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kuni katsuya

Enterprise Architect - Resources - Model Driven Generation (MDG) Technologies - 0 views

  • Model Driven Generation (MDG) Technologies
  • MDG Technologies allow users to extend Enterprise Architect's modeling capabilities to specific domains and notations. MDG Technologies seamlessly plug into Enterprise Architect to provide additional toolboxes, UML profiles, patterns, templates and other modeling resources.
  • Free MDG Technology downloads for Enterprise Architect:
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • EJB MDG Technology for Enterprise Java Beans allows the user to model EJB entities and EJB sessions, complete with UML profiles for modeling EJB, EJB patterns and Code Management. (requires Enterprise Architect 4.1 or later)
  • ICONIX AGILE DDT ICONIX Agile Developer - Design-Driven Testing (DDT) streamlines the ICONIX modeling process, providing: Convenient modeling of robustness diagrams Automatic generation of sequence diagram structures from robustness diagrams Transformation of robustness control elements to test diagrams Transformation of sequence diagram elements to test diagrams Transformation of requirement diagrams to test diagrams Transformation between test cases and test classes. (JUnit & NUnit) Built-in model validation rules for ICONIX robustness diagrams (requires Enterprise Architect 7.5 or later)
  • Testing MDG Technology for Testing helps users to rapidly model a wide range of Testing procedures including component Testing, SUT, Test Cases and more. (requires Enterprise Architect 4.1 or later)
  • Instructions for loading an MDG Technology EXE file: Download and run the .exe file to install the MDG technology. Open Enterprise Architect. Select from the Main Menu Add-Ins | XYZ Technology | Load.
  • Built-in MDG Technologies: Most of the MDG Technologies provided by Sparx Systems are built into Enterprise Architect directly. Depending on your edition of Enterprise Architect, some or all of the following MDG Technologies will be available:
  • Gang of Four Patterns
  • Mind Mapping
  • Web Modeling
  • Data Flow (DFD)
  • Entity-Relationship (ERD)
  • Business Rule Model
  • BPMN™
kuni katsuya

WYTIWYR : What You Test Is What You Run « Antonio's Blog - 0 views

  •  
    " Don't mock types you don't own TDD: Only mock types you own Test Smell: Everything is mocked Testing Anti-Patterns: How to Fail With 100% Test Coverage TDD: Only mock types you own Test Smell: Everything is mocked Arquillian"
kuni katsuya

InfoQ: Dan Allen on Arquillian Testing Framework - 0 views

  • Arquillian Testing Framework
  • Arquillian is an integration and functional testing platform that can be used for Java middleware testing. With the main goal of making integration (and functional) tests as simple to write as unit tests, it brings the tests to the runtime environment, freeing developers from managing the runtime from within the test.
kuni katsuya

Plugins - Jenkins - Jenkins Wiki - 0 views

  • Git Plugin — This plugin allows use of Git as a build SCM
  • Subversion Plugin — This plugin adds the Subversion support (via SVNKit) to Jenkins
  • Subversion Release Manager — This plugin allows you to set up a job in Hudson for building specific revisions of a project.
  • ...77 more annotations...
  • Subversion Tagging Plugin — This plugin automatically performs subversion tagging (technically speaking svn copy) on successful build.
  • ViewVC Plugin — This plugin integrates ViewVC browser interface for CVS and Subversion with Hudson.
  • Source code management
  • Build Pipeline Plugin — This plugin creates a pipeline of Hudson\Jenkins jobs and gives a view so that you can visualise it.
  • Build tools
  • JBoss Management Plugin — This plugin allows to manage a JBoss Application Server during build procedure
  • Maven 2 Project Plugin — Jenkin's Maven 2 project type
  • Phing Plugin — This plugin allows you to use Phing to build PHP projects.
  • Post build task — This plugin allows the user to execute a shell/batch task depending on the build log output. Java regular expression are allowed.
  • Promoted Builds Plugin — This plugin allows you to distinguish good builds from bad builds by introducing the notion of 'promotion'.
  • Publish Over SSH Plugin — Publish files and/or execute commands over SSH (SCP using SFTP)
  • Selenium AES Plugin — This plugin is for continuous regression test by Selenium Auto Exec Server (AES).
  • Vagrant Plugin — This plugin allows booting of Vagrant virtual machines, provisioning them and also executing scripts inside of them
  • Unicorn Validation Plugin — This plugin uses W3C's Unified Validator, which helps improve the quality of Web pages by performing a variety of checks.
  • Build wrappers
  • Android Emulator Plugin — Lets you automatically generate, launch and interact with an Android emulator during a build, with the emulator logs being captured as artifacts.
  • Artifactory Plugin — This plugin allows deploying Maven 2, Maven 3, Ivy and Gradle artifacts and build info to the Artifactory artifacts manager.
  • AWS Cloudformation Plugin — A plugin that allows for the creation of cloud formation stacks before running the build and the deletion of them after the build is completed.
  • Build Keeper Plugin — Select a policy for automatically marking builds as "keep forever" to enable long term analysis trending when discarding old builds - or use to protect logs and artifacts from certain builds
  • Build Name Setter Plugin — This plugin sets the display name of a build to something other than #1, #2, #3, ...
  • SSH plugin — You can use the SSH Plugin to run shell commands on a remote machine via ssh.
  • SeleniumRC Plugin — This plugin allows you to create Selenium server instance for each project build.
  • Vagrant Plugin — This plugin allows booting of Vagrant virtual machines, provisioning them and also executing scripts inside of them
  • Timestamper — Adds timestamps to the Console Output.
  • VirtualBox Plugin — This plugin integrates Jenkins with VirtualBox (version 3, 4.0 and 4.1) virtual machine.
  • Version Number Plugin — This plugin creates a new version number and stores it in the environment variable whose name you specify in the configuration.
  • VMware plugin — This plugin allows you to start a VMware Virtual Machine before a build and stop it again after the build completes.
  • AWS Cloudformation Plugin — A plugin that allows for the creation of cloud formation stacks before running the build and the deletion of them after the build is completed.
  • Desktop Notifier for Jenkins — This is useful for those who are looking for a Desktop Notifier for Jenkins builds to automatically notify you about failed builds directly from their desktops.
  • Email-ext plugin — This plugin allows you to configure every aspect of email notifications. You can customize when an email is sent, who should receive it, and what the email says.
  • Google Calendar Plugin — This plugin publishes build records over to Google Calendar
  • HTML5 Notifier Plugin — Provides W3C Web Notifications support for builds.
  • Jabber Plugin — Integrates Jenkins with the Jabber/XMPP instant messaging protocol. Note that you also need to install the instant-messaging plugin.
  • Build reports
  • Checkstyle Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for Checkstyle, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • Clover PHP Plugin — This plugin allows you to capture code coverage reports from PHPUnit. For more information on how to set up PHP projects with Jenkins have a look at the Template for Jenkins Jobs for PHP Projects.
  • Crap4J Plugin — This plugin reads the "crappy methods" report from Crap4J. Hudson will generate the trend report of crap percentage and provide detailed information about changes.
  • Dependency Analyzer Plugin — This plugin parses dependency:analyze goal from maven build logs and generates a dependency report
  • Dependency Graph View Plugin — Shows a dependency graph of the projects using graphviz. Requires a graphviz installation on the server.
  • FindBugs Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for FindBugs, an open source program which uses static analysis to look for bugs in Java code. 
  • Grinder Plugin — This plugin reads output result files from Grinder performance tests, and will generate reports showing test results for every build and trend reports showing performance results across builds.
  • JSUnit plugin — This plugin allows you publish JSUnit test results
  • Performance Plugin — This plugin allows you to capture reports from JMeter and JUnit . Hudson will generate graphic charts with the trend report of performance and robustness.
  • PerfPublisher Plugin — This plugin generates global and trend reports for tests results analysis. Based on an open XML tests results format, the plugin parses the generated files and publish statistics, reports and analysis on the current health of the project.
  • PMD Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for PMD, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • Sonar plugin — Quickly benefit from Sonar, an open-source dashboard based on many analysis tools like Checkstyle, PMD and Cobertura.
  • testng-plugin — This plugin allows you to publish TestNG results.
  • Violations — This plug-in generates reports static code violation detectors such as checkstyle, pmd, cpd, findbugs, codenarc, fxcop, stylecop and simian.
  • xUnit Plugin — This plugin makes it possible to publish the test results of an execution of a testing tool in Jenkins.
  • Artifact uploaders
  • ArtifactDeployer Plugin — This plugin makes it possible to copy artifacts to remote locations.
  • Artifactory Plugin — This plugin allows deploying Maven 2, Maven 3, Ivy and Gradle artifacts and build info to the Artifactory artifacts manager.
  • Confluence Publisher Plugin — This plugin allows you to publish build artifacts as attachments to an Atlassian Confluence wiki page.
  • Deploy Plugin — This plugin takes a war/ear file and deploys that to a running remote application server at the end of a build
  • FTP-Publisher Plugin — This plugin can be used to upload project artifacts and whole directories to an ftp server.
  • HTML Publisher Plugin
  • Publish Over FTP Plugin — Publish files over FTP
  • Publish Over SSH Plugin — Publish files and/or execute commands over SSH (SCP using SFTP)
  • S3 Plugin — Upload build artifacts to Amazon S3
  • SCP plugin — This plugin uploads build artifacts to repository sites using SCP (SSH) protocol.
  • Hudson Helper for Android — Monitor your CI builds right from your Android device.
  • Hudson Mobi, the iPhone, iPod and Android client for Hudson CI — The iPhone, iPod and iPad client for Hudson CI monitoring on the road.
  • Hudson Monitor for Android — Monitor and display the status of your builds on your Android™ phone.
  • External site/tool integrations
  • Jira Issue Updater Plugin — This is a Jenkins plugin which updates issues in Atlassian Jira (by changing their status and adding a comment) as part of a Jenkins job.
  • JIRA Plugin — This plugin integrates Atlassian JIRA to Jenkins.
  • ChuckNorris Plugin — Displays a picture of Chuck Norris (instead of Jenkins the butler) and a random Chuck Norris 'The Programmer' fact on each build page.
  • UI plugins
  • Active Directory plugin — With this plugin, you can configure Jenkins to authenticate the username and the password through Active Directory.
  • Audit Trail Plugin — Keep a log of who performed particular Jenkins operations, such as configuring jobs.
  • JClouds Plugin — This plugin uses JClouds to provide slave launching on most of the currently usable Cloud infrastructures.
  • Checkstyle Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for Checkstyle, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • FindBugs Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for FindBugs, an open source program which uses static analysis to look for bugs in Java code. 
  • JIRA Plugin — This plugin integrates Atlassian JIRA to Jenkins.
  • M2 Release Plugin — This plugin allows you to perform a release build using the maven-release-plugin from within Jenkins.
  • PMD Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for PMD, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • Meme Generator Plugin — Generate Meme images when a build fails (and returns to stable), and post them on the project page.
kuni katsuya

Testing | Apache Shiro - 0 views

  • Testing with Apache Shiro
  • how to enable Shiro in unit tests.
  • Subject
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • is security-specific view of the
  • 'currently executing' user
  • and that Subject instances are always bound to a thread to ensure we know who is executing logic at any time during the thread's execution
  • Subject instance must be created
  • Subject instance must be bound to the currently executing thread
  • Subject must be unbound to ensure that the thread remains 'clean' in any thread-pooled environment
  • Shiro has architectural components that perform this bind/unbind logic automatically
  • root Shiro Filter performs this logic when filtering a request
  • after creating a Subject instance, it must be bound to thread
  • Test Setup
  • 'setup' and 'teardown'
  • can be used in both unit testing and integration testing
  • AbstractShiroTest
  • abstract class AbstractShiroTest
kuni katsuya

Needle - Effective Unit Testing for Java EE - Overview - 0 views

  • Test Java EE applications effectively
  • Needle is a lightweight framework for testing Java EE components
  • outside of the container in isolation
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • reduces the test setup code by
  • analysing dependencies
  • automatic injection of mock objects
kuni katsuya

Test enrichers - Arquillian - Project Documentation Editor - 0 views

  • With Arquillian, you no longer have to worry about setting up the execution environment because that is all handled for you. The test will either be running in a container or a local CDI environment
  •  
    With Arquillian, you no longer have to worry about setting up the execution environment because that is all handled for you. The test will either be running in a container or a local CDI environment
kuni katsuya

Performance, Load and Stress testing of Flex applications - 0 views

  • NeoLoad
  • can create scenarios to test your Flex applications' behavior under stress and validate their performances, while pinpointing any weaknesses
  • Record the AMF traffic to be played back
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Extract/replace AMF data during the test in order to variabilize the calls
  • Automatically handle the session IDs used by AMF
kuni katsuya

Preemptive commit comments | Arialdo Martini - 0 views

  • Tell me what the software does
    • kuni katsuya
       
      tell me how the software should *behave*, not how the behavior was *implemented* ie. describe the changes in this commit from the behavioral perspective rather than implementation details
  • What is the project behavior, in this snapshot?
  • What did the programmers, in order to produce this snapshot?
  • ...43 more annotations...
  • committing comments describing the
  • behavior of the software,
  • rather than the
  • implementation or a description of what we did
  • commits’ comments started to look like BDD’s methods name: a description of a behavior.
  • principles
  • Talk about the feature, not about yourself
  • Don’t refer to the past
  • I know it’s now
  • list of benefits
  • More focus while developing
  • Commit review is much easier
  • Less cognitive load
  • You learn commenting much more precisely
  • commit comment becomes a
  • declaration of intent
  • like a BDD method name
  • No more “Just a fix“, “Improvements” or “I made this, this, this and also this” comments.
    • kuni katsuya
       
      BDD/TDD or any methodology aside, these are the worst commit comments as they are as useless as empty commit comments
  • Each preemptive comment triggers a micro design session
  • A preemptive comment sets a micro goal
    • kuni katsuya
       
      which also aligns well with the 'micro goal' or incremental deliverables approaches of most agile methodologies 
  • helps to focus a goal to be reached
  • Without preemptive comments, I often went on coding, always asking myself: “Should I commit now? Have I reached a stable state which I could consider a good commit?“
  • define micro-goals through preemptive comments
  • macro-goal through the feature branch name
  • A preemptive comment creates a little timebox
    • kuni katsuya
       
      similar to the timeboxing strategy of a short sprints, for instance
  • Writing comments preemptively puts the agreement between the pair members to a test
    • kuni katsuya
       
      more relevant to methodologies using pair programming
  • commit history gains a very balanced granularity
  • feature branch becomes a collection of evolutionary commits each of which has usually a 1:1 binding with tests
  • very easy to find which commit introduced a bug, since each commit is related to a single new goal/feature
  • Preemptive commit comments
  • Rule #2: write what the software
  • I started taking a lot of care of the words I was using in comments, commits, test names and classes/variables/methods’ names
  • be supposed to do,
  • not what you did
  • should
  • Introducing BDD
  • began with the simple attempt to replace the world
  • “should“
  • “test”
  • with the world
  • Rule #1: write commit comments before coding
  • use the same criteria for my commits’ comments as well.
  • (not what you did)
kuni katsuya

UML tools for software development and Modelling - Enterprise Architect Full Lifecycle UML modeling tool - 0 views

  • EA User Guide (pdf)
  • Reference Booklets
  • Enterprise Architect Online Help
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Tutorials All Tutorials UML Tutorials UML 2.1 Tutorial UML Tutorial - Part 1 Intro UML Tutorial - Part 2 Intro The Business Process Model The Component Model The Dynamic Model The Logical Model The Physical Model The Use Case Model UML Database Modeling Enterprise Architect Tutorials Creating Strategic Models Diagram Filters BPEL: Step by Step Guide Resource Management Testing Management Traceability RTF Documentation Use Case Metrics Structured Use Case Scenarios
  • Video Demonstrations All Videos Getting Started Requirements Management Modeling & Productivity Tools Code Engineering and the Debug Workbench Version Control Integration (Eclipse, Visual Studio, TFS)
  • UML Tutorial - Structure UML Tutorial - Behavior The Business Process Model Deployment of EA MDA Overview Rich-Text (RTF) Reporting Version Control Integration Requirements Management
  • White Papers & E-Books
  • Roles Business Analyst Database Administrator Deployment & Rollout Developer Project Manager Software Architects Software Engineer Technology Developer Testers
  • Solutions
  • MDG Technologies MDG Technologies EJB Technology.xml Testing Technology.xml
  • UML Profiles & Patterns UML Patterns UML Patterns Create UML Patterns Import UML Patterns Use UML Patterns UML Profiles UML Profiles: Introduction UML Profile for SPEM XML Schema (XSD) Generation Web Modeling Profile Eriksson-Penker Business Extensions Open Distributed Processing (UML4ODP)
kuni katsuya

Containers - Arquillian - Project Documentation Editor - 0 views

  • Arquillian recognizes three container interaction styles: A remote container resides in a separate JVM from the test runner. Arquillian binds to the container to deploy the test archive and invokes tests via a remote protocol (e.g., Servlet, JMX). A managed container is similar to a remote container, except its lifecycle (startup/shutdown) is also managed by Arquillian. An embedded container resides in the same JVM and is mostly likely managed by Arquillian. Tests are executed via a local protocol for containers without a web component and via a remote protocol for containers with a web component. No need to fiddle with those Maven plugins!
  • Arquillian can control a variety of containers out of the box
kuni katsuya

How it works - Arquillian - Project Documentation Editor - 0 views

  • How it works
  • write a basic test case and annotate it with declarative behavior that says, "@RunWith Arquillian."
  • tells Arquillian to take over execution of the test when it's launched
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • right-clicking the test class in the IDE and selecting Run As > * Test
kuni katsuya

Article Series: Migrating Spring Applications to Java EE 6 - Part 1 | How to JBoss - 1 views

  • In fact people still love those books without realizing that the world has changed dramatically ever since
  • The reality check here is to wonder whether the rhetorics set forth by Rod Johnson in his 2003/2004 books are still actual today
  • So if you still care about those books, the best way to show your appreciation is probably to use them as your monitor stand
  • ...21 more annotations...
  • The discussion whether or not to use Spring vs. Java EE for new enterprise Java applications is a no-brainer
  • Why migrate?
  • since then fallen a prey to the hungry minds of Venture Capitalists and finally into the hands of a virtualization company called VMware
  • While the different companies and individuals behind the Spring framework have been doing some work in the JCP their voting behavior on important JSRs is peculiar to say the least
  • outdated ORM solution like JDBC templates
  • some developers completely stopped looking at new developments in the Java EE space and might have lost track of the current state of technology
  • size of the deployment archive
  • fairly standard Java EE 6 application will take up about 100 kilobytes
  • comparable Spring application weighs in at a whopping 30 Megabytes!
  • Lightweight
  • Firing up the latest JBoss AS 7 Application Server from scratch and deploying a full blown Java EE 6 application into the server takes somewhere between two and five seconds on a standard machine. This is in the same league as a Tomcat / Spring combo
  • Dependency injection
  • Java EE 6, the Context and Dependency Injection (CDI) specification was introduced to the Java platform, which has a very powerful contextual DI model adding extensibility of injectable enterprise services
  • Aspect Oriented Programming
  • “AOP Light” and this is exactly what Java EE Interceptors do
  • common pitfall when taking AOP too far is that your code might end up all asymmetric and unreadable. This is due to the fact that the aspect and its implementation are not in the same place. Determining what a piece of code will do at runtime at a glance will be really hard
  • Testing
  • With Arquillian we can get rid of mocking frameworks and test Java EE components in their natural environment
  • Tooling
  • capabilities comparison matrix below to map Spring’s technology to that of Java EE
  • Capability Spring JavaEE Dependency Injection Spring Container CDI Transactions AOP / annotations EJB Web framework Spring Web MVC JSF AOP AspectJ (limited to Spring beans) Interceptors Messaging JMS JMS / CDI Data Access JDBC templates / other ORM / JPA JPA RESTful Web Services Spring Web MVC (3.0) JAX-RS Integration testing Spring Test framework Arquillian *
kuni katsuya

VineetReynolds / Java EE 6-Galleria / wiki / Home - Bitbucket - 0 views

  • Java EE 6-Galleria
  • Java EE 6-Galleria
  • captures various project design decisions to aid in understanding the design choices made during the design and construction of the application.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Overall Application Architecture
  • Data Model
  • Domain Model
  • Testing the Domain Layer
  • Testing the Application Layer
  • Testing the Presentation Layer
  • Overview Source
kuni katsuya

Top 10 Lessons Learned From 10 Years in Agile | Agile Zone - 0 views

  • Top 10 Lessons Learned From 10 Years in Agile
  • 1.  Simplicity is Sophistication.  
  • 2.  Define your Rhythm.  
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • start cutting down on wasted meeting time
  • 3. Agile is Fundamentally About Discipline.  
  • areas of planning, unit testing, test driven development, continuous integration, and test automation.
  • 4.  Software is Hard to Scale, Agile is Not.  
  • Focus on business goals
  • 5.  Think of the Big Picture.   
  • success requires a
  • consideration of the system as a whole
  • before making changes to its parts, or else the change will likely be fraught with risk.
  • 6.  Lose the Religion  
  • adapt agile to your need.
  • 7. Continuous Focus on Business Value.
  • get caught in the weeds of a technical story's delivery and velocity at the expense of overall business value, company and project goals
  • 8. Agile - It's Not Just For Software Anymore.
  • 9. Continuous Planning. 
  • Plan on a daily basis if possible
  • Keep your focus on maximizing value
  • 10.  Doing agile and being agile aren’t the same.
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