CircleCI announced today it has added integrations in collaboration with 20 partners to the family of connectors, known as Orbs, that it makes available for its continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) platform.
Thomas Trahan, vice president of business development for CircleCI, said integrations are now available with Heroku, AWS, Cloud Foundry, Google Cloud, Red Hat, Helm, Kublr, Alcide, Azure, DeployHub, Fairwinds, VMware, Kubernetes, Rafay Systems, Pulumi, Convox, Spinnaker, realMethods, Quali, Pantheon, LaunchDarkly and Salesforce.
Since launching Orbs a year ago, CircleCI claims there are now more than 13,000 organizations using Orbs across nearly 40,000 repositories and 9 million CI/CD pipelines. There are also more than 1,200 Orbs provided by more than 116 partners listed in the CircleCI registry. In the future, Trahan said the company plans to begin surfacing recommendations concerning which Orbs to employ based on the nature of the workflow being constructed.
Trahan said Orbs are gaining traction because they reduce the amount of custom code that needs to be written to set up workflows across a CI/CD pipeline. Without the existence of Orbs, DevOps teams are forced to rely on application programming interfaces (APIs) that are more liable to break, he said.
Competition between CI/CD platform providers is expected to become fiercer as adoption of CI/CD platforms continues to accelerate. A report published by Data Bridge Market Research this week forecasts demand for continuous integration (CI) tools alone will grow to $18.9 billion by 2025, representing a 19% compound annual growth rate. While the current CI/CD market is dominated by open source platforms managed by internal DevOps teams, CircleCI is betting interest in accessing a managed CI/CD service delivered via the cloud will rise as organizations opt to devote more resources to building applications versus managing the platforms they are built on.
A recent CircleCI study of more than 30 million workflows spanning 1.6 million jobs runs per day on its platform found 80% of all workflows finish in less than 10 minutes. Those jobs spanned 150,000 projects launched by more than 40,000 organizations.
The report noted 50% of those organizations start six workflows per day across their projects and that 50% of CircleCI projects never had a failure during pipeline changes made over the 90-day period when the study was conducted. When a failure did occur, 50% recovered in less than an hour, with 25% of organizations recovering in 15 minutes or less, according to the report.
As organizations embrace best DevOps practices more broadly, CircleCI is betting these kinds of metrics will become more important as a platform differentiator.
Naturally, it’s too early to say how the CI/CD platform wars will play out in the months and years ahead. But the amount of code organizations will need to deliver at increasingly faster rates is only increasing. The challenge organizations are facing now is finding a way to deliver all that code at an unprecedented level of scale.