--- title: Continuous Integration menu: true weight: 140 --- GoReleaser was built from the very first commit with the idea of running it as part of the CI pipeline in mind. Let's see how we can get it working on popular CI softwares. ## Travis You may want to setup your project to auto-deploy your new tags on [Travis](https://travis-ci.org), for example: ```yaml # .travis.yml language: go addons: apt: packages: # needed for the nfpm pipe: - rpm # needed for the snap pipe: - snapcraft env: # needed for the snap pipe: - PATH=/snap/bin:$PATH install: # needed for the snap pipe: - sudo snap install snapcraft --classic # needed for the docker pipe services: - docker after_success: # docker login is required if you want to push docker images. # DOCKER_PASSWORD should be a secret in your .travis.yml configuration. - test -n "$TRAVIS_TAG" && docker login -u=myuser -p="$DOCKER_PASSWORD" # calls goreleaser deploy: - provider: script skip_cleanup: true script: curl -sL https://git.io/goreleaser | bash on: tags: true condition: $TRAVIS_OS_NAME = linux ``` Note the last line (`condition: $TRAVIS_OS_NAME = linux`): it is important if you run a build matrix with multiple Go versions and/or multiple OSes. If that's the case you will want to make sure GoReleaser is run just once. # Circle Here is how to do it with [CircleCI](https://circleci.com): ```yml # circle.yml deployment: tag: tag: /v[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)*(-.*)*/ owner: user commands: - curl -sL https://git.io/goreleaser | bash ```