Letter from the Editor – December 2015

Michael_Hackett.20150723Every year, LogiGear Magazine devotes one full issue to Test Automation. We could do more than one, and perhaps even that would not be enough.

The problems around automation have become increasingly complex. And now, automation is much more integrated into the software development process. For over a decade teams have been faced with “do more with less”: do more testing, do more automation, and do it all with less staff. Then Agile/Scrum came along and we had to automate it faster. As the XP practice of continuous integration (CI) caught fire, our automation suites – smoke tests and full regression suites – got integrated into the autobuild development process, which in most cases was out of our control. Other people and tools are now running our automation and reporting back results – not by us kicking off automation when we choose to, but whenever a build takes place.

Today this process is moving at an even more extreme pace and further away from us. We see CI moving onto virtual machines and DevOps running our automation all the time (continuous testing), on all kinds of environments.

Many teams are still struggling with getting automated test into their current sprints, or Sprint +1 (getting new functionality automated, but only in the sprint following that function’s development). Some teams struggle just to get more tests automated in their development cycle at all, and end up settling for adding new automation after a release, because they just do not have the time. This is not OK. If this is your situation, you need to fix it. It may not be an easy fix, but not fixing it has a negative impact on development.

What do we have to do?

  • First, automate more and automate faster. With shorter cycles, you need automated tests, or you will never reach levels of coverage acceptable enough to have confidence in your product. Yes, automate faster.
  • You need a framework with reusable and low maintenance functions.
  • Finally, choose effective methods. We all know the idea that tests need to be low maintenance. But how do you do that? When you have a big suite of tests and some break – and not because of application bugs – how do you unbreak the test suite to run again? Simply automating step-by-step test scripts is a surefire formula for failure. Instead, choose a more sophisticated method for developing tests, like Action Based Testing.

Our tests have to be effective at validating functionality and finding bugs or breaks. And they must be efficient – suites should do this in the minimum number of tests possible.

We know that our tests are going to be run, in most cases these days, across a large matrix of configurations, browsers, devices, and appliances. In addition, now the tests will more than likely be run on a variety of build environments. It is becoming increasingly common to run the same suite of tests on a dev environment, testing environment, user acceptance or staging environment, and sometimes live/production environments. For some tools and suites, the performance demands are too great: the tool itself becomes an issue, not just the suites it runs. I myself have used some tools that develop huge problems running tests as the number of virtual machines increases. And that is only the start.

Our automation has to get better. But more automation is not always the answer. Today, the answer must be: better and faster automation. I hope this issue of our magazine gives you valuable guidance to achieve this.

We’ve also just published our 2016 editorial calendar, to give you an idea of what’s ahead for next year. As always, if you’d like to submit an article, just let us know.

All of us at LogiGear wish you a joyful and healthy holiday season and a happy new year. We look forward to continuing to provide you with great software test information in 2016!

 

LogiGear Corporation

LogiGear Corporation provides global solutions for software testing, and offers public and corporate software-testing training programs worldwide through LogiGear University. LogiGear is a leader in the integration of test automation, offshore resources and US project management for fast and cost-effective results. Since 1994, LogiGear has worked with hundreds of companies from the Fortune 500 to early-stage startups, creating unique solutions to exactly meet their needs. With facilities in the US and Vietnam, LogiGear helps companies double their test coverage and improve software quality while reducing testing time and cutting costs.

For more information, contact Joe Hughes + 01 650.572.1400

LogiGear Corporation
LogiGear Corporation provides global solutions for software testing, and offers public and corporate software testing training programs worldwide through LogiGear University. LogiGear is a leader in the integration of test automation, offshore resources and US project management for fast, cost-effective results. Since 1994, LogiGear has worked with Fortune 500 companies to early-stage start-ups in, creating unique solutions to meet their clients’ needs. With facilities in the US and Viet Nam, LogiGear helps companies double their test coverage and improve software quality while reducing testing time and cutting costs.

The Related Post

Testers need to learn their craft and hone in on their skill set. That means building skills, sharpening their tools, and becoming creative detectives. There is no cookie-cutter tester and no best practice. The best circumstance is a fully-skilled, aggressive tester mixed with curiosity, nimbleness, and agility.
Big and complex testing. What do these terms conjure up in your mind? When we added this topic to the editorial calendar, I had the notion that we might illustrate some large or complex systems and explore some of the test and quality challenges they present. We might have an article on: building and testing ...
Digital Transformation and IT Modernization projects have shifted into high gear during the COVID-19 pandemic. Tough on some teams is having to do more with less and speed up projects on reduced budgets due to the resulting COVID-19 business climate. On the other hand, other companies are adding funding and pressing the schedule under the ...
I spend about half my work time in the role of a consultant assessing, auditing and examining software development team practices and processes for the purpose of process improvement. I am regularly surprised to find teams that lack basic skills, management support, tools, information, access to users, Product Owners and to developers. And yet they’re ...
I have been training testers for about 15 years in universities, corporations, online, and individually – in both a training, managing and coaching capacity. So far, I have executed these various training efforts in 16 countries, under good and rough conditions – from simultaneous translation, to video broadcast to multiple sites, to group games with ...
I once consulted for a company to give a week-long course on testing and QA. It was a survey course covering a wide range of topics. I was setting up and chatting with students in the room. One man came over to me and said: “I have been testing for 6 months and I am completely ...
I was just recently at a company that had a beautiful test architecture, framework, and Cucumber with tons of well-automated tests. But there was no good test management on top of the Cucumber tests, and they did not do a good job tagging the tests. Although almost everybody on the team could write and maintain ...
We launched the first ever software testing conference in Vietnam, VISTACON. It was a resounding success, with well over 200 participants and 20+ speakers from around the globe; each speaking on a wide range of cutting-edge testing topics. In this month’s magazine, we have uploaded several video recordings of event presentations – giving our readers ...
Our plan for the December LogiGear Magazine was to have a forward-looking Trends and Challenges issue. However, whilst assembling our September issue on SMAC, we realized the momentum SMAC was gaining in the industry. We had a large amount of content on our hands from a range of excellent contributors. Thus, we decided to split ...
Testing tools – very important, very often overlooked, and very often where mistakes are made. First, the most common mistake people make about tools is thinking tools are only about test automation! False. Automation tools are merely one type testing tool. We will try to balance this issue between test automation tools and other test ...
“Why do we need to understand a bunch of test methods? I write test cases from user stories or requirements, automate what I can and execute the rest manually, and its fine.” If this is your situation: good for you. If you are time crunched, if your automated tests have lost relevance, are hard to ...
Software development projects are multifaceted. There is staffing and budget work. There are communication and team dynamics. There are project and process issues from what the customer wants, when they want it, revenue projections, and production dates. As part of my work in helping people deliver software, I get involved in all aspects mentioned above. ...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Stay in the loop with the lastest
software testing news

Subscribe