I would recommend others to use the solution. It is a good solution because, you know, it is a distributed system. So we can give access to all of our team members, and they can go there and check for the reports. I am just a little, you know, concerned about whether we can do all those things in Jenkins. So I would say that if something can be done on Jenkins, we should not opt for a cloud solution since Jenkins is free, and you can do everything for free. I rate the overall solution a seven out of ten.
Sr Data Engineer at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2022-09-26T17:01:53Z
Sep 26, 2022
I'm using the latest version of AWS Device Farm. The solution is specifically provided by AWS, and it doesn't have a non-cloud version. My company runs it on AWS. Between four to five people use AWS Device Farm in my company. A single person can deploy AWS Device Farm, but it would still depend on how much you want to scale. If you have hundreds and hundreds of test cases running at a single time, then that would require more people, but to get AWS Device Farm up and running, you don't need more than one person to do that. My company doesn't have plans of increasing AWS Device Farm usage because it's pretty expensive, but it's being used for a lot of work streams within the organization. My advice to anyone who wants to use AWS Device Farm is that there's an expiration, and you have to check the expiry date on the test packages and test specifications. It would be nice to automate that part of AWS Device Farm. The rating I'd give AWS Device Farm is six out of ten. My company has a partnership with AWS.
I would recommend others to use the solution. It is a good solution because, you know, it is a distributed system. So we can give access to all of our team members, and they can go there and check for the reports. I am just a little, you know, concerned about whether we can do all those things in Jenkins. So I would say that if something can be done on Jenkins, we should not opt for a cloud solution since Jenkins is free, and you can do everything for free. I rate the overall solution a seven out of ten.
I'm using the latest version of AWS Device Farm. The solution is specifically provided by AWS, and it doesn't have a non-cloud version. My company runs it on AWS. Between four to five people use AWS Device Farm in my company. A single person can deploy AWS Device Farm, but it would still depend on how much you want to scale. If you have hundreds and hundreds of test cases running at a single time, then that would require more people, but to get AWS Device Farm up and running, you don't need more than one person to do that. My company doesn't have plans of increasing AWS Device Farm usage because it's pretty expensive, but it's being used for a lot of work streams within the organization. My advice to anyone who wants to use AWS Device Farm is that there's an expiration, and you have to check the expiry date on the test packages and test specifications. It would be nice to automate that part of AWS Device Farm. The rating I'd give AWS Device Farm is six out of ten. My company has a partnership with AWS.