This topic explains several ways to contact technical support, as well as how to prepare and send "support archives" that help the technical support team diagnose any problems you are experiencing.
In this section:
The Parasoft support team is available online to answer your questions. This live support allows you to chat in real-time with the support team and perform desktop sharing if needed. To receive live online support, go to https://www.parasoft.com/support/ . This live tech support feature currently supports only the Microsoft Windows operating system.
You can file a support case directly at https://parasoft.force.com/customerportal/CommunityNewCasePage.
Tel: (888) 305-0041 or (626) 256-3680
Email: [email protected]
See http://www.parasoft.com/contacts.
If you are experiencing testing problems such as build failures, the best way to remedy the problem is to create a zip archive containing the source file(s) that caused that failure (if applicable), as well as related test information, then send that zip file to Parasoft's support team. To facilitate this process, you can have the product automatically create an archive when testing problems occur. On average, these archives are about half a megabyte, and are created in about one minute.
By default, an archive is not created when testing problems occur. You can either manually prepare and send a support archive when needed, or you can modify Parasoft archive creation options so that the product automatically prepares and sends an archive when testing problems occur.
To configure the product to automatically prepare and send archives when testing problems occur:
Option | Description |
---|---|
Send archives by e-mail | If this option is enabled, the archive is sent automatically. If you enable this option, be sure to set the e-mail options in Preferences> E-mail if you have not already done so. |
C++test configuration files | All user and team Test Configurations available to C++test at the time the technical support archive is created. |
DTP engine configuration files | Additional C++test data generated during analysis. |
Environmental data | Environment variables, JVM system properties, platform details, additional properties (memory, other). |
Preprocessed source files | If this option is enabled, you will be prompted to include preprocessed source files when the Create Archive button is clicked. If the Enable auto-creation of support archives option is enabled, pre-processed source files will be automatically added to any archives created. |
Project properties | Properties from the project, platform, tool, and options extractor. If this is enabled, the archive will probably contain your preprocessed sources, Makefiles, and other files you have added to the project. Moreover, it might also contain data that can reveal your project’s structure. |
Test run data | Checker-specific (standards, execution, generation) data that is automatically collected during test sessions. This option must be enabled in order to collect data during test runs. |
General application logs | Various platform/application logs. |
Enable verbose logging | Includes verbose logs included in the archive. Note that this option cannot be enabled if the logging system has custom configurations.
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Enable source control output | Includes output from source control commands in verbose logs. Note that the output could include fragments of your source code. |
Advanced options | If the support team asked you to enter any advanced options, check this box, then enter the options here. |
Archives location | If you do not want to use the listed archive location, specify a new one. |
4.Click Apply, then OK.
To manually create a support archive:
To open the Technical Support Archive Manager, which allows you to review, e-mail, or delete recent support archives:
When creating a support archive it is best to ensure that it contains all the info which is relevant to the problem and does not contain any unrelated info.
When a technical support archive is created, the complete application logs are included. The logs may contain information from many test runs over a long period of time—but chances are that only a small part of that information is relevant to the problem you are experiencing. To help technical support isolate the cause of the problem, create a technical support archive containing application logs for only the testing session that produces problems. To do this: