When comparing Nevercode vs Travis, the Slant community recommends Travis for most people. In the question“What are the best hosted continuous integration services?” Travis is ranked 3rd while Nevercode is ranked 14th. The most important reason people chose Travis is:
Travis is free for all public repositories on Github.
Specs
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Ability to run tests on real devices
Simulating or emulating tests is good - actually testing on real hardware is better as you'll catch device (manufacturer) specific issues that would kill your app ratings in the wild.
Pro Multiple integrations to cover your needs
Simplifies the instant access to the latest state of your apps.
Pro Easy to setup
There's no configuration files to write, nothing to download or install, nothing to really configure. Setting it up takes basically only adding your Git repository and waiting for the clone, build and test to finish.
Pro Focused on mobile app development
It's dedicated to mobile platforms and supports Andorid, iOS native apps + a couple of cross-platform frameworks such as Cordova and Ionic.
Pro Free for open source projects
Travis is free for all public repositories on Github.
Pro Easy to set up and configure
All that is needed to set up Travis is a configuration file (travis.yml) in the root of the repository where it will be installed and Travis takes care of the rest.
Pro Github integration
Travis registers every push to GitHub and automatically builds the branch by default.
Pro Supports most technological stacks
Supports the most widely used technological stacks (Node, Ruby, PHP, Python etc...) for free.
Pro OSX & Ubuntu support
Travis' VM are built on Ubuntu 12.04 64 bit Server Edition, with the exception of Objective-C builds, which are based on Mac OS X Mavericks.
Pro Multiple test environments for different runtime versions
Travis supports testing for different versions of the same runtime. All it takes is some lines in the travis.yml
file.
Pro Supports more than a dozen languages
Support for C, C++, Clojure, Erlang, Go, Groovy, Haskell, Java, JavaScript, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby and Scala.
Pro Great community
Travis CI has a large and helpful community which is quite accepting to new users and provides a great number of tutorials.
Pro Private repositories and personal support w/ TravisPro
Starting at $129 you can use TravisPro, that adds the option of closed-source, private, repositories and personal support.
Pro Excellent website user experience
Cons
Con Project settings view could have a better UX to make it simpler for new users
Con Inflexible, can't implement multiple build tasks or target multiple modules
Con Only partial .NET support
.NET support is limited to .NET Core and Mono.
Con Only GitHub support
It does not support BitBucket. So it's not in list for companies using BitBucket private or public repositories.
Con Relatively expensive
Commercial plans for Travis are relatively expensive compared to other tools. They start at $129/month.
Con Non-free for private repos
Travis CI was first built to serve and help Open Source Projects, but now they also have added support for Closed Source which unfortunately is not free.
Con No Windows support
Travis can only run tests on Linux and OS X operating systems; running tests on Windows is not currently supported.