Blueprint Integration with GitHub
The integration of Blueprint with GitHub ensures completely traceability of all work-items. With this integration, the product management team can easily track commit trends and volume.
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Blueprint-GitHub Integration Overview
In an Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) ecosystem, the choice of systems, and the collaboration between the cross-functional teams play a great role. While the choice of systems impacts the productivity of a team, cross-functional collaboration brings in collective wisdom to take better decisions, faster.
Best-of-breed systems such as Blueprint and GitHub bring rich functionalities to the ecosystem and make the work of the product and development team easier. With Blueprint and GitHub integrated within the ecosystem, the product development has real-time visibility into the commits made by the development team. It is also easier for them to enforce authentic commits against each work item and access the changes/edits made to the commits from Blueprint itself.
How Blueprint – GitHub integration is beneficial for an enterprise
- Track commit volume, track commit trends and edits/changes to commit files in real time
- Enforce authentic commits to make sure each commit is happening against a scheduled and open workitem
With Blueprint + GitHub integration, enterprises can:
How OpsHub Integration Manager integrates Blueprint and GitHub
OpsHub Integration Manager integrates Blueprint and GitHub bi-directionally. It ensures that all historical and current data is available to each user, in that user’s preferred system, with full context, in real-time. All the details related to a commit made against a work-item in Blueprint can be tracked from Blueprint itself. For example, for each commit that development team makes in GitHub, GitHub synchronizes a ‘commit entity’ linked to the specific requirement id back to Blueprint. Each ‘commit entity’ includes information such as ‘who did the commit?’, ‘when was the commit done?’, and ‘which part of the code was committed?’.
Popularly synchronized entities
Use Case: Blueprint integration with JIRA
Problem statement: Lack of commit traceability in the Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) ecosystem can lead to compliance as well as other issues.
Solution: If Blueprint and GitHub are integrated using OpsHub Integration Manager, there will be complete traceability for each requirement in the ecosystem.
- The Product Manager creates a ‘business requirement’ in Blueprint.
- The development team works on the requirement, tests it, and then commits it in GitHub against the ‘requirement id’ specified in Blueprint.
- For each commit that happens from the development team, OpsHub Integration Manager synchronizes a ‘commit entity’ linked to the specific requirement id back to Blueprint. Each ‘commit entity’ includes information such as ‘who did the commit?’, ‘when was the commit done?’, and ‘which part of the code was committed?’.
Benefits of integration for Blueprint and GitHub users
Blueprint users
- Complete traceability from Blueprint to source code in GitHub
- Visibility into the progress of development work, the volume and quality of commits made with full context, in real-time
- Reduced dependency on manual communication to track the completion of a task
GitHub users
- Each commit can be traced back to its respective workitem at any given point in time from GitHub itself
- Enforced checkpoints ensure that no mandatory steps/checks are missed while making a commit – this leads to high success rate for commits