Hands-On Test Management with Jira
End-to-end test management with Zephyr, synapseRT, and Jenkins in Jira
- 264 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Hands-On Test Management with Jira
End-to-end test management with Zephyr, synapseRT, and Jenkins in Jira
About This Book
Learn best practices for testing with Jira and model industry workflows that can be used during the software development lifecycle
Key Features
- Integrate Jira with test management tools such as Zephyr, Test Management, and SynapseRT
- Understand test case management, traceability, and test execution with reports
- Implement continuous integration using Jira, Jenkins, and automated testing tools
Book Description
Hands-On Test Management with Jira begins by introducing you to the basic concepts of Jira and takes you through real-world software testing processes followed by various organizations. As you progress through the chapters, the book explores and compares the three most popular Jira plugins—Zephyr, Test Management, and synapseRT.
With this book, you'll gain a practical understanding of test management processes using Jira. You'll learn how to create and manage projects, create Jira tickets to manage customer requirements, and track Jira tickets. You'll also understand how to develop test plans, test cases, and test suites, and create defects and requirement traceability matrices, as well as generating reports in Jira.
Toward the end, you'll understand how Jira can help the SQA teams to use the DevOps pipeline for automating execution and managing test cases. You'll get to grips with configuring Jira with Jenkins to execute automated test cases in Selenium.
By the end of this book, you'll have gained a clear understanding of how to model and implement test management processes using Jira.
What you will learn
- Understand QMS to effectively implement quality systems in your organization
- Explore a business-driven structured approach to Test Management using TMap NEXT
- Implement different aspects of test planning, test strategy, and test execution
- Organize and manage Agile projects in Scrum and Kanban
- Uncover Jira plugins available in the Atlassian Marketplace for testing and project management
- Configure a DevOps pipeline for continuous integration using Jira with Jenkins
Who this book is for
If you're a quality assurance professional, software project manager, or test manager interested in learning test management best practices in your team or organization, this book is for you. Prior knowledge of test management and Jenkins will be beneficial in understanding the concepts covered in this book.
Frequently asked questions
Information
Section 1: Introduction to Software Quality Assurance
- Chapter 1, An Overview of Software Quality Assurance
An Overview of Software Quality Assurance
- What is quality?
- How do we ensure quality?
- Software testing thought process
- Quality Management Systems
- Software Development Life Cycle versus Software Testing Life Cycle
- Types of testing
- Preparing test data and managing test artifacts
What is quality?
- Customer focus
- Leadership
- Engagement of people
- Process approach
- Improvement
- Evidence-based decision-making
- Relationship management
- FUNCTIONAL SUITABILITY: Characterizes the functional potential and abilities of the software by sub-categorizing it into three different categories:
- Completeness: The measurement of the set of functions implemented and covered for all the specified requirements to satisfy user goals
- Correctness: The measurement of deviation from the specified requirements and the measurement of the precision of the generation of end results
- Appropriateness: The measurement of the generation of suitable and relevant results that can facilitate achieving specified tasks and objectives
- PERFORMANCE EFFICIENCY: Takes three main factors into consideration:
- Time-behavior: Measures the response times, processing times, and tolerance of the throughput of an application against the specified load
- Resource utilization: A measurement of the utilization of the amount and types of resources while performing specified tasks
- Capacity: Checks maximum tolerance and limitations to meeting the required goal
- COMPATIBILITY: This checks whether the system can work efficiently in different environments by examining the following two factors:
- Co-existence: Verifies that software or a product can perform its tasks effectively by sharing common resources and environments with other software/hardware
- Interoperability: Ensures the exchange of information between two separate products or components is smooth and has no impact on the intended results
- USABILITY: Examines the ease of use of software by considering the following aspects:
- Appropriateness recognizability: The verification of the product or service against the user's needs
- Learnability: The extent to which a product or service facilitates users' learning of its usage effectively and efficiently
- Operability: Deals with knowing how easy it is to operate, control, and use the system product or service effectively
- User error protection: Measures the degree to which the system can prevent users from making errors
- User interface aesthetics: Checks how the user interface of the system can yield user satisfaction and a pleasing experience
- Accessibility: Makes sure that users can use the system hassle-free, so that users can use it effectively, without compromising its ability to perform a specified set of goals or the purpose that has been set for the system or products
- RELIABILITY: The extent to which end users can rely on the system or products to perform specific tasks or activities. It consists of four sub-categories:
- Maturity: The extent to which the system or its components meets customers' needs in terms of reliability when functioning normally
- Availability: The measurement of the availability and accessibility of the software or product whenever users want to use it
- Fault-tolerance: The measurement of the deviation of the expected results despite being under undesirable conditions
- Recoverability: Checks how quickly the system can recover from interruptions or failures without losing information
- SECURITY: Everyone wants their data to be secure when it comes to using software products or services. Security is needed to control the unauthorized use of data. In order to meet security needs, it has been sub-categorized into the following categories:
- Confidentiality: Ensures the authorized use of data
- Integrity: Capability to prevent unauthorized and unofficial access to data by invalid users, products, or other services that could potentially cause harm by modifying data
- Non-repudiation: Refers to the degree to which the actions and/or events can be ascertained to have occurred so that it cannot be disputed or repudiated late
- Accountability: Ensures that activities or actions performed by an actor in the system can be traced back uniquely to having been performed by the same actor
- Authenticity: Ensures that the actor or person is uniquely identifiable in the system, which can be proven to match the identity as claimed
- MAINTAINABILITY: Deals with the maintenance of the software product or service to fulfill customer needs and to continue to perform efficiently. It has been sub-categorized into the following:
- Modularity: Measures the effect on the other parts or components of the system when one part undergoes a change. High cohesion and low coupling are what we strive to achieve. Thus, the code for a particular module should be closely related within the module but each module should function independently from other modules.
- Reusability: Refers to the degree to which specific parts or components of software can be reused.
- Analyzability: Deals with checking the ease of analyzing the software or product in order to detect failures, deficiencies, and/or the impact of modifications.
- Modifiability: A measurement of the extent to which the software product or service is modifiable without affecting its current efficiency and functionality.
- Testability: Defines the baseline for the test that confirms whether the software product or service meets the specified requirements.
- PORTABILITY: Defines the resilience of the system to perform efficiently with the changes in software, hardware, or the environment.
- Adaptability: A measurement of the extent to which the software system or product can be adopted without affecting its efficiency
- Installability: A measurement of the capacity of a product or software to be installed or uninstalled in a stipulated environment
- Replaceability: The ability of software to be replaced with other software to perform the same set of tasks in the same environment
- EFFECTIVENESS: A measure of the accuracy and completeness of results generated by the component or functions of the software product or service.
- EFFICIENCY: A measurement of the utilization of resources needed to produce complete and accurate results.
- SATISFACTION: These are four ways to test user satisfaction with software:
- Usefulness: Makes sure that the software satisfies customer needs and functions as expected
- Trust: Ensures software fulfills customer expectations
- Pleasure: A measurement of how much the software product or service helps customers meet their needs
- Comfort: The degree to which the user is satisfied with the software product and feels comfortable using it
- FREEDOM FROM RISK: There are three main ways to analyze the level to which a system can reduce potential risks, as follows:
- Economic Risk Mitigation: Analyzes how much the system can mitigate potential risks that could have a severe impact on various levels, such as financial, commercial, reputation, and disrupt the efficiency of the software product or service
- Health and Safety Risk Mitigation: Identifies the level to which software can mitigate potential risks to end users
- Environmental Risk Mitigation: Identifies how much software can mitigate the potential risk to property or the environment
...
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Copyright and Credits
- Dedication
- About Packt
- Contributors
- Preface
- Section 1: Introduction to Software Quality Assurance
- An Overview of Software Quality Assurance
- Section 2: Jira Environment - An Overview
- Getting Started with Jira
- Understanding Components of Testing with Jira
- Section 3: Test Management - Manage and Plan
- Test Management Approach
- Test Planning
- Section 4: Test Management - Design and Execute
- Test Design Phase
- Test Execution Phase
- Defect Management Phase
- Section 5: Test Management - Monitor and Control
- Requirement Management
- Test Execution Status Reporting
- Section 6: Continuous Integration with Jira and Jenkins
- Jira Integration with Automated Testing Tools
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