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Azure DevOps Server 2019 Cookbook

You're reading from   Azure DevOps Server 2019 Cookbook Proven recipes to accelerate your DevOps journey with Azure DevOps Server 2019 (formerly TFS)

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788839259
Length 456 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Concepts
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Authors (3):
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Tarun Arora Tarun Arora
Author Profile Icon Tarun Arora
Tarun Arora
Utkarsh Shigihalli Utkarsh Shigihalli
Author Profile Icon Utkarsh Shigihalli
Utkarsh Shigihalli
Tarun Arora Tarun Arora
Author Profile Icon Tarun Arora
Tarun Arora
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Planning and Tracking Work FREE CHAPTER 2. Source Control Management 3. Build and Release Agents 4. Continuous Integration and Build Automation 5. Continuous Testing 6. Continuous Deployments 7. Azure Artifacts and Dependency Management 8. Azure DevOps Extensions 9. Other Books You May Enjoy

Visualizing progress in a sprint

During a sprint, the team can use the taskboard and the sprint burndown chart to track progress. The sprint burndown chart provides you with an at-a-glance visual so that you can determine whether your team is on track to meet their sprint plan. Your taskboard provides a visualization of the flow and status of each sprint task. With this, you can focus on the status of backlog items, as well as work that has been assigned to each team member. It also summaries the total amount of remaining work to complete for a task or within a column. The taskboard supports pivoting the work by stories and people, and further filtering on individuals. The taskboard supports customization of the cards, which helps you surface more information during standup or generally out to stakeholders. The taskboard can be customized using the team settings dialogue (which we looked at earlier for backlog board customization). The field setting gives you the option to track bugs on the taskboard, as shown in the following screenshot:

The Fields settings allow you to display more work item fields on the taskboard for product backlog items, tasks, and bugs. For example, you may be interested in seeing the priority of the bugs and which area of the application they belong to versus the board column for the product backlog item. Additionally, you can create styling rules to configure the style for the cards. For example, by rendering impeded work as red, you can base the style on work items tagged as blocked:

When a lot of work is being done, it is sometimes hard to visualize the dependencies between multiple tasks that could result in key deliverables being delayed. In this recipe, you'll learn how you can organize tasks in a sprint on a calendar view and identify dependencies between them. 

Getting ready

The sprint burndown chart is a great indicator of whether the team will be able to complete all remaining work within the sprint time box, and the taskboard helps you visualize the remaining work on each task. The Sprint Drop Plan extension (https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=yanivsegev.Drop-plan-extension), which was created by Yaniv Segev, is an organizational tool that helps team members sync their tasks by visualizing their work status and dependencies on a sprint-based calendar.

Once you've installed the extension from the marketplace, you'll see a new tab called Drop Plan in the sprint tools:

How to do it...

  1. Once you're in the Drop Plan view, you'll notice that there is a swimlane pivoted against a calendar view for each individual, and a lane for all unassigned work. Tasks assigned to the individual show up in their respective lane on the sprint end date:

  1.  Next, start to schedule the tasks by dragging them to the date you forecast they'll be completed by:

How it works...

When you hover over a task of interest, the drop plan will render dependency links out to tasks that are related to the task you have selected, in addition to the product backlog item all the tasks are linked to. In this case, you now know that the product backlog item has three key tasks in flight, one of which is only likely to complete on the last day of the sprint. This gives you an opportunity to discuss the order in which the tasks are scheduled. For example, in this case, if you think the task scheduled for the last day of the sprint has more value, it should be brought forward in place of something else. In addition to this, the extension allows you to visualize an individual's and team's days off, as well as blocked tasks:

There's more... 

The team foundation marketplace features the Team Calendar extension (https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-devlabs.team-calendar), which was created by the Microsoft DevLabs team and helps busy teams stay on track and informed about important deadlines, sprint schedules, and upcoming milestones. Team Calendar is the one place where you can view and manage the dates that are important to your teams, including sprint schedule, days off (for individuals or the team), and custom events:

You have been reading a chapter from
Azure DevOps Server 2019 Cookbook - Second Edition
Published in: May 2019
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781788839259
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