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DevOps is an extension of agile software development approach and enables a simultaneous occurrence of software development and testing through continuous collaboration between all stakeholders. Enterprises today are witnessing a rapid adoption of DevOps to accelerate time to market and to better respond to and meet the ever-changing customer needs. DevOps has emerged from the necessity of businesses to respond more quickly to market changes for gaining competitive advantage and rapid business growth.

Five stages of DevOps: Normalization (Stage 1) : Application development teams use version control. Teams deploy on a standard set of operating systems.

Standardization (Stage 2) : Teams deploy on a single standard operating system. Build on a standard set of technology.

Expansion (Stage 3) : Individuals can do work with manual approval outside them. Deployment patterns for building apps/services are reused. Infrastructure changes are tested before deploying to production.

Automated infrastructure delivery (Stage 4) : System configurations are automated. Provisioning is automated. System configs are in version control. Application configs are in version control. Security policy configs are automated.

Self-service (Stage 5): Incident responses are automated. Resources are available via self-service. Applications are rearchitected based on business needs. Security teams are involved in technology design and development.

Build the foundation (Stage 0): Monitoring and alerting are configurable by the team operating the service. Reuse deployment and testing patterns for building applications or services. Teams contribute improvements to tooling provided by other teams. Configurations are managed by a configuration management tool.

Source: State of DevOps survey rep ort 201 9 by Puppet Labs

DevOps practices are intended not only to improve the regularity of feature releases but also to reduce defects. DevOps emphasizes constant and collaborated development and deployment of applications. DevOps is the answer to the requirement of enterprises that need to catch up with the relentless speed of business growth. It is driving enterprises to streamline and speed up the delivery of applications along with changes and innovation. It isn’t just about continuous delivery, but also about continuous improvement of software as well.

DevOps – Why, What, How & Who? Why: Increase business benefits by reducing the transaction cost associated with delivering incremental change.

What (Goal): Clarity, consistency , and collaboration to understand the changes that each release brings to the IT and customer environments

How: Methodology and tools that continue to evolve

Who: Developers, QA , and Operations

Key Highlights of DevOps Quicker and faster software delivery

Stable operating environments

Early detection and faster correction of defects

Transparency and Collaboration across teams

Continuous release and deployment

Continuous testing

Continuous monitoring

Reduced time to market

Improved quality



The Cultural Shift

DevOps is all about keeping the software deployable at any point in time over working on new features. It calls for a cultural shift among all stakeholders of the organization and requires them to come together and work towards a common goal of creating rapid, reliable, and repeatable processes. DevOps encourages development and operations teams to function as one single team, focused on delivering business value across the IT value chain.

Traditionally, a development team and an operations department usually have entirely different deliverables and responsibilities. Development team continuously indulges in developing software/application based on changing user needs or market demands for new features or making changes and fixes in the existing product. Operations team tries to retain everything as constant as possible so as to deliver maximum stability and availability of software services.

Between the two differing goals of Development and Operations teams, Quality Assurance (QA) plays an important role as a key enabler in delivering business value. And, DevOps seamlessly integrates all the three functions – Dev, Ops, and QA into a single IT entity that delivers value. DevOps breaks down the organizational silos between development and operations teams. It emphasizes that QA is everyone’s responsibility. QA & testing function as a bridge between all disciplines, from clients and business to development and operations in DevOps. QA & testing is viewed as one of the most vital levers for accelerating time to market within DevOps initiatives.

The Strategic Role of QA in DevOps

In the DevOps approach, testers and developers play equally important roles. The boundaries of job responsibilities between a developer and tester become blurred in DevOps. QA ties together development and operations and enables them to collaborate to have software and applications up & running. Everyone in the organization takes responsibility for quality and stability, and thereby for the business success.

A developer thinks more like a tester and continually checks their own code for potential errors. Conversely, a tester, whose responsibility is to test the application/software using different types of testing tools & methodologies, also fixes the code. In such a scenario, organizations without a strong and definite QA and testing strategy to “continuously test” in DevOps face troubles in meeting their goals for an accelerated speed of delivery.

As discussed in our previous post – Importance of Continuous Testing in DevOps – Continuous Testing, when implemented diligently, allows flawless continuity in the delivery cycle. It reduces the time from development to operations. QA is moving into a more strategic role of building robust software testing infrastructure while tracking quality across the SDLC.

Having a QA strategy in place, coupled with best practices, has become very relevant. Organizations are readily embracing the DevOps movement to enable effective software development and operations while achieving superior quality and user experience.

10 Best Practices of QA in a DevOps scenario:

QA and testing teams should be part of technical teams. They have to move beyond manual functional testing and should focus their efforts on automation and testing strategies. QA becomes the enabler of quality across SDLC. Quality needs to be well-defined in order to meet requirements. Rather than trying to achieve perfection in software, QA should move towards focusing on accomplishing satisfying user experience within the given time frame. Metrics that measure quality have to be laid down and measured. Such metrics should detect software defects early in the development cycle. Goals of individual and teams need to be optimized. Organizations need to strengthen necessary behavior and cultural shift by incentivizing quality assurance. Requirements need to be specific. QA teams should proactively involve in the requirements process to help and guide development teams towards proper direction. QA & testing should focus more on automated regression testing on critical areas such as key software functionality. QA & testing has to move towards leveraging automation tools to automate testing wherever possible. Development, operations, and QA teams should be facilitated and encouraged to communicate, collaborate, and optimize their efforts. Continuous integration is the key to identifying defects early in the development lifecycle. For continuous integration to be implemented effectively, all the stakeholders have to integrate their work often on a day-to-day basis. A fully automated continuous testing process needs to be integrated into the SDLC for a successful continuous delivery process that minimizes risks, reduces costs, and accelerates time to market by frequent releases.

At Cigniti, we standardize efforts and ensure accelerated time to market with DevOps testing solutions. We also focus on delivering improved deployment quality with greater operational efficiency. Our DevOps testing specialists enable your application testing efforts with their rich experience in Continuous Integration (CI) testing and can configure and execute popular CI tools helping client’s DevOps teams. Talk to us today.