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Years ago, Tim O’Reilly coined the phrase “architecture of participation.” His insight was that successful open source projects all shared one common trait: the ability for developers outside of the core team to easily extend the code to meet their needs. Examples of this successful pattern include the Linux kernel, the Apache Web server, Firefox extensions, and Eclipse plugins. Hudson was one of the first open source Continuous Integration tools to embrace this notion. It provided an extensible platform and, in turn, created an ecosystem of plugins that allowed it to support a myriad of repository, build, and analysis tools in many different ...

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