This month, we are releasing fixes that impact our self-hosted product, Azure DevOps Server, as well as Team Foundation Server 2019.1.1. Check out this post for details.
In this video, Jay will walk you through using the Starter to start creating a demo website, make changes, and have them deployed automatically thanks to Azure DevOps.
This month, we are releasing fixes for security vulnerabilities that impact our self-hosted product, Azure DevOps Server, as well as the following older Team Foundation Server releases: TFS 2015, TFS 2017 and TFS 2018.
Today, we are releasing Azure DevOps Server 2020.0.1 RC. This is a go-live release, meaning it is supported on production instances, and you will be able to upgrade to our final release. Azure DevOps Server 2020.0.1 includes bug fixes for Azure DevOps Server 2020.
Today, we released Azure DevOps Server 2020 RTW. This is our final release of Azure DevOps Server 2020. You can upgrade from Azure DevOps Server 2020 RC2 or previous versions of TFS and Azure DevOps.
This month, we are releasing fixes that impact our self-hosted product, Azure DevOps Server 2019. The following has been fixed with this patch:
Unexpected behavior while adding AD groups to security permissions.
Today, we released Azure DevOps Server 2020 RC2. This is our last planned prerelease before our final release of Azure DevOps Server 2020. You can upgrade from Azure DevOps Server 2020 RC2 or previous versions of TFS and Azure DevOps.
This month, we are releasing fixes that impact our self-hosted product, Azure DevOps Server 2019, as well as Team Foundation Server 2018. Take a look at the blog post to learn more about this patch.
Today, we are releasing Azure DevOps Server 2020 RC1. This is a go-live release, meaning it is supported on production instances, and you will be able to upgrade to our final release. We’ve added a ton of new features which you can read about in our release notes.