A presentation at CAST2019 in in United States by Trisha Chetani
The following resources were mentioned during the presentation or are useful additional information.
Here’s what was said about this presentation on social media.
If you are submitting to a conference and are unsure because someone told you the topic isn't unique, remember - your EXPERIENCES are. No one can duplicate your feelings, your work, your problem solving process... YOU are unique, and don't let someone negate your experiences.
— Ashley Hunsberger (@aahunsberger) April 27, 2018
I broke my rest to give a final round of review/edits to @trisha_1212 who is hoping to give her first conference talk at @seleniumconf Chicago.
— Richard Bradshaw (@FriendlyTester) May 24, 2018
Good luck with your submission, watch out for it @aahunsberger and @mmerrell!
We welcome @trisha_1212 ! #CAST2019 https://t.co/edVJJ8nM7m
— Maria Kedemo (@mariakedemo) May 10, 2019
Just had a great call with @trisha_1212, we are working on her talk for #CAST2019.
— Richard Bradshaw (@FriendlyTester) June 10, 2019
She has a great story to tell on making tests more stable to help her team achieve continuous delivery.
Tonight we focused more on the flow of her story, and identified a rough slide layout
About to watch a practice run of @trisha_1212’s #CAST2019 talk, Creating Test Stability to Create Continuous Delivery.
— Richard Bradshaw (@FriendlyTester) July 18, 2019
#CAST2019 @FriendlyTester @ajay184f @kriscorbus @mariakedemo Thank you for the support and the reason for me to travel new continent.Stayed in Asia , Staying in Europe, traveling to USA. Thank you all other whom I could pair up and reharse my talk . #feelinghappy #feelingthankful
— Trisha Chetani (@trisha_1212) August 10, 2019
yay! It amazing to meet so many people at #cast2019 whom i just talked via different medium
— Trisha Chetani (@trisha_1212) August 13, 2019
Followed by a fun conference birthday dinner with these lovely ladies! pic.twitter.com/CGKmwmsE6a
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
Time for Creating Test Stability to Achieve Continuous Delivery with @trisha_1212 a #CAST2019! So excited!!
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
She started out as the sole tester and was working on multiple projects--she had a huge issue with flakey tests. They couldn't maintain the SLA and the team was putting in too much extra effort! @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
The team couldn't learn new things because they were spending so much time working on the flakey tests. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
Just learning the product wouldn't help--I needed to also learn the tools that everyone was using. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
As I explored, I dug deeper--there was a lot of dead code. Duplicate tests, outdated tests, missing tests. I sat down with the team to analyze these tests. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
The problems were endless effort, work/life balance because of the endless effort, ongoing changes to the code, and the vicious red/green test cycle. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
I went on leave for a few weeks, and the team realized how much I'd been doing. I was a bottleneck for the team. So, we started having retrospectives and talking about how the team could self organize. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
I needed to dig even deeper--focus not only on testing but improve on overall quality aspects. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
Debugging tools: logs, screenshots, retry tests before failing them, js console errors, and integrating with a test library to see how the application is behaving. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
Improving the infrastructure reduced uncertainty and reduced the tech debt. Tests were more stable, and everyone was happier! @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
Once we started having code reviews, we were able to get a better idea of the types of test cases we could add and the coverage we had. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
Everyone in the team started contributing to automated checks. We also increased our tech stack understanding! @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
Everyone had a chance to be involved. Everyone's knowledge was getting used in real time and they were much more motivated. We also paired with new team members and they came up to speed quickly. @trisha_1212 #CAST2019
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
@trisha_1212 #CAST2019 pic.twitter.com/36LkSVyUUe
— Jenny Bramble (@jennydoesthings) August 14, 2019
Super excited for @trisha_1212’s talk Test Stability to Achieve Continuous Delivery!#CAST2019
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
Discover a need > learn about it > collaborate & contribute > iterate > repeat. @trisha_1212’s journey beginning probably sounds err familiar to many testers!#CAST2019
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
Root cause analysis of flaky tests included unexpected changes, lack of time to make significant improvements, basic user flows weren’t consistent, attempting to automate all the tests. (Note many of these are people-related, not code-related!)#CAST2019 @trisha_1212
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
I think it’s easy for testers to become bottlenecks without realizing it, simply because we are often silo’ed in the work we do. #CAST2019 @trisha_1212
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
@trisha_1212’s team decided to stop developing new features until their testing was fixed! A hard choice, but great to see the maturity that allows short-term trade offs for long-term benefits 💫#CAST2019
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
Adding debugging methods to support the tests made a big difference! Logging, visual validation, console errors, and test reporting. Tests that fail silently aren’t useful, but tests that fail with information are!#CAST2019 @trisha_1212
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
Refactoring the application and addressing tech debt to make it easier to test and maintain 🙌🏼 This is one of the hardest things to advocate for, really awesome to see @trisha_1212 and her team doing this successfully!#CAST2019
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
Great wrap-up from @trisha_1212 about how to improve and stabilize tests. #CAST2019 pic.twitter.com/WFN2iYIT9q
— angela (@AngelaRiggs_) August 14, 2019
Whole team winning with #testability! I love it! @trisha_1212 here at #CAST2019 pic.twitter.com/strbZ37cuV
— Ash Winter (@northern_tester) August 14, 2019
Digging deeper into your existing test automation is a neglected skill & activity. Do they still provide value and cover what matters? @trisha_1212 here at #CAST2019 #testing pic.twitter.com/2RobmdyjVX
— Ash Winter (@northern_tester) August 14, 2019
@trisha_1212 sharing her story on how to create test stability to create continuous delivery. Thanks for doing your very first talk at #CAST2019 pic.twitter.com/K0mzG5tMFG
— Maria Kedemo (@mariakedemo) August 14, 2019
👏💃🙏🙌Thank you for everyone to attend my talk #cast2019 . There was 3 track going on but surprised to see great crowdhttps://t.co/qNWfcXjKMm
— Trisha Chetani (@trisha_1212) August 18, 2019
Thank you everyone who attend my talk and tweets ! It meant a lot to me.#cast#2019 Thank you to all my mentor who supported me to deliver this talk
— Trisha Chetani (@trisha_1212) August 14, 2019
I have been on your talk. Good job Trisha!
— Aleksander Lipski (@aleetesting) August 14, 2019