The Build Master: Microsoft's Software Configuration Management Best Practices by Vincent Maraia, Jeffrey Richter (Foreword by)

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Textbook (Paperback - New Edition)

  • 249pp
  • Sales Rank: 323,620

Textbook Information

  • ISBN-13: 9780321332059
  • Edition Description: New Edition
  • Edition Number: 1
  • Pub. Date: October 2005
  • Publisher: Addison-Wesley
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Product Details

  • Pub. Date: October 2005
  • Publisher: Addison-Wesley
  • Format: Textbook Paperback, 249pp
  • Sales Rank: 323,620

Synopsis

"Wow, what can I say? Chapter 4, 'The Build Lab and Personnel,' by itself is enough justification to purchase the book! Vince is obviously a 'Dirty Finger Nails' build meister and there is a lot we can all learn from how he got them dirty! There are so many gems of wisdom throughout this book it's hard to know where to start describing them! It starts where SCM should start, at the end, and works its way forward. This book is a perfect complement to the 'Follow the Files' approach to SCM that I espouse. I will recommend that every software lead and software configuration management person I work with be required to read this book!"

—Bob Ventimiglia, autonomic logistics software configuration manager, Lockheed Martin Aeronautics

"The Build Master contains some truly new information; most of the chapters discuss points that many people in the industry don't have a full understanding of and need to know. It's written in a way that is easy to read and will help a reader fill holes in their vision regarding software build management. I especially liked Vince's use of Microsoft stories to make his points throughout the book. I will purchase the book and make certain chapters mandatory reading for my build manager consultants."

—Steve Konieczka, SCM consultant

"Vince does a great job of providing the details of an actual working build process. It can be very useful for those who must tackle this task within their own organization. Also the 'Microsoft Notes' found throughout the book provide a very keen insight into the workings of Microsoft. This alone is worthpurchasing this book."

—Mario E. Moreira, author of Software Configuration Management Implementation Roadmap and columnist at CM Crossroads

"Software configuration management professionals will find this book presents practical ideas for managing code throughout the software development and deployment lifecycles. Drawing on lessons learned, the author provides real-world examples and solutions to help you avoid the traps and pitfalls common in today's environments that require advanced and elegant software controls."

—Sean W. Sides, senior technical configuration manager, Great-West Healthcare Information Systems

"If you think compiling your application is a build process, then this book is for you. Vince gives us a real look at the build process. With his extensive experience in the area at Microsoft, a reader will get a look in at the Microsoft machine and also how a mature build process should work. This is a must read for anyone doing serious software development."

—Jon Box, Microsoft regional director, ProTech Systems Group

"Did you ever wonder how Microsoft manages to ship increasingly complex software? In The Build Master, specialist Vince Maraia provides an insider's look."

—Bernard Vander Beken, software developer, jawn.net

"This book offers an interesting look into how Microsoft manages internal development of large projects and provides excellent insight into the kinds of build/SCM things you can do for your large-scale projects."

—Lance Johnston, vice president of Software Development, SCM Labs, Inc.

"The Build Master provides an interesting insight into how large software systems are built at Microsoft covering the set up of their build labs and the current and future tools used. The sections on security, globalization, and versioning were quite helpful as these areas tend to be overlooked."

—Chris Brown, ThoughtWorks, consultant

"The Build Master is a great read. Managing builds is crucial to the profitable delivery of high-quality software. Until now, the build process has been one of the least-understood stages of the entire development lifecycle. This book helps you implement a smoother, faster, more effective build process and use it to deliver better software."

—Robert J. Shimonski, Networking and Security Expert, http://www.rsnetworks.net

The first best-practice, start-to-finish guide for the software build process

Managing builds is crucial to the profitable delivery of high-quality software; however, the build process has been one of the least-understood stages of the entire development lifecycle. Now, one of Microsoft's leading software build experts introduces step-by-step best practices for maximizing the reliability, effectiveness, timeliness, quality, and security of every build you create.

Drawing on his extensive experience working with Microsoft's enterprise and development customers, Vincent Maraia covers all facets of the build process—introducing techniques that will work on any platform, on projects of any size. Maraia places software builds in context, showing how they integrate with configuration management, setup, and even customer support. Coverage includes

  • How Microsoft manages builds: process flows, check-in windows, reporting status, and more

  • Understanding developer and project builds, pre- and post-build steps, clean builds, incremental builds, continuous integration builds, and more

  • Choosing the right build tools for your projects

  • Configuring source trees and establishing your build environment—introducing Virtual Build Labs (VBLs)

  • Planning builds for multiple-site development projects or teams

  • Determining what should (and shouldn't) be kept under source control

  • Managing versioning, including build, file, and .NET assembly versions

  • Using automation as effectively as possible

  • Securing builds: a four layer approach—physical, tracking sources, binary/release bits assurance, and beyond

Builds powerfully impact every software professional: developers, architects, managers, project leaders, configuration specialists, testers, and release managers. Whatever your role, this book will help you implement a smoother, faster, more effective build process—and use it to deliver better software.


© Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.

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Biography

Vincent Maraia has fifteen years' experience at Microsoft, and has helped ship products ranging from Windows NT and Visual Studio to the Microsoft Mouse. For six years, he has been an Application Development Consultant in Microsoft's Premier Services group, helping customers architect and implement effective source code, build, and test processes.


© Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.

Customer Reviews

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Build Master: Microsoft's Software Configuration Management Best Practicesby Anonymous

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February 01, 2006: The author of this book, Vincent Maria, appears to have extensive knowledge of and experience with the build process at Microsoft. His knowledge if presented properly would be a very interesting and valuable book. Unfortunately, this book fails to deliver. I was looking forward to reading this book, so maybe my expectations were high. I can't recommend this book - it lacks content. The book is a little over 200 hundred pages and has 18 chapters. If you factor out the introductions and graphics, you get about 8 or 9 pages of content per chapter. It would be very difficult to cover any of the chapter topics in detail in 9 pages. What you get is a very high level introduction to a topic with very little usable information. Given the short length of the book, it would be more acceptable if the author were very concise. Unfortunately, I found his writing style to be redundant. Also, the book seems to be stretching for content. For example, there are actually 2 pages of email rules like 'never open attachments from strangers', 1 page on why you should learn XML and of course, there is almost a whole chapter dedicated to how great the new Microsoft Team Foundation product is. I think about a quarter of this book could have been removed without losing anything. Some of the recommendations in this book are childish and unprofessional. For example, one side note included tips for test managers to 'Say 'no' to development at least once a day.' and 'If people really want you to do something, they'll ask at least twice.' and 'On a regular basis, complain that the project is off track...' The book is not completely bad. It is just not detailed enough to be useful. If you are implementing a build process from scratch, you might get a good overview from this book, but I would argue you could get better information from the Internet. One good source would be white papers from the patterns and practices group at Microsoft. There are also some good sources on build automation in the extreme and agile programming texts. If you are looking for a good resource on branching, check out Software Configuration Management Practices by Berczuk.

Build Master: Microsoft's Software Configuration Management Best Practicesby Anonymous

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November 05, 2005: If you have a team of 30 or more programmers, then Maraia offers good suggestions on how to design your build processes so that these can both handle your current team, and scale up to hundreds or even thousands of programmers. The book uses Microsoft's own development effort as the central case study. Given that Microsoft has massive software development efforts, you may want to pay attention. The book can be read at two levels. One is if you want to use the development tools from Microsoft, that the book talks about. If your team works under a Microsoft operating system, and uses Visual Studio, then indeed, this can be germane. But you don't have to be using any Microsoft product at all, to reap some gain from the text. The key idea is to have a group of developers who maintain a centralised build process. (They can certainly have other duties.) Here, the book argues about having a metalevel, if you will. Where this build process can and will change over the project's lifetime. If the project has several subgroups, as it will if it is large enough, then each subgroup uses this same central build to make its own binaries. The centralising fights a natural tendency for a large project to have subgroups that drift apart. In part by imposing a top-down discipline on the subgroups to have their developments conform to this build. The book also goes into various good practices that your group should use. These have been covered in other books on software projects. The distinctive part of the text is the above discussion on the centralised build.