Over 25 years in web development, from HTML (remember image maps and frames?) to classic ASP to ASP.NET to .NET CMSes. 2021/2022 Sitecore Technology MVP.
I'm about to post an update, it seems that whatever process Sitecore uses only picked up my "latest" tag because I changed the pipeline. If I just ran the pipeline, it didn't seem to like it. Plus a few folks on Slack are more about using the specific tags. I understand that for the basic images, but client images I'd think it's okay. But I'll bow to the guidance until someone figures this out. There really doesn't seem to be a reason to have to update the codebase every time. But maybe that's just me. :)
I like the exploration, and I wish the latest method would've worked. One of my thoughts, was maybe there's a way to fire into the pipeline, update the file and push in a CD process in your own devops process. But of course this is full of potential issues.
The other ponderance I've had, is could you pull the managed cloud code base into your own repo, that way you could build around it. But I'm not sure if that would work, due to security limitations.
But if you come up with another approach, you should definitely blog about it.
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I'm about to post an update, it seems that whatever process Sitecore uses only picked up my "latest" tag because I changed the pipeline. If I just ran the pipeline, it didn't seem to like it. Plus a few folks on Slack are more about using the specific tags. I understand that for the basic images, but client images I'd think it's okay. But I'll bow to the guidance until someone figures this out. There really doesn't seem to be a reason to have to update the codebase every time. But maybe that's just me. :)
I like the exploration, and I wish the latest method would've worked. One of my thoughts, was maybe there's a way to fire into the pipeline, update the file and push in a CD process in your own devops process. But of course this is full of potential issues.
The other ponderance I've had, is could you pull the managed cloud code base into your own repo, that way you could build around it. But I'm not sure if that would work, due to security limitations.
But if you come up with another approach, you should definitely blog about it.