From the course: Docker on Azure (2019)
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Enable CI trigger
- [Instructor] So while our build process has a pipeline, you can see here from the commit history that the only build was actually manual. If we want to make sure that a change in the master repository of our Git repo, or any repository really, causes another build to occur, we actually do have one more configuration step to do. So let's go ahead and select the Pipeline, and we're going to edit it. And you can see here that we have our sources, are coming from docker-azure master, and we have an agent job that's going to run and a build, and a push image. So these things are all correct. These are going to tie in to the right resources, and it's the right steps for the pipeline, those are the tasks. But our triggers are not scheduled, so we're not going to just do this continuously, and continuous integration is disabled. Well this is the real trick right here. We have to enable continuous integration. We can batch…
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Contents
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From app to containerized app5m 16s
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(Locked)
Create an Azure Container Registry2m 5s
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(Locked)
Use ACR locally3m 47s
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(Locked)
Connect Azure Repos with ACR3m 53s
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(Locked)
Automated container builds3m 28s
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(Locked)
Enable CI trigger2m 20s
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(Locked)
Challenge: Update a container26s
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(Locked)
Solution: Commit a code change2m 17s
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