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The company I just joined has a system of products that share a large percentage of their code base (via shared links in Visual SourceSafe). There are about 25 product types in this system as well as a PC interface.

The products network together using proprietary protocols that are largely undocumented. Historically, the method for maintaining this mess is to require that all firmware and software is released as a package. This, of course, causes significant delays in release schedules due to the required regression testing.

Has anyone else had a successful method of dealing with this type of issue? We're really getting beat up over it by management (I honestly can't fault them for feeling this way).

My first thoughts are to try to separate the device releases from each other somehow. Maybe pull shared functionality into libraries which are versioned. Then only update devices that use the libraries that have changed. I see issues with version mismatches from this however.

This is an organizational question. I understand how to keep the house of cards going via testing and processes, but I believe that better organization of the code base could have many good results.

I appreciate the advice.

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significant delays in release schedules due to the required regression testing.

That's why folks do a "daily build".

Daily builds typically include a set of tests, sometimes called a smoke test ( as in where there is smoke there is fire). These tests are included to assist in determining what may have been broken by the changes included in the latest build. The critical piece of this process is to include new and revised tests as the project progresses.

When the organization -- as a whole -- has to keep the daily build working, then people change their responsibilities, points of view, biases, complaints and actions to keep the daily build running.

Daily stand-up meetings become focused on things that might break the build.

Individual developers have to refactor their code more carefully to avoid breaking the build.

Breaking the build becomes an immediate, instantaneous indicator of something being out of sync. Immediate. No delay. If I break the build today, everyone will know it tomorrow morning. No days were wasted assuming (or hoping) that things still worked. We can immediately roll changes back, or apply changes to keep going forward.

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  • We do. That keeps it compiling. I assume you also mean automated testing after the daily builds. I want to do this, but we just don't have the infrastructure at the moment. This isn't PC software, so there's a significant effort to do the automated testing.
    – caveman
    Sep 2, 2011 at 14:07
  • " just don't have the infrastructure at the moment". That's not relevant. You asked what to do. You're not alone. Everyone else who has this problem solves it with a daily build that runs the unit test. That's pretty much the standard solution. If you don't have the infrastructure, that doesn't change the solution any, does it?
    – S.Lott
    Sep 2, 2011 at 15:43
  • The costs (money, time) are always relevant. No it doesn't remove it as an option, but it does help assign a priority. I'm sorry if it sounded like I was disagreeing. I totally agree, but need to consider all options. What you are saying simply doesn't fix it all.
    – caveman
    Sep 2, 2011 at 18:08
  • @caveman: "What you are saying simply doesn't fix it all"? Why not? It's the standard solution. What doesn't it fix?
    – S.Lott
    Sep 2, 2011 at 18:20
  • There are organizational issues here as well. Smoke tests are not a silver bullet.
    – caveman
    Sep 2, 2011 at 19:02

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