1 / 28

Making the SQL developer one of the family with Visual Studio Team System

Making the SQL developer one of the family with Visual Studio Team System. Richard Fennell Engineering Director SQLBits IV 28 th March 2009. Agenda. Why do we need DB Pro.? What is Visual Studio Team System DB Pro. Features Project Life-cycle Testing Deployment Power Tools The Future.

Télécharger la présentation

Making the SQL developer one of the family with Visual Studio Team System

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. Making the SQL developer one of the family with Visual Studio Team System Richard FennellEngineering DirectorSQLBits IV 28th March 2009

  2. Agenda • Why do we need DB Pro.? • What is Visual Studio Team System • DB Pro. Features • Project Life-cycle • Testing • Deployment • Power Tools • The Future

  3. Pain points in DB development • What is the ‘correct DB schema’? • How do we version control it? • How do I know the impact of a change? • How do we publish a DB? • Where do we get test data from? • How do we test it anyway? • There has been no ‘Microsoft standard’ way to manage the DB – until now

  4. Excel Project Team System Web Access Operations, QA and Help Desk Non-Microsoft Developer Visual Studio Team SystemApplication Life Cycle Management (ALM) Solution

  5. Incorporates the Database Professional into the software development lifecycle Provides a foundation for change management and process integration Exposes database schema as individual script files Provides a set of essential tools Version Control via Visual Studio supported providers Rename Refactoring Schema Comparison Tools Data Comparison Tools Visual Studio for Database Professionals

  6. Visual Studio for Database Professionals • Was known as ‘DataDude’ in beta phase • Released in 2006 • Release VS 2008 was really more of a service pack than a major release. • VS 2008 GDR Released November 2008

  7. Visual Studio Team System 2008Database Edition GDR • Builds on top of Visual Studio 2008 SP1 • Adds support for SQL Server 2008 • Introduces a new product architecture • Database Schema Provider model • Separation of Build & Deploy • Public Extensibility • Incorporates functionality previouslyshipped in the Power Tools • T-SQL Static Code Analysis • Dependency Viewer • Many product enhancements and improvements

  8. Database Project Ecosystem DSP Extensions DSP Extensions DSP Extensions DSP Extensions DSP Extensions DSP Extensions Schema Compare Data Compare Database Refactoring T-SQL Static Code Analysis Database Unit Testing Data Generation 3rd Party Designers 3rd Party Tools Project Features Database Eco Project System Solution Explorer Schema View Dependency Viewer Editor 3rd Party DSP Parser ScriptDOM Interpreter Reverse Engineer Deploy SQL Server 2000 DSP Parser ScriptDOM Interpreter Reverse Engineer Deploy SQL Server 2005 DSP Parser ScriptDOM Interpreter Reverse Engineer Deploy SQL Server 2008 DSP Parser ScriptDOM Interpreter Reverse Engineer Deploy DSP Extensions Database Model API

  9. As a member of the Visual Studio Team System family, DBPro is integrated with all of the team features TFS provides Team project with prescriptive guidance Version control management Work Item tracking Team Build integration Team Foundation Server Integration

  10. Power Tools 2008 added additional features that didn’t make the product release cycle Dependency Viewer New Refactorings Data Generation Wizard MSBuild Tasks T-SQL Static Code Analysis Schema Manager API At present no GDR Power tools released Database Edition Power Tools

  11. Roles in a DB Project Writes Tests Writes DB Code Refactors Runs Tests Checks In Works with other developers to integrate Creates New DB Project Reverse Engineers DB to Project Creates Data Generation Plan Reviews Changes Compares Updates to Production Builds Deploy Package Deploys to Production Manage Develop Deploy DB Administrator DB Developer DB Administrator

  12. Creating the DB Project TFSServer DBPro Check in to Source Control DBA Staging Database Database Project Production Database Create a Project Import schema

  13. Sync • Check-out • Edit/Refactor • Test • Check-in • Work is being drivenand tracked viawork items • Other team members can pick up changes TFS Shelving allows DBAto provide guidance and evaluate work Isolated Iterative Development Sandbox Database TFSServer Sandbox Database DBPro DBA Staging Database Sandbox Database Production Database

  14. Automated Build & Testing Reports TFSServer Test Environment Test Get Latest DBPro Build Server DBA Staging Database Production Database

  15. SQL Deploy Script Deploy the Project TFSServer DBPro Sync from Label DBA Deploy Staging Database Publish Database Project Production Database Refine deploy script Build Verify

  16. Schema Compilation Source Database Reverse engineer schema into DDL artifacts Interpret, Analyze and Validate Schema Model Project System Schema Model DDL Scripts (artifacts) .dbschema file Build Compose model representation from source code fragments

  17. Schema Deployment Target Database .dbschema file Schema Model Schema Model Model Diff Plan Executors .SQL … Deployment Engine Incremental Target Update Additional schema artifacts

  18. demo DB Life Cycle

  19. Data Generation • Shipped with the product • Data-bound, Regular Expression, Random Number • Available as a Power Tool • File-bound and a Wizard tools to ease the process • Codeplex – DbProGenerators • LoremIpsum, sparse columns, XML bound, Word bound and web search bound • Plus what you write yourself.....

  20. demo Data Generation

  21. Firstly remember that can test any CLR code before loading it into SQL Server DBPro adds database tests that can be used to test any stored procedure, function, trigger or DB object A single test project can contain a variety of test types Can be used to auto generate test stubs Testing in DB Pro

  22. demo Automated Testing

  23. Is DB Testing Valid? • You have to ask how useful it is to test at the raw data layer? • Usually more effective to test the DB via the data access layer or as part of integration testing

  24. All the key DB tasks can be scripted Database operations can become part of a scheduled build However this can all get a bit complex and DBProMSBuild tasks are a bit idiosyncratic. Check the web for examples MSBuild

  25. The Future • Developer & Database Team Editions merged • Database Schema Providers • Publicly extensible in Visual Studio 2010 • Quest Software announced that they will offer a Database Schema Provider (DSP) for Oracle • Partnership with IBM provides DB2 support • Contextual Project Feature Extensibility • Publicly extensible in Visual Studio 2010

  26. Visual Studio Team Edition for Database Professionals make SQL development part of the project mainstream. Team System coupled with integrated version control helps to mitigate risks associated with DB schema change Build integration provides for quality tracking and improvement Process reduces last minute problems and the need to rollback changes out of production Summary

  27. Good VSTS Blogs • Gert Drapers (was Architect/Development Manager Visual Studio Team Edition for DB Professionals, but moved to new team Mar 09) •  http://blogs.msdn.com/gertd • VSTS DB Team Blog (replaces Gert’s blog) • http://blogs.msdn.com/vstsdb/ • Brian Harry (Product Unit Manager for Team Foundation Server) • http://blogs.msdn.com/bharry

  28. For Further Information • My random thoughts ‘But it works on my PC!’ http://blogs.blackmarble.co.uk/blogs/rfennell • You can also get in touch via: Email – richard@blackmarble.co.uk WebSite– www.blackmarble.co.uk

More Related