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Analyze and report on test results using the test perspective

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By using the Test perspective in the SQL Server Analysis Services cube, view just the measures, dimensions, and attributes that pertain to reporting on tests results and test runs. For example, use these measures to determine the overall quality of each build, the tests that a particular build affected, and the number of test cases that were run. You can also answer questions about changes to the result outcomes.

The Test measure group is based on the Test Results relational table, which enables reporting on test results as either a property of the tests or an independent outcome. For more information, see Test Result tables.

Test Measure Group

By using the Test perspective, you can create reports that answer the following questions:

Status reports:

  • What is the status of testing of specific user stories or product areas?
  • What is the quality of builds based on the number of failed and passed tests?
  • How many test cases have never been run?
  • Which test cases have never been run?

Trend reports:

  • How many tests are blocked, passing, or failing over time?
  • How many tests are regressing?
  • How consistent is the manual test activity over time?

Note

If your data warehouse is using SQL Server Enterprise Edition, the list of cubes will include Team System and a set of perspectives. The perspectives provide a focused view of the data so that you do not have to scroll through all of the dimensions and measure groups in the whole Team System cube.

To use many Test measures and dimension attributes, the test team must publish the test results to the data store for Azure DevOps Server. For more information, see Required activities later in this article.

Example: Progress report for testing user stories

By using PivotTable and PivotChart reports in Excel, you can create a status report that shows the test progress on user stories, similar to the report in the following illustration.

User Story Test Status Excel Report

The Agile and CMMI process templates include the User Story Test Status and Requirement Test Status in Excel, respectively.

Specify and filter pivot fields

Pivot Fields for User Stories Test Progress

By carrying out the following steps, you can create a progress report for testing user stories:

  1. In Excel, connect to the Analysis Services cube for Azure DevOps Server, and then insert a PivotChart report.

    For more information, see Create Excel reports from a work item query.

  2. Right-click the chart, then choose Change Chart Type, Area, Stacked Bar.

  3. For each report filter, right-click each of the following fields, specify the hierarchies or elements of interest, and then drag the field to the Report Filter area.

    • Team Project Hierarchy from the Team Project dimension

    • Area Path from the Team Project dimension

    • Iteration Path from the Test Case dimension

    • Work Item Type from the Work Item Linked dimension

      Specify the type as user story, requirement, or another type of work item that has test cases linked to it that you want to report.

  4. Drag the Point Count Trend field from under the Test measure group to the Values area.

  5. Drag the Outcome field from under the Test Result dimension to the Column Labels area.

Test measures

The following table describes the measures that the Test measure group includes. You can analyze test results by the aggregate of tests results and their outcome for a particular build or by the changed outcome for a test result.

Measure Description
Build Result Count Trend Counts the most recent version of each result in a particular build.

For an example of a report that uses this measure, see Build Quality.
Point Count Trend Count of the most recent version of each test result in a particular build. If a test is run multiple times against a build, the Point Count Trend counts the most recent result for that test using that build. If a test case isn't included in the build, the test case is counted as "Never Run."

Use this measure to determine which tests or how many tests are failing in the current build.
Result Count Counts the most recent version of each test result. Use this measure when you want to determine the overall volume of testing.

For an example of a report that uses this measure, see Build Quality Indicators.
Result Transition Count Counts all the results whose outcome changed in a particular build. Use this measure when you want to determine which tests were affected by a particular build.
Test Case Count Number of test cases. Use this measure when you want to determine how many test cases were run for a particular test run or build.

Dimensions and attributes in the Test Perspective

By using the attributes that this section describes, you can aggregate a measure, filter a report, or specify a report axis. These attributes are in addition to the Team Project and Date shared dimensions that Working with shared dimensions describes.

Build, build flavor, and build platform dimensions

You can filter test reports based on build pipeline, build flavor, or build platform by using the attributes that the following table describes.

Dimension Attribute Description
Build Build Pipeline Name The name that is assigned to the build pipeline for which a build was executed.

For an example of a report that uses this attribute, see Build Quality.
Build ID The number that is assigned to the build. Each time that a particular build pipeline is run, the Build ID is incremented by 1.
Build Name The name or expression that uniquely identifies a build. For more information, see build pipeline options.
Build Start Time The date and time when the build started.
Build Type The reason why the build was run. Build types are associated with the trigger that was defined for the build. Azure DevOps Server supports the following types of build: manual, continuous (triggered by every check-in), rolling (accumulate check-ins until the previous build finishes), gated check-in, and scheduled. For more information, see Build pipeline triggers.
Drop Location The drop folder that is defined for the build and that is specified as a Uniform Resource Locator (URL). A URL specifies the protocol with which web browsers will locate Internet resources. The URL also includes the name of the server on which the resource resides. You can also include the path to a resource.

For more information, see Utility: Publish Build Artifacts.
Build Flavor Build Flavor (Published test results only) A name that designates the category of builds that are assigned to a set of completed builds that were published as part of a test run. For example, a build flavor can be used to designate a beta release or a final release.
Build Platform Build Platform The name of the machine platform for which an end-to-end (not desktop) build was made (for example, x86 or Any CPU).

Test case, test configuration, test plan, and test suite dimensions

The Test Case, Test Configuration, Test Plan, and Test Suite dimensions correspond to how you can organize, configure, automate, and run tests by using Azure Test Plans.

The test case corresponds to a type of work item that the test team uses to define both manual and automated tests that your team can run and manage by using Azure Test Plans. A test plan consists of test configurations and test suites. A test configuration defines the software or hardware on which you want to run your tests. A test suite defines a hierarchy within the plan so that you can group test cases together.

For more information, see Test Plans documentation.

Dimension Attribute Description
Test Case Area Hierarchy and more The Work Item and Test Case dimensions contain all attributes that relate to work items, such as State, Work Item Type, and Work Item ID. For information about the structure of the Test Case dimension, see Test cases and work items.

For a description of each attribute, see Work item field index.

For information about how to work with date, area, and iteration hierarchies, see Shared dimensions.

This measure group contains other attributes when custom fields in the definition for a type of work item specify Dimension as the reportable attribute. For more information about how to use the optional reportable attribute and its values, see Add or modify work item fields to support reporting.
Test Configuration Configuration ID and Configuration Name The number that the system assigns and the name of a test configuration.
Test Plan Area Hierarchy, Area Path, Iteration Hierarchy, and Iteration Path The product area and milestone that is assigned to the test plan.

For more information, see Test cases and work items.
End Date Hierarchy By Month or By Week

Start Date Hierarchy By Month or By Week
Optional values that a test plan owner can assign to the test plan. They represent the date on which the test plan should start and the date on which the test plan should finish.

For more information about how to work with date hierarchies, see Shared dimensions.
Test Plan ID and Test Plan Name The number that the system assigns and the name that the test plan owner assigns.
Test Plan Owner The user name of the test team member who created or currently is assigned as the owner of the test plan.
Test Plan ID and State The system-assigned number and name of the state of the test plan. For example, Inactive indicates that the test plan is being defined, and Active indicates that the test plan is ready to be reviewed and run.
Test Suite Test Suite Hierarchy Provides a mechanism to specify multiple filters based on project collection, team project, and test suite.
Suite Path Corresponds to the hierarchy of test suites that are configured for all team projects in all team project collections.

Test result dimension

The following table lists all dimensions and attributes that are specific to the test measures in the cube. Before you can report on Failure Type or Resolution, the test team must populate this information as part of their test activities.

Attribute Description
Failure Type and Failure Type ID Corresponds to one of the following reasons why a test failed: None, Known Issue, New Issue, or Regression.

Azure Test Plans automatically assigns a number or an ID to each reason. The test team can, but isn't required to, assign a failure type to each failed test. Note: You can't add to or change the set of failure types.

For an example of a trend report that shows the outcome of test results based on failure type, see Failure Analysis.
Outcome and Outcome ID The outcome of the test (for example, Passed, Failed, or Inconclusive).

For an example of a trend report that shows the outcome of test plans and test configurations, see Test Plan Progress.
Readiness State and Readiness State ID The state of a particular test within a test run. Valid values are Completed, InProgress, None, NotReady, and Ready.
Resolution State (Optional) The name of the Resolution with which a tester identified the cause of a failed test. By default, all MSF process templates have the following resolution states: Needs investigation, Test issue, Product issue, and Configuration issue. The test team can, but isn't required to, assign a resolution state to each failed test. Note: You can change these states or add states using the tcm command-line tool. See Customize and manage the test experience.
Test Result Executed By The name of the user or other account under which the test was run.

For an example of a report that uses this attribute, see Test Team Productivity.
Test Result Owner The name of the user or other account that is assigned as the owner of the test result. The assignment corresponds to the value that is set by using the tcm /resultowner switch.
Test Result Priority The priority of a particular test within a test run.

Test run dimension

The following table describes the attributes that are defined for the Test Run dimension. Many of these attributes correspond to parameters that the test team specifies when it runs tests.

Attribute Description
Complete Date, Creation Date, Start Date Hierarchy By Month or By Week Dates when the test run was created, completed, or started. You can use these attributes to filter or structure a report. For more information, see Shared dimensions.
Is Automated Flag that indicates that the test run contains one or more automated tests.

For an example of a report that uses this attribute, see Build Quality.
Is Build Verification Run Flag that indicates whether the test run contains build verification tests that check the basic functionality of the build. This flag corresponds to the tcm /buildverification switch.

For an example of a report that uses this attribute, see Build Quality.
Test Run ID The number that the system assigned to the test run.
Test Run Owner Corresponds to the owner who is assigned to the test run that the test team created or published. Corresponds to the tcm /owner switch.
Test Run State and ID Name or number that is assigned to the state of a test run (for example, Aborted, Completed, In Progress, Not Started, or Unknown).
Test Run Title Corresponds to the title that is assigned to the test run that the test team created or published. Corresponds to the tcm /title switch.

Work item and work item linked dimensions

You can link test cases to other work items such as user stories, requirements, and bugs. By using the Work Item Linked dimension, you can create a report that provides test results that relate to the linked work items. The progress report for testing user stories, described earlier in this article, provides an example of using the linked work item.

For a description of each attribute, see Index of work item fields.

Required activities

To create reports that contain useful data about test efforts and test results, team members should review the information in the following articles: