If you’ve been building in Microsoft Fabric long enough to feel the friction, you already know the moment: the work is “done,” the PR is merged, and then deployment becomes a mix of careful clicks, environment tweaks, and crossed fingers.
That’s exactly why fabric-cicd (often written as Fabric-CICD) getting official support matters. It’s not just another community accelerator to admire—it’s a signal that code-first deployment is now a first-class part of the Fabric lifecycle story.
In this post I’ll lay out what Fabric-CICD is, why “official” changes its value, and where it fits alongside Git integration and deployment pipelines—so you can decide if it belongs in your Microsoft Fabric delivery path.
Continue reading “Fabric-CICD Is Official Now. That Changes the Conversation.”