This page last changed on Jul 30, 2008 by rosspatterson.

The Interval Trigger is used to specify that an integration should be run periodically, after a certain amount of time. By default, an integration will only be triggered if modifications have been detected since the last integration. The trigger can also be configured to force a build even if no changes have occurred to source control. The items to watch for modifications are specified with Source Control Blocks.

Examples

NOTE: Like all triggers, the intervalTrigger must be enclosed within a triggers element in the appropriate Project Configuration Block

Minimalist example:

<intervalTrigger />

Full example:

<intervalTrigger name="continuous" seconds="30" buildCondition="ForceBuild" initialSeconds="30"/>

Configuration Elements:

Node Description Type Required Default
name The name of the trigger. This name is passed to external tools as a means to identify the trigger that requested the build. (Added in CCNet 1.1) string false IntervalTrigger
seconds The number of seconds after an integration cycle completes before triggering the next integration cycle. int false 60
buildCondition The condition that should be used to launch the integration. By default, this value is IfModificationExists, meaning that an integration will only be triggered if modifications have been detected. Set this attribute to ForceBuild in order to ensure that a build should be launched regardless of whether new modifications are detected. Use Source Control Blocks to specify what to watch for modifications. string false IfModificationExists
initialSeconds The number of seconds after server startup before triggering the first integration cycle. int false value of seconds
This trigger replaces the PollingIntervalTrigger and the ForceBuildIntervalTrigger.
The initialSeconds is new in CruiseControl.Net release 1.4
Document generated by Confluence on Mar 14, 2009 02:55