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We are a mostly MS shop at work doing .NET LOB development. We also use MS Dynamics for our CRM app... all the devs are currently using VS/SQL Server 2008. We also use VSS, but everyone hates it at work and that is quickly on its way out.

We are begining our initiative for TDD implementation across the team (~dozen ppl). I've gotten TeamCity setup and have my first automated builds running succesfully using the 2008 sln builder and also using SVN that a co-worker had setup who is doing the source control analysis. When demoing to managament, I think they started to buy into my snake oil and threw out the suggestions of looking into TFS.

This threw a wrench in what I had planned for our TDD architecture; In a good way though, because I had always assumed that TFS was just too expensive and not worth it for our team (and i've seen the same in other shops i've worked at / know of). I do feel like MS is years behind in the TDD/CI area and that the third party products were probably much better and more mature... I still need to do a lot of research, but I figured I'd come here to see if anyone has actually used both systems.

I realize the TFS encompasses a lot more then just a build server... but I didn't want to make this too broad of a question at least on purpose. What are the practical pros/cons of using TFS/TFB instead of TeamCity - e.g. which benefits would we lose/gain? Has anyone here actually used both systems (TFS for TDD/CI and TeamCity/SVN) and can speak from practical standpoint?

I've done some searching on this topic, and one post I found here on SO mentioned that the cons of TFB was it only supported MSBuild. I was planning on using FinalBuilder with TeamCity; and it appears it also supports TFS as well...

Thanks for any advice

EDIT: Has anyone used TFS as their Build/CI server and can tell of success/failure stories?

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    It doesn't have to be an either/or question. We use TFS for source control and project management, TeamCity for CI (it integrates with TFS source control), NUnit for writing tests, NAnt for extending TeamCity, and ReSharper for NUnit/VS integration (among other things).
    – TrueWill
    Feb 20, 2010 at 17:24
  • @TrueWill, have you been able to link the TeamCity builds back into TFS build reporting? We are doing similar to your shop but would like the TFS project management to be able to see the builds so that we can associate test results and bug reports.
    – Rob Hunter
    Feb 3, 2011 at 16:27
  • @Rob - no, we haven't done that tight an integration. I'm hoping you aren't suggesting releasing builds with failing tests...
    – TrueWill
    Feb 3, 2011 at 18:38
  • @Rob - I checked with our TeamCity expert and he said there are hooks for some of that. If nothing else you could write a plug-in to do that. (We haven't.)
    – TrueWill
    Feb 3, 2011 at 19:10
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    @TrueWill - Not releasing builds with failing tests, wanting to be able to link back for the manual testing that is done once a build and unit tests are run. If our unit tests fail, the build is failed.
    – Rob Hunter
    Feb 7, 2011 at 17:40

7 Answers 7

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We are a small development shop, and decided that Team Foundation Server carries too much overhead for us. We used to write custom MSBuild scripts to run from the command line, but after we discovered TeamCity, we moved our entire build process over to it.

We've found TeamCity to be easy to use and configure, and JetBrains provides excellent support and documentation. They are also on a much faster release and update cycle than Microsoft.

Their support for SVN source control is excellent, and we like the fact that they support both MSTest and NUnit for unit testing.

We also liked the fact that the TeamCity Professional edition was free, so we could evaluate it to see if it worked for us. We haven't hit the number of project configurations (20) that would require us to upgrade to the Enterprise edition.

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  • Thanks a lot for the post. this is very useful to hear from someone who moved FROM TFS TO TeamCity. Out of curiousity - Are you guys a strictly Microsoft shop though?
    – dferraro
    Feb 20, 2010 at 23:30
  • I wouldn't say we were strictly Microsoft. We mostly work with .NET technologies, but are willing to look outside the Microsoft stack for other useful tools and technologies. I guess that puts us in the Alt.NET camp. :)
    – dthrasher
    Feb 22, 2010 at 19:01
  • 3
    We also moved from TFS to TeamCity + Subversion + VersionOne. First, we ran into serious problems with source control under TFS. Then, after experiencing some project management pain with TFS, we were told by a major MS consulting shop that we should adjust our methodology to fit the MFS-Agile process template! At that point we migrated away from TFS and have never looked back. Jul 15, 2010 at 7:20
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    Since the release of TFS 2010 I think this argument needs revisiting! Mar 13, 2011 at 22:58
  • It's worth noting that once the NUnit Test Adapter is installed that TFS supports NUnit tests too.
    – Ryan Gates
    Jun 9, 2016 at 16:16
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This question has a lot of good answers about TeamCity. It does not compare to TFS but it might shed some light on TeamCity for you.

I have used both, and I have had success with both, but TeamCity was so much easier. TeamCity was a breeze to set up and configure. TFS was not. TeamCity is rock solid, it's easy to maintain and it just plain works. The developers at JetBrains have done a great job responding to the community. They get a release out every 6 to 8 months that adds real value. TFS is on a 2 year or more cycle.

TeamCity gives you more choice in how you build and what source control you use. It's not all in one, but that's sometimes a good thing. It's got a good set of extension points as well. We have also been really happy with the agent model it has.

I've gone through 3 absolutely painles upgrades in TeamCity. The one TFS upgrade we did took our build and source control down for 3 days. I'm the admin for TeamCity on our project and it takes up a couple of hours a month. TFS took a couple of days a week.

TeamCity + SVN + VisualSVN has been the smoothest environment I have ever worked in. TFS was generally smooth on the day to day, but only if someone was there keeping it running.

Hope that helps

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The benefits of TFS are one integrated environment that is supported by Microsoft. I personally do not like TFS for source control and have had a number of issues with it. It is clunky, however it had the benefit of having VS integration (which is also available in VisualSVN, but is not as robust).

Personally, I think you would be much better off using SVN/TeamCity. It is just easier to work with and behaves more as you would expect. As with most open source software, both are constantly evolving and will always have the latest and greatest feature before Microsoft. The integration between the 2 is really good and I have found no fatal flaws in the system. I constantly push to go this route in my current company (we use TFS), as I believe it is a much better workflow. As an added benefit, it is significantly cheaper than going the TFS route.

I have also used FinalBuilder with TFS - my question there is what are you really buying with FinalBuilder that you can't do with NANT/MSBuild? The answer at my shop is unfortunately very little IMO.

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  • Thanks for the response. Awesome to hear from someone who has actually used both systems. As for your question - since I am just in the proof-of-concept phase of setting up our TDD infrastructure, I'm not quite sure if FinalBuilder is worth using yet. From what I've read though it makes it much easier for creating the build scripts and people have had high praise for it - did you not find that it was much better then having to edit the build scripts by hand?
    – dferraro
    Feb 11, 2010 at 16:29
  • It probably has a lot to do with the setup that we have for FinalBuilder, but we have run into a bunch of issues because assumptions about our folder structure for solutions were made in the past that are no longer true. So our FinalBuilder script has become a beast that does a ton of different things. I don't see that it has provided a ton of benefit to us above and beyond what we would be able to do with NANT alone. Feb 11, 2010 at 18:35
  • Good to keep in mind. FinalBuilder seemed like a great sell - no having to write your own build scripts and just push buttons. Guess its still a bit immature for certain setups. But I've heard it plays well with TeamCity from people whove used it. Maybe TFS is the blocking factor for you?
    – dferraro
    Feb 11, 2010 at 18:58
  • Yeah a fair number of our issues certainly come from TFS. I think that our FinalBuilder script also is trying to be too many things to too many people. We really should have split it out into a couple of different scripts for different types of projects. Feb 11, 2010 at 19:38
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First off, see this post:

SVN vs. Team Foundation Server

As to your question about which environment better fosters TDD and such, my two cents is that the build management system matters much less than what's in the build file itself. Your Ant or MSBuild file should have the targets that do your testing. With MSBuild or Ant, you don't have to use MS's test suite. You can still use nUnit or whatever else you want. That means it doesn't matter if TFS is calling your MSBuild file, or if CruiseControl is, or if TeamCity is. The smarts are all in the build file and the tools you integrate with it.

My personal choice is not to get locked down into TFS's way of doing things, since you have a lot more freedom for a lot less cost with the wealth open-source testing tools that are out there. TFS is about to receive a major upgrade, as well. If you are going to go with TFS, my advice is to at least wait until 2010 is released. Concentrate on making your MSBuild files as good as they can be right now.

That being said, I must admit that TFS has one of the nicest build systems out there (2005 was terrible, 2008 was nice). Being able to easily customize notifications and the release process all inside .NET code was pretty cool -- you had a lot more central control over build and release policy than we did with CruiseControl.NET.

So I've used TFS and SVN/CCNet. I can't speak much to TeamCity. But IMO a build management system should be fairly agnostic to what is being built and how it's being built. For us, the extra control in the release management process that TFS brought us just wasn't enough of a bonus for us to justify the greatly increased administrative effort of a fully integrated TFS solution. Nor was it enough to justify the extra per-license cost of TFS, which can be significant.

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    You bring up a good point about the increased overhead of maintaining a TFS solution. If you really try to use TFS to its full ability, you will need at least one person whose full time job is a TFS admin. Of course, you can get by without that, but then does TFS really justify the cost. Feb 11, 2010 at 18:38
  • thanks for the good info. Unfortunately, from my 6 or so years experience in commercial LOB software, management almost always runs away and hides from anything with the word 'open source' near it. I guess i'll never understand why... if you hid it from them that its open source, theyll never notice... ;)
    – dferraro
    Aug 25, 2010 at 2:07
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The old TFS Build was XAML based and very cumbersome and and not nice to work with. That said, the new TFS 2015 build system is leaps and bounds better, and is script based with lots of web hooks and 3rd party integrations; very similar to Team City. Also, TFS now supports Git, so you are no longer confined to using Team Foundation Version Control (TFVC). Also, with TFS you can use your own on-prem installation, or can take advantage of a hosted solution through visualstudio.com. TFS is great because it's one completely integrated environment (work items, planning, builds, tests, deployments), whereas Team City is just a build solution. When this question was originally asked in 2010 I would've recommended Team City hands down. Now though, the 2 are very competitive. I would say that it would maybe boil down to if you want an all-in-one solution, then go with TFS, but if you are looking for purely just a build system, then Team City.

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Comparing TeamCity to Visual Studio Team Services (the latest cloud-based offering from Microsoft):

  • Both work great for implementing a continuous integration process

  • TeamCity is more mature and everything just works.

  • Visual Studio Team Services by contrast is constantly evolving to catch up with TeamCity and some things just don't work well (e.g. try triggering builds based on paths that have changes from Git - the documentation is weak and the feature itself just doesn't work (as of August 2016))

  • Visual Studio Team Services makes it easy to have only cloud-based agents running your build (the downside however is that each has to do a clean pull of your repository for each build which may add a minute or more to the build). Both can also support local build agents which do not need to wipe the working directory for each fresh build.

But in either case I would highly recommend you also look at CakeBuild which moves most of the configuration information about how to do a build out of the CI system and into C# code that is in your Git repository along with all your other source code. With CakeBuild you can run the same build locally as you will run in the CI system and if you need to go back a month to build a specific version you have the source code and the build script to do it.

With CakeBuild in place you are now free to easily switch between TeamCity and Visual Studio Team Services.

The only downside to CakeBuild is that all your build steps are bundled into a single task in the CI system which makes reporting slightly less nice and may involve some extra work to get the test results out into a format that the CI reporting system can use.

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MS is years behind in the TDD/CI area

Being one who has TDD'd for 4 years now you are correct. MS is still not even promoting it nor do they offer tools that work well with the TDD flow.

Don't get stuck dealing with Visual Studio for any kind of automation, source control, or agile workflow period (stop using TFS please!!). That stuff even though they say is "new" is monolithic and always comes with weird issues and bloat. It is always painful.

I've used Team City and it's simply amazing, things work, it's designed for usability, and it's simply designed well and compatible with most all test tools, etc. Fine use Visual Studio for code, nothing else. Look for external and open source tools to help build a better CI. The "you can do everything right in VS" sell is not selling, and it's not working. People nowdays are used to and always combining different tools from the outside to get things done. Relying on all MS toolsets is just not the way to go IMO for .NET. MS likes to sell "hey you can just do everything right here". But you end up with nothing but pain when you go that route and drink their koolade (TFS, MS Fakes, etc.).

If you plan on doing TDD, you definitely don't want to be using all MS tools. You'll either be pushed down "their way" of doing things which is often proprietary and/or bloated when you try to TDD with their tools or be totally restrictive. For TDD you need to be able to have some flexibility and choices when you decide to layer in different test frameworks, assertion libraries, etc.

Add Octopus on top of Team City, and it's stellar...you will simply fall in love with it as developer or for anyone doing DevOps.

Stop trying to rely on Microsofts continued failure at agile tool offerings

Start looking outside the box and try new things is what I keep repeating to the .NET world, me being a .NET developer in the past and who has tried new things outside the MS world.

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  • Would you say everything you said here stands in 2018?
    – Zorkind
    Jul 5, 2018 at 16:19

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