years since I've looked into their private repository pricing, but their public service is top notch. What do you dislike? The wait times can sometimes get pretty long, but if you're not paying ...

Read more

AH

Aster H

01/22/16

5 out of 5

Automated testing for the uninitiated

What do you like best? Travis CI made it super simple to integrated automated testing into my Github repos. Auto login, auto-syncing, auto-run mocha testing, container support, content deployment, it handles everything I need it to gracefully and efficiently. What do you dislike? The queues can get backed up sometimes, where a new job can be waiting upwards of 5-10 minutes to run. There isn't necessarily a mechanism in place to notify you when something like that occurs, or if there ...

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UI

User in Program Development

01/15/16

5 out of 5

Travis provides me a way to develop fast software

What do you like best? Travis is a software that provides me a way to make software without loosing time and with a best performance and quality What do you dislike? Travis tends to have a low performance with some test when you're trying theme in the cloud instead using it in local machine Recommendations to others considering the product: First you need to consider the requirements of your software, also the enviroment of development and the type of software are you developing, ...

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12/19/15

4 out of 5

Almost perfect CI system that still can not test for windows

What do you like best? The testing framework looks rock solid, it will add itself to github hook when turning tests on from travis interface. Just a push and it starts building the project. As the outputs are directly copied over from console, errors can easily be tracked. Allows root access so that is a plus. Dependencies can be cached so build times are reduced. Travis even gives you a neat icon to put anywhere to show build status. The web interface shows who last committed, i.e. who ...

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SS

Swadesh S

12/19/15

4 out of 5

Almost perfect CI system that still can not test for windows

What do you like best? The testing framework looks rock solid, it will add itself to github hook when turning tests on from travis interface. Just a push and it starts building the project. As the outputs are directly copied over from console, errors can easily be tracked. Allows root access so that is a plus. Dependencies can be cached so build times are reduced. Travis even gives you a neat icon to put anywhere to show build status. The web interface shows who last committed, i.e. who ...

Read more

JV

John V

12/18/15

5 out of 5

The best CI platform

What do you like best? Travis-CI provides an extremely powerful platform for continuous integration. The .travis.yml build control file is extremely versatile. What do you dislike? Travis-CI does not allow build artefacts to be downloaded from Travis-CI. It is necessary to push them to another service, such as S3. I wish they had support for more commercial databases, like Oracle and SQLServer. Also their OSX platform isnt mature and well supported. Recommendations to others ...

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Disclaimer: This research has been collated from a variety of authoritative sources. We welcome your feedback at [email protected].