1 / 26

Maven vs Gradle: Which Is Better? | Maven & Gradle Difference | Devops Tools Explained | Simplilearn

This presentation on the Maven vs. Gradle will help you understand the contrast between the DevOps tools. In the video, we shall begin learning the basics of the two tools and what they comprise. After we know that, we shall move forward and look at the differences between them based on some prominent features. After learning all this, we shall finally see the possible procedure to choose between the two DevOps tools, which would be a better fit for your work.<br><br>So, let's get started.<br>The topics covered in the video are:<br>What is Maven?<br>What is Gradle?<br>Maven vs. Gradle<br>How to Choose?<br><br>Why learn DevOps? <br>Simplilearnu2019s DevOps training course is designed to help you become a DevOps practitioner and apply the latest in DevOps methodology to automate your software development lifecycle right out of the class. You will master configuration management; continuous integration deployment, delivery and monitoring using DevOps tools such as Git, Docker, Jenkins, Puppet and Nagios in a practical, hands on and interactive approach. The Devops training course focuses heavily on the use of Docker containers, a technology that is revolutionizing the way apps are deployed in the cloud today and is a critical skillset to master in the cloud age.<br><br>After completing the DevOps training course you will achieve hands on expertise in various aspects of the DevOps delivery model. The practical learning outcomes of this Devops training course are:<br>An understanding of DevOps and the modern DevOps toolsets<br>The ability to automate all aspects of a modern code delivery and deployment pipeline using:<br>1. Source code management tools<br>2. Build tools<br>3. Test automation tools<br>4. Containerization through Docker<br>5. Configuration management tools<br>6. Monitoring tools<br><br>Who should take this course?<br>DevOps career opportunities are thriving worldwide. DevOps was featured as one of the 11 best jobs in America for 2017, according to CBS News, and data from Payscale.com shows that DevOps Managers earn as much as $122,234 per year, with DevOps engineers making as much as $151,461. DevOps jobs are the third-highest tech role ranked by employer demand on Indeed.com but have the second-highest talent deficit.<br>1. This DevOps training course will be of benefit the following professional roles:<br>2. Software Developers<br>3. Technical Project Managers<br>4. Architects<br>5. Operations Support<br>6. Deployment engineers<br>7. IT managers<br>8. Development managers<br><br>ud83dudc49Learn more at: https://bit.ly/2ytbV4J<br>

Simplilearn
Download Presentation

Maven vs Gradle: Which Is Better? | Maven & Gradle Difference | Devops Tools Explained | Simplilearn

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is Maven?

  2. What is Maven? Maven is a popular open-source build tool developed by the Apache Group to build, publish, and deploy several projects at once

  3. Click here to watch the video

  4. What is Maven? Maven is written in Java and is used to build projects written in C#, Scala, Ruby, etc.

  5. What is Maven? The tool is chiefly used by Java Developers to simplify their daily build of projects

  6. What is Gradle?

  7. What is Gradle? Gradle is a build automation tool known for its flexibility to build software

  8. What is Gradle? The tool is known to build automation on many languages like Java, Scala, Android, C/C++, and Groovy

  9. What is Gradle? Gradle provides building, testing and deploying software on several platforms

  10. Maven vs. Gradle

  11. Maven vs. Gradle

  12. Maven vs. Gradle Based on Gradle is based on developing domain-specific language projects Maven is based on developing Java based software

  13. Maven vs. Gradle Focus Gradle focuses on developing applications by adding new features Maven focuses on developing applications within the deadlines

  14. Maven vs. Gradle Configuration Gradle uses Groovy-based Domain Specific language for making project structure Maven uses Extensible Markup Language or XML for making project structure

  15. Maven vs. Gradle Languages Gradle supports development in languages like Java, C, C++, and Groovy Maven supports development in languages like Scala, C#, and Ruby

  16. Maven vs. Gradle Customization Gradle is highly customizable, providing a large range of IDE support builds Maven provides a limited number of parameters and is not much customizable

  17. Maven vs. Gradle Performance Gradle performs better than Maven as it tracks only the current task Maven does not build cache, that makes the build time slower

  18. How to Choose?

  19. How to Choose?

  20. How to choose? • The tools have their own respective pros and cons.

  21. How to choose? • The tools have their own respective pros and cons • Though Gradle is more powerful, you don’t need most of those functionalities all of the time

  22. How to choose? • The tools have their own respective pros and cons • Though Gradle is more powerful, you don’t need most of those functionalities all of the time • Maven is great for small projects, while Gradle is the best for bigger projects

  23. How to choose? • The tools have their own respective pros and cons. • Though Gradle is more powerful, you don’t need most of those functionalities all of the time • Maven is great for small projects, while Gradle is best for bigger projects

  24. How to choose? • The tools have their own respective pros and cons. • Though Gradle is more powerful, you don’t need most of those functionalities all of the time • Maven is great for small projects, while Gradle is best for bigger projects Even if later in any phase you think your project has outgrown, you can migrate from Maven to Gradle

More Related