Dev
Dummy CI Build Log Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A dummy CI build log generator creates authentic-looking continuous integration logs without running a real pipeline. Developers and DevOps engineers often need realistic build logs for testing log parsers, building CI dashboards, or creating tutorial content. This generator produces multi-step CI/CD logs — including checkout, install, test, and deploy steps — for GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, CircleCI, and Jenkins. You can configure the build result as success, failure, or timeout, so a failure run will include realistic error traces and failing test names. That makes it useful for anything from Storybook component demos to README screenshots where you need convincing output fast.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Use Cases
- •Testing a custom log-parser script against GitHub Actions failure output with realistic error traces
- •Populating fake build history in a prototype CI dashboard built with React or Vue
- •Generating Jenkins timeout logs to reproduce edge-case handling in an alerting microservice
- •Creating DevOps tutorial screenshots or README examples without triggering a live pipeline
- •Demoing a GitLab CI integration to stakeholders using believable multi-step build output
FAQ
how do I test a CI log parser without running a real pipeline
Generate dummy logs matching your target CI system — GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, CircleCI, or Jenkins — then pipe the output directly into your parser. Switching between success, failure, and timeout results lets you cover all the edge cases your code needs to handle.
are fake CI build logs safe to use in demos or public docs
Yes. Generated logs contain no real credentials, repo names, or IP addresses, so they're safe to include in public documentation or screencasts. Just avoid replacing them with actual logs that might expose secrets or internal hostnames.
what's the difference between a failure log and a timeout log
A failure log includes specific failing test names and non-zero exit codes, mimicking a broken build. A timeout log shows the pipeline being killed mid-step after exceeding a time limit, which is a different failure mode useful for testing how your tooling handles hung jobs.