Testing API with with multiple release/per day - devops

How would you implement testing in an environment where new functionalities are being deploy with frequent release. i.e: twice a day.
What test strategy you will implement in such project so that application is deployed to production without bugs?
PS: Application is Continuous deployment enabled, as soon as devs merge the code, code is deployed to production.

Related

How to organize deployment process of a product from devs to testers?

We're a small team of 4 developers and 2 testers and I'm a team lead of the team. Developers do their tasks each in separate branch. Our stack is ASP.NET MVC, ASP.NET Core, Entity Framework 6, MSSQL, IIS, Windows Server. We also use Bitbucket, Jira software to store code and manage issues.
For example, there is a task "add an about window". A developer creates branch named "add-about-window" and put all the code there. Once the task is done, I do code review and in case all was good, I merge the branch into some accumulating branch let's name it "main". As a next step, I then manually deploy the updated "main" branch to test server with installed IIS, MSSQL. Once done I notify testers to test freshly uploaded app to make sure "add about window" is done correctly and works good. If testers find a bug, I have to revert the task branch merge from "main" branch and tell the developer to fix the bug in task's branch. Once the developer fixed it, I merge the branch into "main" branch again and ask testers to check again. In the end the task branch gets deleted.
This is really inconvenient, time consuming and frustrating. I have heard about git flow (maybe this is kind of what we have now).
Ideally, I would like this process to be as this:
Each developer still do work in separate branches.
Once a task is done and all the task code is in task branch I do code review.
Once code review is done and all found issues are fixed I just click "deploy"
There is a Docker image which contains IIS, MSSQL, Windows. It also with some base version of the application we work on, fully tested and stable. Let's say it's on a state of some date, like start of the year.
The Docker image is taken and a new container starts.
This Docker container gets fully initialized and then the code from a branch gets installed on the running container.
This container then has own domain name like "proj-100.branches.ourcompany.com" ("proj-100" is task's ID in Jira) which testers can go on and test.
This would definitely decrease time I spend on deployment and also will make the process more convenient and comfortable.
Can someone advice some resources I can learn about similar deployment models? Or maybe someone can share info on this. Any info will be very appreciated.
regardless of your stack, and before talking about the solutions, what you describe is the basic use case of any CI-CD process. all the exhausting manual steps you described, can be done with any CI tool.
now, let's consider what you already have, and talk about the steps for your desired solution - you're using bitbucket, which already gives you at least steps 1 and 2 - merging only approved PRs into master/main.
step 3 is where we start the CI automation process - you define a webhook upon certain actions in the bitbucket repo, which triggers a CI job/pipeline(can be a Jenkins server, gitlab-ci, or many other CI solutions). this way, you won't even need a "deploy" button, since the merging action can trigger the job, which can automatically run unit tests, integration tests(if you define them), build artifacts/docker-images and finally deploy.
step 4 needs some basic understanding of the docker containers design - a docker image is not a VM. it has its use cases and relevant scenarios, and more importantly an advised architecture guideline to follow.
to make it short, I'll only mention the principle of separation - each service should be in a separate container. it allows upscaling and easier debugging, and much more. which means - what you need is not a docker image that contains your entire system, but an orchestration of containers, each containing an independent software unit, with a clear responsibility. and here Kubernetes comes into play.
back to the CI job - after the PR merge, the job starts, running the pre-defined unit tests, building the container, and uploading to your registry.
moving to CD - depending on your process, after the updated and tested docker images are in your registry(could be artifactory/GitLab registry/docker registry...), the CD job can take any image it needs, and deploy them in your Kubernetes cluster. and that's it! the process is done.
A word of advice - if you don't have a professional DevOps team, or a good understanding of docker, CI-CD process, and Kubernetes, and if your dev team is small(and unfortunately it seems so) you may want to consider hiring a DevOps company to build the DevOps/CICD infrastructure for you, preferably with a completely managed DevOps solution and then do a handover. everything I wrote is just the guideline and basic points, to give you the big picture. good luck!
All the other answers are here great still I would like to add my piece of advice.
Recently I was also working on a product and we were three team members. It was a node.js project. If you are on AWS then you can use the AWS pipeline. This will detect pushes from a specific GitHub branch and the changes will get deployed to the server. The pipeline service has a build stage too. You can also configure slack notifications.
But you should have at least two environments production and dev to check if deployment is working properly on dev.
AWS also has services like AWS Code Commit and AWS Code Deploy.
This is just a basic solution. You don't actually need fancy software to set up ci/cd.
This kind of setup is usually supported by a CICD tool coupled with Kubernetes.
Either an on-premise one, like Jenkins+Kubernetes, or its Jenkins Kubernetes plugin, which runs dynamic agents in a Kubernetes cluster.
You can see an example in "How to Setup Jenkins Build Agents on Kubernetes Pods" by Bibin Wilson.
Or a Cloud one, like Bitbucket pipeline deploying a containerized application to Kubernetes
In both instances, the idea remains the same: create a ephemeral execution environment (a Docker container with the right components in it) for each pushed branch, in order to execute tests.
That way, said tests can take place before any merge between a feature branch and an integration branch like main.
If the tests pass, Jenkins itself could trigger an automatic merge (assuming the feature branch was rebased first on top of the target branch, main in your case)
We have similar process in our team.
We use gitlab-ci.
Hence there are some out of docker infrastructure (nginx with test stand dns),
we just create dev1, dev2 ... stands (5 stands for team of 10 developer and more than 6 microservices). For each devX stand and each microservice we have deploy to devX button in our CI-CD. And we just reserve in slack devX for feature Y on time of tests after deploy. Whan tests are done and bugs are fixed we merge to main branch and other feature brunch can be deployed and tested on devX stand.
As a next step, I then manually deploy the updated "main" branch to test server with installed IIS, MSSQL.
Once done I notify testers to test freshly uploaded app to make sure "add about window" is done correctly and works good.
If testers find a bug, I have to revert the task branch merge from "main" branch and tell the developer to fix the bug in task's branch.
If there are multiple environments then devs could deploy themselves into them. Even a single "dev" environment they can deploy to would greatly help. The devs should be able to deploy themselves and notify the testers without going through you.
That the deploy is "manual" is suspicious. How manual? Ideally it should just be a few button clicks. Sometimes you can even have it so that pushing to a branch does a deploy (through webhooks).
You should be able to deploy from branches besides main. What that means or looks like can vary a lot but the point is that if you're forcing everything there and having to revert when it doesn't work you're creating a lot of unneeded work. Ideally there should be some way to test locally. If there really can't be then you need to at least allow a way to deploy from any branch (or something like force pushing to a branch called 'dev' or something).
From another angle, unless the application gets horribly broken you don't necessarily need to rollback changes unless a release is coming soon. You can just have it fixed in another pull request.
All in all the main problem here sounds like there's only a single environment for testing, the process to deploy to it is far too manual, and the devs have no way to deploy to it themselves. This sort of thing is a massive bottle neck. Having a burdensome process to even begin to test things takes a big toll on everyone's morale -- which can be worse than the loss in velocity. You don't necesscarily need every dev to be able to spin up as many environments as they want at the push of a button but devs do need some autonomy to be able to test.
Having the application run in Docker containers can greatly help with running it locally as well as making the deployment process simpler. I've tried to stay away from specific product suggestions because this is more of a process problem it sounds like.

How to avoid codefreeze when deployments past QA are in progress

We normally merge feature branches to the development branch(Development branch is deployed to QA) and from there RELEASE tags are created subsequently followed by deployments to staging and production. All has been implemented through AWS codepipeline. Problem we are facing is that once RELEASE branch is created, we go into code freeze and we cant merge more into development branch i.e. get things into QA till production deployment is completed successfully(Think about scenario, if hotfix is needed in production, we need our development branch to be exactly what was deployed into production, prior to applying the hotfix). We are trying to figureout a way on how to avoid codefreeze while release is in progress. This is a high level description of our issue, would love to provide more details, if needed.
Thank you.

iOS App Store: How to handle multiple versions of an app that points to different backends?

I have one app but I have different backends for Production and Testing to isolate the data between the two. This means that when I upload a version of the app to the App Store, it is locked-in pointing to either the Testing or Production backend. Since each version of the app uploaded to the App Store must be its own unique version, I'll have some versions that are 'test-only' that will never be promoted to production and other that are 'production-only'. Is there a better way to handle this situation, either within the App Store or within my Swift code itself?
After working with TestFlight more, I settled on the pattern of having all builds for the same release use the same semantic release version and just change the build number.
I may take this a step further and use different build number schemes between the Testing builds and the Production builds. This would make the distinction between test and production builds much more explicit within TestFlight.
Another solution that requires more setup but creates an even cleaner separation would be to create separate Apps in App Store Connect with the intention that your non-Production Apps would never be released to the public App Store. I could see this being a great solution if your app had to go through multiple test environments. There would be some more overhead (i.e. a lot more builds and separate targets to maintain) but you would never have to worry about accidentally submitting a version of your app whose backend points to a test environment instead of a production environment. For more details on this type of solution, I recommend https://savvyapps.com/blog/using-testflight-to-distribute-multiple-versions-ios-app.

Best practice for moving fastlane deployment of whitelabel apps off local machine and to a server/service

We create iOS and Android apps that are white-labeled. They all use a single code base (one for iOS and one for Android). Whenever we need to make changes to all of our apps (> 100 live in App Store) we rely on Fastlane. We have a "bulk" command that submits each new build to Apple, changing out config variables first and a few files so each app is unique.
This has worked well for us... but... its getting really slow. We'd love to be able to take advantage of some of the continuous development services out there. It seems like they weren't necessarily made for this use case but it might still work?
Ideally instead of running bulk on a local machine we could spin up 100 instances on something like CircleCI and they all run side by side, using our fastlane script to build, submit, etc.
We started by looking into CircleCI. The problem we are running into is they don't allow injection of variables into a job (https://ideas.circleci.com/ideas/CCI-I-690).
Is there a better service for this goal? Is there a tool that was built to achieve this? Struggling to find an alternative to hacking together a bunch of smaller tools.
I think you already identified your first step: You will have to split your fastlane (and other tooling) configuration, so it is possible to build each app in isolation.
Then you can trigger a job for each app on a CI service like for example Travis CI or Azure Pipelines (both have a simple API you can use to start jobs and give them some parameters that will be available to your job) that builds and releases the app.
All the other things (e.g. one big build vs. many small build steps etc.) are just implementation details and will depend on the individual service or tools you choose.

Publishing builds to test environment

Quick question: If I were to set up my build server to publish to a test environment after every check-in, wouldn't that constantly interrupt the testers if the ASP.Net site they are testing would come down periodically as developers check in their changes?
We are looking to ensure the bugs we have marked as resolved are always available for testing, but we also don't want our testers to have the site come down in the middle of their tests.
Thanks!
Chris
My suggestion is to have a dedicated environment for each tester (TFS Lab is a great way to achieve this). Then allow each tester to manually kick off a build that updates their environment with the latest build whenever they desire.
If you must do a shared test environment, then I suggest not updating every build for specifically this reason, but instead doing a nightly build that updates it (and/or using a manual build that testers can run on demand).

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