Many organizations recommend certain checks be done before committing code into source control. The cost of fixing bad code increases overtime. There is incentive in identifying and fixing issues in code early. We discussed the definition of done in the previous chapter; think of this as the definition of check-in. In TFS, a check-in policy is a rule that is executed during the check-in operation to ensure that the selected change set is okay to commit. The check-in policies are stored on the server and executed on the client machines at the time of check-in. Check-in policies are only supported in TFVC projects. While TFS has some preconfigured check-in policies, several other check-in policies are added by TFS Power Tools. In this recipe, you'll learn how to configure the code analysis check-in policy. The code analysis check-in policy requires that code analysis is run before check-in.
Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2015 Cookbook
By :
Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2015 Cookbook
By:
Overview of this book
Team Foundation Server (TFS) allows you to manage code repositories, build processes, test infrastructure, and deploy labs. TFS supports your team, enabling you to connect, collaborate, and deliver on time. Microsoft's approach to Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) provides a flexible and agile environment that adapts to the needs of your team, removes barriers between roles, and streamlines processes.
The book introduces you to creating and setting up team projects for scrum teams. You'll explore various source control repositories, branching, and merging activities, along with a demonstration of how to embed quality into every code check-in. Then, you'll discover agile project planning and management tools. Later, emphasis is given to the testing and release management features of TFS which facilitate the automation of the release pipeline in order to create potentially shippable increments.
By the end of the book, you'll have learned to extend and customize TFS plugins to incorporate them into other platforms and enable teams to manage the software lifecycle effectively.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2015 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Team Project Setup
Setting Up and Managing Code Repositories
Planning and Tracking Work
Building Your Application
Testing Your Application
Releasing Your Application
Managing Team Foundation Server
Extending and Customizing Team Foundation Server
Index
Customer Reviews