1 / 58

Kuali Bootcamp for Interested Technologists

Kuali Bootcamp for Interested Technologists. Bryan Hutchinson - Cornell University (Development Manager) Jack Frosch – Kuali Foundation (Lead Developer). Agenda. Day 1 Kuali overview Kuali methodology Project Management Collaboration Tools (Confluence, JIRA, etc.) Overall Architecture

Télécharger la présentation

Kuali Bootcamp for Interested Technologists

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Kuali Bootcampfor Interested Technologists Bryan Hutchinson - Cornell University (Development Manager) Jack Frosch – Kuali Foundation (Lead Developer)

  2. Agenda • Day 1 • Kuali overview • Kuali methodology • Project Management • Collaboration Tools (Confluence, JIRA, etc.) • Overall Architecture • Development Tools • Implementation • Demo • Q&A • Time Permitting: initial development environment config

  3. Agenda • Day 2 • Rice • Day 3 • Rice • Day 4 • Kuali Coeus Research Administration (KCRA) / Coeus topics • How KCRA uses Rice • Look at some Code • Exercises

  4. Acknowledgements Special Thanks to the following people whose previous Kuali Days and Cornell presentations provided material used in this presentation: • Andy Slusar, KCRA Project Manager, Cornell University • Jim Thomas, KFS Project Manager, Indiana University • Cath Fairlie, KS Program Director, The University of British Columbia • Terry Durkin, KCRA Development Manager, Indiana University

  5. Introductions • Who are you? • Where are you from? • What do you do? • What do you hope to get from this week?

  6. Kuali Overview • What is Kuali? • Organization • Open Source Misconceptions • Kuali Community Source

  7. What is Kuali? • Kuali = Humble utensil that plays an important role in the kitchen.

  8. What is Kuali? • The Kuali Foundation is a non-profit organization responsible for sustaining and evolving a comprehensive suite of administrative software that meets the needs of Carnegie Class institutions. • Its members are colleges, universities, commercial firms and interested organizations that share a common vision of open, modular, and distributed systems for their software requirements. • The goal of Kuali is to bring the proven functionality of legacy applications to the ease and universality of online systems. • Kuali began as an open/community source initiative to create a financial system (KFS) for higher education.

  9. Kuali Foundation Projects

  10. Partner Institutions

  11. Commercial Affiliates

  12. How do we make it work?

  13. Foundation Organization

  14. Project Organization

  15. Project Organization

  16. Open Source Misconceptions • Part time Developers • Not industrial Strength • Not well tested • Hap-hazard governance • No documentation

  17. Kuali Community Source

  18. Kuali Community Source • Full Time Dedicated Development Teams • Dedicated Functional Resources • Built for 24x7 reliability and built to be scalable for use by the largest institutions • Intensive QA/Testing process • Structured and well documented governance process • Extensive functional and technical documentation • Partner Institutions dedicated to the success of Kuali! • Commercial Affiliates available to provide expertise

  19. Kuali Methodology • Guiding Principles • The Reality Triangle • Collaboration

  20. Guiding Principles • Identify “best of breed” solutions from among partners as base for each module • Develop Common Kuali User Interface • Leverage Kuali Rice architecture and development standards (nervous system, enterprise notification, enterprise workflow and service bus) • Functional Councils and the Subject Matter Experts Drive Functionality and Scope • Application Roadmap Committee and Technical Roadmap Committee work together to govern Rice and Technical Standards/Directions of Kuali

  21. Guiding Principles • Maximize commonality of business practices • Make configurable as much as possible given time and resource constraints • Create a Scope Statement which serves as the developments team’s “contract” with functional stakeholders • Burden of proof falls on advocates for change to show benefits exceed costs • All changes subject to “The Reality Triangle”

  22. The Reality Triangle Scope Time Resources

  23. Collaboration Requirements for success • Communications • Governance • Commitment • Respect • Trust

  24. Collaboration Tools Project Organization and Coordination • Confluence from Atlassian (wiki pages for documentation, collaboration, etc) • JIRA from Atlassian (task tracking) • Sakai (document sharing, email archive, etc) • Omniplan, MS Excel and Project for project plans and Gantt charts • Resource planning sheets

  25. Effective PM?

  26. What is effective PM? According to Project Management Institute: Initiation and Planning Execution and Monitoring Closing – transition to Sustainment

  27. Effective Project Management Initiation and Planning Different Projects, Same Foundation Execution and Monitoring The Reality Triangle Resources Communication & Collaboration Tools Closing – transition to Sustainment Implementation Measuring Success

  28. Kuali Project Differences • Project differences • KFS started with IU FIS • KCRA and the Coeus relationship • KS started with a vision • Team size/project scope • User community differences • Rice Evolution/Extraction • Effective project management essential to all

  29. The Reality Triangle Scope Time Resources

  30. Execution & Monitoring -The Other Realities COST RISK

  31. Project Resources • Clear Role definitions • Development Team Sourcing • Tendered Resources • Onshore consulting • Offshore consulting • Backfill for functional resources • Training

  32. Managing Risk • Identifying, analyzing, and responding to project risk • Minimize the consequences of adverse events, which may prevent the project from meeting its objectives. • Identify the highest-priority risks – focus on them as the project evolves

  33. Communications • Good project management requires effective communications & collaboration • Good communications requires: • A strategy and a plan • Communication/collaboration tools • Effective meetings

  34. Collaboration • Collaboration is hard work. It requires: • Governance • Excellent communications • Relationship building – Respect & Trust • Commitment • Team Goals vs. Institutional Wants • Complementary competencies – everyone brings something different to the table • Results in better, more creative solutions • KIT – cross project collaboration and integration

  35. Communication Plan

  36. Communication Tools • Choosing Communication Tools - the right tool at the right time • Face to face meetings or workshops • Video Conference/Skype video • Breeze (Adobe Connect) • Telephone / Skype audio conference • Chat/IM • Email

  37. Project Management Tools

  38. Project Management Tools

  39. Meetings/Status Reporting • In person meetings are a good communication vehicle for reporting status and resolving issues • Board • Functional Council • Technical Council • Project Leadership meetings • Developer meetings • Code Reviews • One on ones • Face to Face meetings • Focus groups • Informal

  40. Effective Meetings • Have an agenda • Record Action Items • Track and follow up • Formation of ad hoc subgroups

  41. Sustainment Closing the project involves transitioning to sustainment Kuali projects are rapidly approaching completion and full transition into sustainment model several implementation projects in the works Kuali Foundation Board working aggressively to define a detailed Sustainment model Team structure, resources, capacity Funding model Support processes

  42. Sustainment • Closing the project involves transitioning to sustainment • Kuali projects are rapidly approaching completion and full transition into sustainment model • Several implementation projects in the works • Kuali Foundation Board working aggressively to define a detailed Sustainment model • Team structure, resources, capacity • Funding model • Support processes

  43. How are we doing? How will we measure “success”? • Are we delivering working code that provides functionality that meets our SMEs expectations? • Are we meeting our project deadlines? • Do we have successful implementers?

  44. Working togetherWe can do it!!

  45. Collaboration Tools • Confluence • http://test.kuali.org/confluence • JIRA • http://test.kuali.org/jira/ • Sakai • https://collab.kuali.org/

  46. Collaboration Tools Demo

  47. Kuali Architecture • Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) • Open Source Tools • Kuali Rice

  48. Kuali Architecture

  49. Kuali Architecture

  50. Kuali Building Blocks • Kuali Toolbox • Open Source Tools • Struts - UI • OJB/JPA - Persistence • Spring - Services • Rice builds upon and extends functionality • Struts - Mitigates common issues (POJO forms, Formatting,…) • OJB/JPA - DAO w/ Object Hierarchy; No custom code for POJO persistence

More Related