A curated list of awesome tools for continuous integration, continuous delivery, and DevOps.
ciandcd is an awesome list—a curated directory—of tools, services, and resources for continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery (CD). It helps developers and DevOps practitioners discover and compare solutions for automating software build, test, and deployment processes. The list covers everything from build servers and version control to testing frameworks and provisioning tools.
DevOps engineers, platform teams, and developers looking to implement or optimize CI/CD pipelines. It's also valuable for technical leads and architects researching tools for software delivery automation.
It saves time by aggregating and categorizing hundreds of CI/CD tools in one place, providing a trusted starting point for tool evaluation. Unlike generic searches, it offers a community-vetted, structured overview of the ecosystem.
continuous integration and continuous delivery
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Lists hundreds of tools across all CI/CD categories—from build systems like Jenkins to deployment tools like Ansible—as evidenced by the extensive table of contents covering Theory, Testing, Provisioning, and more.
Actively maintained with contributions from the DevOps community, ensuring a broad and diverse selection of tools, with contact information for submissions in the README.
Includes links to theory, books, conferences, and other learning materials, such as Martin Fowler's articles and DevOps days, helping users understand CI/CD concepts alongside tool discovery.
Categories tools into logical sections like Build, Deploy, and Monitoring, making it easy to browse specific needs without sifting through unstructured lists.
Lacks ratings, reviews, or popularity metrics, so users must independently research tool suitability, which can be time-consuming for decision-making.
As a community-driven list, some tools might not be updated regularly; for example, the README includes deprecated services like the old Snap-CI without clear warnings.
The README is a static markdown file with no built-in search, filtering, or interactive features, making it cumbersome to find tools based on specific criteria like language or platform.
The sheer volume of tools—over 20 categories with dozens of entries—can be intimidating for newcomers or teams needing concise recommendations without curation depth.