Vexor

Vexor is a distributed cloud web-service for building and testing software, a continuous integration tool.

Vexor
Developer(s)Evrone
Initial releaseOctober 2014
PlatformWeb
TypeContinuous integration
Websitevexor.io (English) vexor.ru (Russian)

Description

Vexor helps a developers’ team to keep to Continuous Integration methodology. The original code of the project can be stored at GitHub, Bitbucket or at GitLab.[1] The number of workers launched simultaneously is not limited as they automatically start for each new build.[2][3]

The following languages are maintained:[4] Ruby, Clojure, Scala, Python, Node.js, Go, Rust, Haskell. It is possible to use a configuration file in the vexor.yml format or an already written file in the Travis CI format (.travis.yml).[5][6] Vexor can also send notification e-mails and notification messages into a Slack chat.[7] The fee depends on the number of minutes spent on the work of the service. On July 25, 2015, one minute cost $0.015.[6][8] Starting April 1, 2017 Vexor removed their 100 minutes/month free tier for all accounts.[9] There are no plans to support open source projects with free tiers, currently.[10]

History

Vexor is being developed by the Evrone Company. The service was launched on October 2014.[11][12][13]

Among Vexor clients one can find:[14] Meduza, Bookmate, InSales and others.

gollark: There are obviously some non-voting ways to influence politics, but those are generally more costly/annoying, so the situation is probably not much better.
gollark: Discussing politics also has the great effect of sometimes alienating people you know.
gollark: Since your probability of deciding an election by voting is not very high, the expected value of that is very low, and - since people are very hard to convince away from their views - it's even worse for *discussing* politics.
gollark: Regardless of how much you think the results of elections and such matter, I contest that for an individual, at least, politics is not very important.
gollark: So I appear to have been timed out: obviously, this is a clear sign that Cap and WS's views are correct and stand up by themselves.

See also

References

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