![]() ![]() KQL Series – how not to waste $ running ADX clusters.We now have 4 minutes of unit tests per checked in build but that is definitely something I’ll respond to with: I think they’ve got on with it to stop me talking about unit tests…!! So now I can start my unit tests – the good news the DEV team have started theirs and are really getting behind it. So if you have recently installed Redgate SQL Toolbelt and can’t find SQL Test – hopefully this blog post will help you.īy the way I do think there was something wrong with the laptop the client gave me as now when I right click I get the ability to run tests: This was definitely not there before the uninstall/reinstall fiasco It was while clicking around like a madman I found this:Īnd of course now I can do this: Let’s start unit testing!! So I uninstalled everything – SSMS and the Toolbelt. nothing here eitherĪt this point I decided it had to be my machine as I did a google and looked on forums and no one seemed to have experienced this. So as a windows user I naturally looked in the Windows Apps: Hmmm…. I knew to click on the icons to bring down other utilities but it wasn’t here either: Not here either…. DEV were going to do the application side (this client is a start-up so it made sense that they had little to no unit tests) and I’d do the database side.Įxcept in SSMS I couldn’t find SQL Test…? The next thing I wanted to do was start implementing unit testing for both the applications and database. ![]() Things were going swimmingly – in fact thanks to SQL Compare, SQL Source Control and Team Foundation Server I had implemented an automated Continuous Delivery pipeline for the clients databases and applications. (Fantastic product that SQL Toolbelt BTW.) I had recently installed the SQL Toolbelt from Redgate at a client site on a laptop they’d supplied me. ![]()
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