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Application Lifecycle Management in SharePoint 2013 : Getting Started with Application Lifecycle Management

12/18/2013 1:59:56 AM
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Application Lifecycle Management (ALM), as defined by Wikipedia, is the continuous process of managing the life of an application through governance, development, operations, and maintenance.

ALM facilitates and standardizes the process of developing customizations (from idea to working software), supports the transition through your SharePoint environments to your production environment, and supports standard operational activities such as maintenance, upgrade, and patching until the end of life occurs. A consistently applied ALM process improves the governability of applications and customizations introduced to your SharePoint 2013 production environment.

This section further describes the three core aspects of ALM, as well as the supporting tools required and processes to be followed within your particular SharePoint 2013 project.

Three Application Lifecycle Management Perspectives

Application Lifecycle Management can be looked at from three core perspectives. These are the governance, development, and operations perspectives. Figure 1 provides an overview of each of these perspectives.

FIGURE 1

image

The governance perspective largely deals with:

  • Project management, planning, coordinating, managing changes, and improvements to applications, and solutions in your SharePoint 2013 environment.
  • Key decision making during the life cycle of your customizations and the SharePoint 2013 environments, from inception to end of life.
  • Development of the business case to justify and get approval for the investment.
  • Standard application project management to manage the application over the course of its development.
  • Application portfolio management of the suite of applications and solutions in your SharePoint 2013 environments, including deciding on new applications that are required, which should be improved or retired.

The development perspective is focused on the activities that make up the typical development and maintenance/patch life cycle, including:

  • Following a software development methodology, most commonly based on Agile or waterfall-based approaches. Common methodologies and frameworks include SCRUM, MSF, RUP, and Kanban.
  • Requirements definition, design, development, testing, quality assurance, and deployment and release packaging.
  • Developing maintenance fixes to resolve defects and developing new features and enhancements to release to your production environments.

The operation perspective, in relation to customizations, is focused on:

  • Understanding, learning, rehearsing, and preparing to deploy new customizations and maintenance releases through your successive SharePoint 2013 environments until they are safely released and deployed to your production environments.
  • Monitoring customizations in your production environment and reporting issues to the governance and development teams.
  • Improving and tweaking the configuration of applications and production environments.

As a developer, you may think, that’s interesting, but I am interested only in the development perspective. Well, the reality is that each of these perspectives is symbiotic, complementary, and dependent on each other. Poor performance in operations and governance teams and roles can cause problems for the development team and roles. Similarly poor development processes can cause headaches for operations and governance teams and roles.

A mature and well-defined application life cycle management process, which encompasses these three perspectives, can help your SharePoint team overcome these issues.

Application Lifecycle Management Tools

Microsoft Team Foundation Server (TFS) is the application life cycle management tool at the heart of most SharePoint projects. Microsoft Team Foundation Server 2012 provides the following “must-have” features for a team considering major development projects for the SharePoint 2013 platform:

  • Methodology or process templates — Team Foundation Server 2012 supports various agile and waterfall methodologies through the use of process templates. TFS provides out-of-the-box process templates, including Microsoft Solutions Framework (MSF) for Agile Software Development (v6.0), MSF for CMMI Process Improvement (v6.0), and Visual Studio SCRUM (v2.0). In addition, you can use a number of third-party templates, such as Kanban. See the MSDN Article “Choose a Process Template” for more details at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms400752.aspx.
  • Source code management — Team Foundation Server enables development teams to work on the same code project at the same time. It includes features such as check-ins, code branching, merging, shelving, labeling, concurrent check-outs, check-in policies, and the association of check-ins to work items.
  • Work item tracking — Work items consist of requirements, tasks, bugs, issues, and test cases. Team Foundation Server enables flexibility for how these work items are managed via an extensible work item tracking system. This tracking system controls the states a work item can be in and how the state transitions should occur. This results in better documentation, commenting, visibility of the history of issues, productivity, and discipline for the members of the project team.
  • Build automation — Team Foundation Server provides great build management tools. Build management refers to the automatic creation and processing of new builds based on updates to code projects. Team Foundation Server supports manual builds, continuous integration, rolling builds, gated check-in, and scheduled builds. For example, you can schedule a nightly build, deploy this build to a virtual machine, and run a series of tests ready to be analyzed in the morning.
  • Project management and reporting — Team Foundation Server 2012 provides reports and dashboards for you to use to assess and report on various aspects of your project’s progress. For example, if you have implemented the agile process templates, you can track the progress of the iteration backlog and plan items for the next sprint.

Your project manager and technical lead must be sufficiently skilled in the configuration, optimization, and use of Team Foundation Server 2012. For example, if the customer demands an update on your team’s progress, can your project manager instantly generate a report to provide an update? If your developers haven’t been updating their work items, or your testers haven’t been logging and tracking defects, you won’t have the data to show your customer. If you don’t have the data, you will struggle to report on any part of your team’s progress. Team Foundation Server won’t solve bad management, bad judgment, and bad developer habits or traits. Therefore, your project manager and technical lead must instill discipline and structure in your development, test, and release packaging team.

Understanding Key Development Tools

SharePoint 2013 has evolved, improved, and extended many of the existing development tools used by SharePoint developers today. New development tools have also been provided to develop SharePoint apps.

At the heart of the SharePoint 2013 solution development is Microsoft Visual Studio 2012. Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 is a powerful, integrated, and mature development environment that caters for the full development life cycle of customizations produced for your SharePoint 2013 farm. It provides a number of starting-point solution templates to begin development of SharePoint customizations, combined with deployment packaging tools to create Windows solution packages required by SharePoint to deploy fully and partially trusted assemblies and artifacts to your various environments.

Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 provides extensive support for the full application development life cycle. This includes features to plan and track your project, design functionality, code development tools (write, unit test, debug, analyze, and profile), build, testing (manual and automated tests, performance and stress tests), and deployment into virtual environments for further testing.

Visual Studio 2012 extensions are available to provide new SharePoint development tools, namely the Microsoft Office Developer Tools for Visual Studio 2012. See the Downloads section on the MSDN site at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/office/apps/fp123627.

Based on my previous experience using the SharePoint toolset in Visual Studio, it provides a great starting point to learn about new types of customization options of SharePoint 2013. In larger projects and teams, depending on the type of customization, other approaches may be preferable. It depends on what customization you are developing.

SharePoint Designer 2013 is a WYSIWYG (what-you-see-is-what-you-get) tool that enables power users to configure elements of SharePoint sites. Although you could argue that this is not a true development tool, it does provide a deep level of support for customizing sites without requiring any code to be written. It’s great for small changes, tweaks, modifications, and extensions to existing site features. In addition, SharePoint Designer 2013 changes are scoped automatically to a single site collection and not your entire farm.

Finally, the new Office 365 development tool enables developers to start building apps for Office or SharePoint directly out of a browser window. To get access to these tools, Microsoft requires you to sign up for an Office 365 Development site. This site provides features to help you develop and publish apps to your corporate catalog or Office Store. For more information, see http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj220038(v=office.15).aspx.

 
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