It will then ask for the service account to use, this can be changed afterwards. It will then show you the “Configure Build Agent Properties” which is all the details that are set as standard. It will tell you if that port is already busy so you can allocate a different one. You then need to select the TeamCity server port, by default this is 80. It then starts installing, this took about 5 minutes. You can than select which components, I’ll just take the default which is everything which, at time of writing, requires 1.1GB. Then select the destination folder, I’ll keep with the default which is c:\teamcity but you can put it wherever suits. You will get a “Welcome to Team City setup” page, click on Next. Once downloaded, double click the exe file to start installing. You can download it and get more information from here It connects to your source control repository and can automatically trigger builds when changes are pushed into the repo. TeamCity is a Continuous Integration tool is free to use for small teams. Whilst I’ve used Team City extensively I’ve never had to start from the beginning, so I thought I’d document the steps I took. I’ve just started a project where I’ve had to set up Team City from scratch.
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