Book Image

Azure DevOps Server 2019 Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Tarun Arora, Utkarsh Shigihalli
Book Image

Azure DevOps Server 2019 Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Tarun Arora, Utkarsh Shigihalli

Overview of this book

Previously known as Team Foundation Server (TFS), Azure DevOps Server is a comprehensive on-premise DevOps toolset with a rich ecosystem of open source plugins. This book will help you learn how to effectively use the different Azure DevOps services. You will start by building high-quality scalable software targeting .NET, .NET Core and Node.js applications. Next, you will learn techniques that will help you to set up end-to-end traceability of your code changes, from design through to release. Whether you are deploying software on-premise or in the cloud in App Service, Functions, or Azure VMs, this book will help you learn release management techniques to reduce failures. As you progress, you will be able to secure application configuration by using Azure Key Vault. You will also understand how to create and release extensions to the Azure DevOps marketplace and reach the million-strong developer ecosystem for feedback. Later, the working extension samples will even allow you to iterate changes in your extensions easily and release updates to the marketplace quickly. By the end of this book, you will be equipped with the skills you need to break down the invisible silos between your software development teams, and transform them into a modern cross-functional software development team.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Title Page
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Running NUnit tests using Azure Pipelines


NUnit is one of the many open source testing frameworks popular with cross-platform developers. In this recipe, we'll learn how easy it is to create a pipeline for NUnit-based tests and publish the test execution results in Azure DevOps Server. 

Getting ready

In this section, we'll use the .NET CLI to create a new solution and a new class library project, and install the NUnit test template.

 

These are the prerequisites:

  • .NET Core 2.1 SDK or later versions
  • A text editor or code editor of your choice

Follow these steps:

  1. Launch Command Prompt and create a new folder called ContinuousTesting:
mkdir ContinuousTesting 
cd ContinuousTesting
  1. Create a new solution:
dotnet new sln -n prime
  1. Create a new PrimeService directory:
mkdir PrimeService
  1. Set PrimeService as the current directory and create a new project:
dotnet new classlib
  1. Rename Class1.cs to PrimeService.cs. Start by copying this failing implementation of the PrimeService class:
using System;
namespace Prime.Services...