This topic explains how to connect SOAtest to your source control repository.

Sections include:

About Source Control Support

Any source control system that plugs into your Parasoft SOAtest environment can be used to manage your source and test files.

If your team is using a one of the specified supported source control system (see list below) and performs the necessary configurations (as described later in this topic), Parasoft can:

  • Use file revision data from source control to determine authorship (for automatically assigning test failures and policy violations to the responsible team member as well as for restricting test scope by author and/or modification time). SeeConfiguring Task Assignment and Code Authorship Settings for details.
  • Update projects from source control before testing (if the Test Configuration’s Common> Source Control> Update projects setting is enabled).

SOAtest includes out-of-the-box support for the following source control systems:

VendorTested version
Git

1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 2.x

Microsoft Team Foundation Server2012, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019
Perforce2006.2, 2015
Subversion (SVN)

1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13

You can use the source control API to integrate with other source control systems. Refer to Adding a Custom Source Control Integration.

Subclipse Support

Each Subclipse plugin version is compatible with specific Subversion versions. Ensure that your Subclipse plugin is compatible with a version of Subversion that Parasoft supports.

For example, you do not install Subversion 1.3 and Subclipse plugin 1.2, Subclipse 1.2 uses Subversion 1.4. Subclipse 1.4.x requires Subversion 1.5.0 version of JavaHL/SVNKit. Subclipse 1.4.5 already has subversion client adapter 1.5.2.

Subversion clients earlier than 1.4 do not support working copies produced by Subversion 1.4. If you are using Subclipse plugin 1.2 (which includes Subversion 1.4), you might receive the following error message:

svn: This client is too old to work with working copy '.'; please get a newer Subversion client

This means that Parasoft is using a command-line client that is version 1.3 or older. The solution is to update your command-line SVN client to version 1.4. The client version can be verified by executing the following command:

svn --version

Why do dialogs open when I try to modify files?

Some source controls (including ClearCase, Perforce, Synergy, and Visual SourceSafe) require users to mark (lock) sources before editing them. If you are using one of these source control systems and you prompt SOAtest to perform an operation that involves editing a "read-only" file in source control, it will first open a dialog asking you whether you want to make the file writable and lock it. Click OK, then provide your source control username and password in the next dialog that opens; this allows it to access the source control system and set the lock.

Enabling Source Control Support

To enable support for any of the supported source control systems:

  1. Make sure that the command line client for the given source control is on the system%PATH%/$PATH and is available when SOAtest is launched.

    • For example, if you have Subversion, it is not sufficient (or even required) to install the Subclipse plugin to Eclipse (SVN Eclipse plugin). Instead, you should have the plain command line svn.exe Subversion client.

  2. Choose Parasoft> Preferences. The Preferences dialog will open.
  3. Select Parasoft> Scope and Authorship in the Preferences dialog.
  4. Check Use source control (modification author) to compute scope.
  5. Select Parasoft> Source Controls in the Preferences dialog.
  6. If the appropriate repositories are already set (refer to the auto-configuration process described in Configuring SOAtest Across Teams), enter your user and password, and specify the path to your source control client executable (if it is not already on your system path).

    If the appropriate repositories are not already set (refer to the auto-configuration process described in Configuring SOAtest Across Teams) specify them as follows: 
    1. Enable the source control system you want to use and specify the path to the SCM client executable. You do not need to specify the executable path if it is already on your system path.
    2. Click New in Repository properties field and enter the source control properties required for the selected type of source control system.  
    3. Click OK to close the Source Control Description dialog.
  7. Apply your changes and click OK.

To test the integration:

  1. In the Parasoft environment, open a project that is checked out from the repository.
  2. Open a file in the editor.
  3. Right-click the source code, and choose Parasoft> Show Author at Line. If the correct author is shown, the integration was successful.

Troubleshooting

You can enable debug logging by specifying the JAR shipped with SOAtest to troubleshoot problems with source control integration:

-consolelog J-Dparasoft.logging.config.jar.file=/com/parasoft/xtest/logging/log4j/config/verbose.console.xml

A detailed log will print to the console. Include the following flag to include messages from the SCM system:

-Dscontrol.log=true

The output that results from using the -Dscontrol.log flag may contain fragments of user source code. 

As an alternative to the JAR shipped with SOAtest, you can specify a log4j file on disk using the parasoft.logging.config.file system property:

-consolelog J-Dparasoft.logging.config.file=<PATH_TO_LOG4J_FILE>

Git Configuration

The Git repository you connect to must allow anonymous pulls.

  1. Open a command prompt and clone your repository:

    git clone <repository> 

  2. If cloning from a git URL, then the git push  URL must also be configured to automatically push test cases checked in with Git.

    git config remote.origin.pushurl git@<your repository URL> 

  3. Set git config  on the newly created repository user.name

    git config user.name "<your username>" 

    This step can be skipped if a global git user.name is already set. The user.name must match the user's DTP user name.

When you are enabling source control support, specify the following repository properties in the Create Source Control Description dialog:

  • URL: Specify the remote repository URL to pull/push to. If pulling and pushing is disabled, this field can be left blank. You can use all git urls (e.g., git://host/repositoryssh://user@host user@host). Note that since the Git command line doesn't support setting credentials with flags, protocols which normally require authentication (such as ssh) must have identity files set to enable login without credentials or they must accept anonymous connections.
  • Branch: Enter the name of the branch in the local workspace that the source control module will use. If this is left blank, the currently checked out branch will be used.
  • Working folder: Enter the root of the local git repository.

Shallow Clones

A Git repository is considered shallow if the file .git/shallow exists. Git may not accurately produce authorship data when checking out shallow clones from a repository. You should check out full clones to retrieve accurate authorship information.  

Perforce Configuration

When you are enabling source control support, specify the following repository properties in the Create Source Control Description dialog:

  • Server: Enter the Perforce server’s machine name or IP address.
  • Port: Enter the Perforce server’s port.
  • User: Enter the user name under which you want to connect to the repository.
  • Password: Enter the password for the above user name.
  • Client: Enter the client workspace name, as specified in the P4CLIENT environment variable or its equivalent.

Using Workspaces to Determine Authorship

By default, username is used to determine file/method authorship. However, some teams access Perforce with a shared user name and a unique workspace for each developer.

If you want to use workspace name  (or user name and workspace name) to determine  authorship, open the Authorship tab and modify the setting as needed.

Subversion Configuration

Parasoft’s Subversion support is based on the command line client 'svn'. See About Source Control Support for a list of supported SVN versions.

The client certificate must be stored in the Subversion configuration area. The Subversion client has a built-in system for caching authentication credentials on disk. By default, whenever the command-line client successfully authenticates itself to a server, it saves the credentials in the user's private runtime configuration area—in ~/.subversion/auth/ on Unix-like systems or %APPDATA%/Subversion/auth/ on Windows.

When you are enabling source control support, specify the following repository properties in the Create Source Control Description dialog:

  • URL: Enter the URL for the SVN server. The URL should specify the protocol, server name, port and starting repository path (for example, svn://buildmachine.foobar.com/home/svn).
  • User: Enter the user name under which you want to connect to the repository.
  • Password: Enter the password (not encoded) for the above user name.

Team Foundation Server Configuration

 See About Source Control Support for a list of supported versions.

SOAtest for Eclipse doesn't require any additional software to be installed for TFS integration (the required libraries are included).

When you are enabling source control support, specify the following repository properties in the Create Source Control Description dialog:

  • URL: Enter the URL for the Team Foundation Server repository (for example, http://localhost:8080/tfs).
  • Use custom credentials: If you want to provide custom TFS credentials, select this option then provide those credentials. When this option is disabled, system credentials will be used.
  • User: Enter the user name.
  • Password: Enter the password.

By default, SOAtest uses the cached credentials for accessing TFS (this could be your user login or some previously logged in information). You can provide custom credentials if you want to use them instead of the cached ones.

Specifying Source Control Definitions via localsettings

Source control definitions can be specified in localsettings (e.g. for sharing team-wide settings via DTP, Concerto, or by specifying options at the command line). See Configuring Localsettings for details. 

  • No labels