Topic
Acceptance testing
About: Acceptance testing is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2591 publications have been published within this topic receiving 38295 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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01 Mar 1979
TL;DR: Comprehensively covers psychological and economic principles, managerial aspects of testing, test tools, high-order testing, code inspections, and debugging, and programming students will find this reference work indispensible.
Abstract: From the Publisher:
Provides a practical rather than theoretical discussion of the purpose and nature of software testing. Emphasizes methodologies for the design of effective test cases. Comprehensively covers psychological and economic principles, managerial aspects of testing, test tools, high-order testing, code inspections, and debugging. Extensive bibliography. Programmers at all levels, and programming students, will find this reference work indispensible.
3,801 citations
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TL;DR: Omega is a 60-terawatt, 60-beam, frequency-tripled Nd:glass laser system designed to perform precision direct-drive inertial-confinement-fusion experiments and the acceptance tests demonstrated exceptional performance throughout the system.
953 citations
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27 Jul 2010
TL;DR: This groundbreaking new book sets out the principles and technical practices that enable rapid, incremental delivery of high quality, valuable new functionality to users, and introduces state-of-the-art techniques, including automated infrastructure management and data migration, and the use of virtualization.
Abstract: Getting software released to users is often a painful, risky, and time-consuming process. This groundbreaking new book sets out the principles and technical practices that enable rapid, incremental delivery of high quality, valuable new functionality to users. Through automation of the build, deployment, and testing process, and improved collaboration between developers, testers, and operations, delivery teams can get changes released in a matter of hours sometimes even minutesno matter what the size of a project or the complexity of its code base. Jez Humble and David Farley begin by presenting the foundations of a rapid, reliable, low-risk delivery process. Next, they introduce the deployment pipeline, an automated process for managing all changes, from check-in to release. Finally, they discuss the ecosystem needed to support continuous delivery, from infrastructure, data and configuration management to governance. The authors introduce state-of-the-art techniques, including automated infrastructure management and data migration, and the use of virtualization. For each, they review key issues, identify best practices, and demonstrate how to mitigate risks. Coverage includes Automating all facets of building, integrating, testing, and deploying software Implementing deployment pipelines at team and organizational levels Improving collaboration between developers, testers, and operations Developing features incrementally on large and distributed teams Implementing an effective configuration management strategy Automating acceptance testing, from analysis to implementation Testing capacity and other non-functional requirements Implementing continuous deployment and zero-downtime releases Managing infrastructure, data, components and dependencies Navigating risk management, compliance, and auditing Whether youre a developer, systems administrator, tester, or manager, this book will help your organization move from idea to release faster than everso you can deliver value to your business rapidly and reliably.
889 citations
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TL;DR: The main characteristics of a good quality process are discussed, the key testing phases are surveyed and modern functional and model-based testing approaches are presented.
658 citations