Techno Logica


Tuesday, April 28, 2009

MKS for HP Quality Center

Improve Software Quality and Enhance Development and Quality Assurance (QA) Team Efficiency

MKS supports integrations with market leading, complementary development lifecycle tools, including leading software testing technologies. Our deep integrations result in a well managed cohesive development environment that is highly functional and user friendly.

"Quality Assurance is a crucial component of any IT project and is the responsibility of everyone involved - not just the QA Engineer, which makes it imperative for companies to ensure close, consistent collaboration between development, QA, and the business."
- Mark Sarbiewski, Senior Director, Solution Marketing, Software, Hewlett-Packard Company

Benefits of MKS and HP Quality Center (formerly Mercury Quality Center) integration for improved software testing:

Support IT governance by directly linking software change to defects
Improve communication between QA and Development with continuous process
Delivers complete traceability, closing hte loop between defects found in QA and fixed in development
Reduces project risk, providing assurance that QA is testing against the most current set of requirements

Connect Development and QA Teams with Integrated Process and Workflow Management:
HP Quality Center is integrated with the process and workflow capabilities of MKS Integrity to build a continuous and two-way process flow between Application Development and Quality Assurance teams.

Requirements authored in MKS Integrity can be synchronized into the Requirements Module of HP Quality Center, ensuring that testing requirements are directly related to the requirements being authored by the business analysts.

After testing is completed, defects identified with HP Quality Center are automatically cycled back into the development process via MKS Integrity, and travel with associated development artifacts such as source code or documentation. The integration enables organizations to establish an enforceable and auditable process for defect resolution, improving software quality, enhancing development and QA team efficiency, and supporting IT governance initiatives.

About MKS
MKS, the global application lifecycle management (ALM) technology leader, enables software engineering and IT organizations to seamlessly manage their worldwide software development activities. With its flagship product, MKS Integrity, MKS offers support for all software development activities through a single enterprise application, resulting in better global collaboration and higher productivity. MKS supports customers worldwide with offices across North America, Europe and Asia.
The MKS Integrity platform shows how a strong platform for application change and IT management can provide the foundation to meet the biggest challenges facing the Fortune 500 today - prioritization of IT spending, driving higher productivity, outsourcing and offshoring, and the reinvention of their IT infrastructure themselves. 

HP Quality Center 10 from a Test Manager’s Perspective

Serge Baumberger

by Serge Baumberger


The new Version 10 of the HP Quality Center (QC) is now available. Yet what are the actual advantages of the new QC compared to its predecessor from a Test Manager’s perspective?

Below, I will take a look at some of the new features and changes, and I will answer the question whether one should even make the switch.

The Most Significant Changes

The new QC Version 10 has seen a series of changes, of which the most significant ones are:

  • Version control
  • Baselining
  • Integrated dashboard
  • Shared libraries
  • Cross Project Customization

Version Control

Finally, QC has been provided with a fully integrated version control. In past versions, one had to make do with third-party integration, which generally stumbled rather than ran. The version control, if desired, must first be activated for every individual project via the SiteAdmin. Once this is done, all entities falling under the version control become Version 1. QC entities include requirements, tests, test resources, and business components. If one wishes to add a test step to a test case for example, one is automatically requested to check this test case. As soon as there is more than one version of an entity, one can compare various versions against each other or retrieve an older version.

Summary: The whole thing is intuitive and easy to operate. But what’s the use of having eight versions of a requirement, when one doesn’t know which software release a version belongs to?

Baselining

Along with version control comes baselining, which is intended to answer the question above. Using the new “Management” module that replaces the “Releases” introduced in 9.x one gets to the baseline function via the “Libraries” tab. This enables one to obtain a summary of a complete testing release and retrieve it if necessary. In this way, a test set can be pinned to a baseline in the test lab. In other words, as of now, the manual copying of entire trees into the test plan module is a thing of the past. At last, test managers will be able to properly organize software that has multiple parallel releases (in production, current release, future release).

Summary: Setting up the baseline works very well. While creating it, a log keeps one updated on what is currently taking place. However, setting up baselines probably needs to be done during off-peak hours since it can take a while for larger QC projects.

Integrated Dashboard

Equally interesting for test managers is the new integrated dashboard that can be found on the left-hand navigation bar where the “Management” module is, too. The special feature of the new dashboard does not pertain to the graphics, which are not particularly appealing, but the “Cross-Project” functionality. It is now finally possible, when working on a QC project, to get an overview of all of one’s ongoing projects. These dashboards are freely configurable and can be designated to be personal favorites or publicly accessible. Special Excel reports also enable direct access to the database via SQL. The generated reports can then be graphically processed at the same time by means of VBScript.


Summary: The new dashboard module is quickly customized and achieves its purpose in ongoing projects. What is missing is a sensible way of printing content for a given project meeting, for example.

Shared Libraries

Libraries, which are located in the “Management” module, can be re-used and distributed with Version 10. A library represents a collection of entities in a QC project, including their relationships to each other. When dealing with many similar projects, it offers the advantage of not having to repeatedly create entities. Libraries can be imported from project A into project B, compared against each other, or even synchronized. A library also allows one to collect the same entities as in versioning. Defects are not included, but they can be shared with the new “HP Quality Center Synchronizer” manually among several QC projects. As mentioned, the advantages really only present themselves when one has many and/or large-scale projects. I suppose that is why this functionality is available only in the QC Premier Edition (also available are the Standard and Enterprise editions).

Summary: It remains to be seen whether this function will actually be used in real-world applications. In my opinion, it makes perfect sense to be able to take over pre-defined assets from another project so that one doesn’t have to keep re-inventing the wheel.

Cross Project Customization

And now here’s the last big change: Cross Project Customization. Many organizations have defined standards, such as a uniform defect status field or a standardized priority scale, for their software quality-related areas. However, these fields and lists were often changed or even deleted by QC project administrators. Some companies have even gone to great lengths in using their own programming to define a template that can be distributed to all QC projects, thereby establishing a uniform standard.

For all those who want to spare themselves this time and effort or do not wish to keep an in-house programmed interface going, there is a solution. Site Administrator now provides a way to link projects with a template. If the template is changed, the delta can then be passed on later at the right point in time. This function has been awaited not only by test managers who like to have the same configuration in all their projects, but especially also by the respective operators of QC installations, namely the system administrators. Cross Project Customization is also only available in the Premier Edition.

Summary: This change is awesome! Finally, testing organizations or Test Factory managers are able to implement a certain basic standard in their projects. Once this is accomplished, nothing can get in the way of standardized, across-the-board reporting.

Is an Upgrade Worth It?

The new Version 10 is an absolute milestone not only for tests managers. It also makes life easier for testers, Test Factory managers, as well as QC system administrators. The new functions have been anticipated for quite some time and have been implemented in the new product in a well-conceived manner.

However, there are still questions about how stable the new version is (my tests ran flawlessly) and how simple a migration of a larger installation might be. If these questions receive favorable responses, one should absolutely consider switching over to the new version!

Source: http://www.beteoblog.com