AtomicJar Raises $25M for Developer Testing with Testcontainers Cloud

AtomicJar, the lead vendor behind the open source Testcontainers library for integration testing, raises new money and debuts Testcontainers Cloud in a public beta.

Sean Michael Kerner, Contributor

January 25, 2023

3 Min Read
developer writing code on multiple screens
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AtomicJar, the lead commercial sponsor behind the popular open source Testcontainers library, announced today that it has secured $25 million in a Series A round of funding. Alongside the funding, AtomicJar is releasing its Testcontainers Cloud service as a public beta with the goal of improving the testing experience for developers.

The funding round was led by global software investor Insight Partners and will be used to scale AtomicJar's development team and go to market efforts. At the foundation of AtomicJar is the open source Testcontainers project, which provides a software library that helps developers execute integration testing for containers and microservices-based applications.

The Testcontainers project got its start in 2015, while AtomicJar as a commercial entity was founded several years later, in 2021. The Testcontainers Cloud, which is now in public beta, provides a managed service that developers can use to scale testing operations.

"Testcontainers is a library that developers can use to start a variety of technologies for their testing needs," Sergei Egorov, co-founder and CEO of AtomicJar, told ITPro Today.

How AtomicJar and Testcontainers Work to Improve Developer Testing

More often than not, application testing is done later in the development process, rather than at the beginning, Egorov explained.

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The goal with Testcontainers is to change that by enabling developers to easily do integration testing at the earliest stages of development in an iterative process. Egorov said that the ideal scenario for testing is to have a developer make a change and then immediately get feedback on whether the change is correct or not. By getting immediate feedback, developers can be more confident in the changes they make, he said.

"Our focus is how to make developers more confident in the software they are creating."

— Sergei Egorov, CEO and co-founder, AtomicJar

According to Egorov, developers aren't always the owners of the testing process, largely because there is the perception that setting up a testing environment is challenging. A key part of testing is integration testing, where all the components needed to enable an application come together. Running integration testing can sometimes require setting up staging environments, which can be complex. With Testcontainers, a developer can execute integration testing with all the required dependencies, without the complexity of having a purpose-built staging environment.

"Testcontainers isn't even in the category of staging environments, but instead it fits into the area of developer tooling," Egorov said.

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What Testcontainers does, he said, is it reads developers' code for how they want to see their dependencies. For example, if an application needs a MySQL database, the code simply lists MySQL as a dependency, and Testcontainers will provide that as a container for quick application testing.

AtomicJar Previews Testcontainers Cloud with Public Beta

AtomicJar's Testcontainers Cloud service is now in public beta, providing the same foundational technology as the open source project.

Running multiple tests in parallel can be resource-intensive, which is a limitation that developers face when running Testcontainers on a local system. Egorov explained that instead of developers running tests locally on their own system, Testcontainers Cloud enables the same test to be run in the cloud. AtomicJar is using an edge network of cloud compute resources that will help developers offload and scale testing, he said.

Looking forward, AtomicJar is likely to expand its offering beyond just Testcontainers with other tools that help developers improve the application testing experience.

"Our focus is how to make developers more confident in the software they are creating," Egorov said. "We believe that we can expand to increase the confidence level of developers through a variety of other tools that we can build."

 

About the Author

Sean Michael Kerner

Contributor

Sean Michael Kerner is an IT consultant, technology enthusiast and tinkerer. He consults to industry and media organizations on technology issues.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/seanmkerner/

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