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Today I'm going to show you how to use ReleaseOps to deploy a brand new applications scope.
00:01: Hello. This is Jon Lind and today, I'm going to show you how to use release Ops to deploy a brand new applications scope.
00:13: So we're going to publish an app.
00:17: With update sets and use deployment requests in the release Ops to push it through the environments.
00:25: To do this, you simply go to your newly created application and use the publish to update set related link.
00:34: And like anything else, you'll get a new update set.
00:37: the update set is already complete, so all you have to do is choose promote update said,
00:42: Create a new deployment request and then add that to your release.
00:55: This is a great way to initialize your application.
00:59: At it to release and then you can add other DRS to that same release.
01:04: So that you have an entire complete application or anything to go and deploy as a unit.
01:17: Thank you. Hope, will you see how easy that is? And don't forget to do this whenever you're initializing a new application scope and make sure that's your first deployment. Request added to your release, Ops release.
Publish App with Update Set
We are going to publish a new app with update sets and use deployment requests in ReleaseOps to push it through the environments. To do this, you simply go to your newly created application and use the publish to update set related link. And like anything else, you'll get a new update set. The update set is already complete, so all you have to do is choose "promote update set", create a new deployment request and then add that to your Release.
This is a great way to initialize your application before you start adding changes using Deployment Requests.
Thank you. Hopefully you see how easy that is and don't forget to do this whenever you're initializing a new application scope and need to deploy it with ReleaseOps.
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