JRebel vs TeamCity comparison

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Comparison Buyer's Guide
Executive Summary

We performed a comparison between JRebel and TeamCity based on real PeerSpot user reviews.

Find out what your peers are saying about GitLab, Jenkins, Google and others in Build Automation.
To learn more, read our detailed Build Automation Report (Updated: March 2024).
765,234 professionals have used our research since 2012.
Featured Review
Quotes From Members
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Here are some excerpts of what they said:
Pricing and Cost Advice
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  • "Start with the free tier for a few build configs and see how it works for you, then according to your scale find the enterprise license which fits you the most."
  • "The licensing is on an annual basis."
  • More TeamCity Pricing and Cost Advice →

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    Comparison Review
    Anonymous User
    Moving to TeamCity from Jenkins At work, we’re slowly migrating from Jenkins to TeamCity in the hope of ending some of our recurring problems with continuous integration. My use of Jenkins prior to this job has been almost strictly on a personal basis, although I pretty much only use Travis nowadays. The biggest difference upon initial inspection is that TeamCity is far more focused on validating individual commits rather than certain types of tests. Jenkins’ front page presents information that is simply not useful in a non-linear development environment, where people are often working in vastly different directions. How many of the previous tests passed/failed is not really salient information in this kind of situation. Running specific tests for individual commits on TeamCity is far more trivial in terms of interface complexity than Jenkins. TeamCity just involves clicking the ”…” button in the corner on any test type (although I wish it wasn’t so easy to click “Run” by accident). I generally find TeamCity a lot more intuitive than Jenkins out of the box. There’s a point at which you feel that if you have to scour the documentation to do anything remotely complex in an application, you’re dealing with a bad interface. One disappointing thing in both is that inter-branch merges improperly trigger e-mails to unrelated committers. I suppose it is fairly difficult to determine who to notify about failure in situations like these, though. It seems like TeamCity pulls up the… Read more →
    Questions from the Community
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    Top Answer:TeamCity is a very user-friendly tool.
    Top Answer:It's open source, however, if you want your solution to be deployed on their cloud or on the cloud in general without you being involved and having it and managed by them, there may be costs involved… more »
    Top Answer:It's just a tool that I used. I needed to deliver something, so I did. I wasn't looking at it in a way to criticize it or to optimize it. As a user, I need some more graphical design. For example, in… more »
    Ranking
    30th
    out of 41 in Build Automation
    Views
    132
    Comparisons
    87
    Reviews
    0
    Average Words per Review
    0
    Rating
    N/A
    6th
    out of 41 in Build Automation
    Views
    3,476
    Comparisons
    3,016
    Reviews
    2
    Average Words per Review
    574
    Rating
    8.0
    Comparisons
    GitLab logo
    Compared 44% of the time.
    CircleCI logo
    Compared 17% of the time.
    Jenkins logo
    Compared 9% of the time.
    Harness logo
    Compared 7% of the time.
    Tekton logo
    Compared 6% of the time.
    Also Known As
    ZeroTurnaround JRebel
    Learn More
    Overview
    JRebel is a JVM Java Agent that integrates with application servers, making classes reloadable with existing class loaders. Only changed classes are recompiled and instantly reloaded in the running application. JRebel plugs into IDEs and build systems. Classes and static resources are loaded straight from the workspace.

    TeamCity is a Continuous Integration and Deployment server that provides out-of-the-box continuous unit testing, code quality analysis, and early reporting on build problems. A simple installation process lets you deploy TeamCity and start improving your release management practices in a matter of minutes. TeamCity supports Java, .NET and Ruby development and integrates perfectly with major IDEs, version control systems, and issue tracking systems.

    Sample Customers
    MS Learning & Consulting, NetworkedAssets, Vaadin Ltd, Heliocentris, Result Group
    Toyota, Xerox, Apple, MIT, Volkswagen, HP, Twitter, Expedia
    Top Industries
    No Data Available
    REVIEWERS
    Financial Services Firm14%
    Computer Software Company14%
    Leisure / Travel Company7%
    Non Tech Company7%
    VISITORS READING REVIEWS
    Financial Services Firm22%
    Computer Software Company14%
    Manufacturing Company10%
    Comms Service Provider7%
    Company Size
    No Data Available
    REVIEWERS
    Small Business38%
    Midsize Enterprise15%
    Large Enterprise46%
    VISITORS READING REVIEWS
    Small Business24%
    Midsize Enterprise10%
    Large Enterprise66%
    Buyer's Guide
    Build Automation
    March 2024
    Find out what your peers are saying about GitLab, Jenkins, Google and others in Build Automation. Updated: March 2024.
    765,234 professionals have used our research since 2012.

    JRebel is ranked 30th in Build Automation while TeamCity is ranked 6th in Build Automation with 24 reviews. JRebel is rated 8.0, while TeamCity is rated 8.4. The top reviewer of JRebel writes "Easy to configure, works well, has 'free' options (like Social)". On the other hand, the top reviewer of TeamCity writes "Build management system used to successfully create full request tests and run security scans". JRebel is most compared with Jenkins, whereas TeamCity is most compared with GitLab, CircleCI, Jenkins, Harness and Tekton.

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