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GitLab 9.3 released with code quality, multi-project pipeline graphs and more from GitLab

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gitlab.com

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news@gitlab.com

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Thu, Jun 22, 2017 09:34 PM

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Read the latest news about GitLab and recent releases. GitLab 9.3 Released with code quality & multi

Read the latest news about GitLab and recent releases. [GitLab]( GitLab 9.3 Released with code quality & multi-project pipeline graphs [Explore now]( GitLab 9.3 introduces Code Quality reports displayed directly in the Merge Request widget! Code Quality gives you immediate insight into how a change will affect the health of your code and project. This will reduce your review time and allow you to catch mistakes before merging a change. Modern production-level software is often composed of many different projects, especially those adopting micro-services architecture. Therefore, understanding the relationships between these projects is crucial. With GitLab 9.3, you can see how upstream and downstream project pipelines are linked together with Multi-Project Pipelines Graphs. In addition, this release gives you an extremely powerful way to compare your usage of each facet of GitLab with other people, using the Conversational Development Index. The ConvDev Index gives you a quick overview of how you perform in going from Idea to Production and where you have the opportunity to optimize. Scaled Continuous Integration and Delivery [Get your copy]( Today, whatever your business, customer expectations are largely the same: they want a great product and efficient service. The days of annual releases, with a pre-defined feature set bundled onto compact discs and delivered to retailers, are far behind us. Delivering customer value at the pace required demands a refined software development lifecycle that saves time, effort, and cost wherever possible. At the core of modern software development is continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery, helping businesses to ship new, working features earlier and more often. 3 Ways to Foster Collaboration [Read More]( We know that collaboration is critical for organizations moving towards a DevOps culture. Here's how we encourage collaboration in our workflow at GitLab. Using version control for more than just your source code means that everyone feels free to contribute to documentation, configurations, tests and whatever else you're working on. With the benefit of merge requests, it's possible to suggest a change or an improvement, or even just query something that isn't entirely clear or could be described better, without just going ahead and making the change immediately. This invites discussion and prevents less experienced team members from feeling nervous to voice their opinions. On-Calliday: A Guide to Un-sucking Your on Call Experience [Learn More]( In spirit of the summer-vacation season, here are some tips on how to prevent burnout when scheduling on-call rotations. Although I'm currently a developer advocate, I've been a career developer and worked in DevOps roles, and I'm no stranger to the on-call life. Here I'll discuss burnout, the pros and cons of different shift lengths, and how to make on-call rotations a little less painful. Especially in tech, people may respond to the demands of their job by staying late to get stuff done, or forgoing vacation days because even the prospect of catching up upon return is daunting. It's worth remembering that work can actually kill you, and there's a lot of stigma around this kind of stress, so it's important to talk about. [We're Hiring]( We're Hiring [Read Listings]( [Get In Touch]( Get In Touch [Contact Us]( [Contact Sales]( [about.gitlab.com]( [Login]( We want feedback on this newsletter! Please reply if you have requests or ideas for improvement. This email was sent to [{EMAIL}](. If you no longer wish to receive notifications please [unsubscribe]( here.

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