![]() ![]() The NuGet package gets fed up to Octopus Server which is configured to run the Deploy.ps1 file against the required tentacle.Once the build is complete a NuGet package is created that contains the DACPAC for the SSDT project and a Deploy.ps1 powershell file that actually does the deployment.TeamCity is configured to listen for changes made to the source control repository and triggers a build of the SSDT project whenever a check in occurs.An SSDT project exists in source control, for example GitHub or TFS.In this post I’m going to describe how to install Octopus Deploy and how to use it to publish an SSDT project built with TeamCity.īefore I start going into details of how to build and publish an SSDT project using TeamCity and Octopus Deploy I thought I’d run over how the end to end process will work. ![]() In a further post I demonstrated a way of building and publishing an SSDT project under source control in a local git repository using TeamCity. In another post I talked about how we were asked to move away from TFS to start using GitHub, TeamCity and Octopus Deploy.
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