01-20-2006 08:36 AM
01-20-2006 10:05 AM
I must say that you're more trusting of your CMs than I am if you give them the ability to recompile software.![]()
I don't know how much of what I do can be applied to you since every CM is different. We have a formal configuration management system. This system manages all product documentation. These are things like bill of materials, fab drawings, etc. Our CMs have access to this for those products that they build. Change orders (ECO's) are also controlled through this system. When an ECO is done on a product, the CM is also notified and immediately knows what needs to be changed. We have also included test software and test change orders into the system. When I modify a TestStand sequence, the updated sequence is placed into the configuration management system, I issue a test change order, then CM then knows that they have to connect to the system and download the new sequence. So far I haven't needed anmore complex installation instruction that says "copy this file to c:\TestSequence\FolderName\FileName.seq, reload sequence in TestStand". My test sequences almost always consist of calls to custom test steps (LabVIEW and CVI DLLs) and I seldom have to change these. It is only the .seq file itself that changes. However, the test steps themselves are part of the configuration management system and changes to those are also controlled with a test change order. Our configuration management system is expensive and requires a lot of support but I would recomend that you look to see how your company manages ECOs now and try to model something similar.
All that I have installed on the testers at the CM are the necessary run-time engines so my licensing needs are much simpler. Someone from NI is can answer your questions on that subject better than I can.
01-20-2006 11:06 AM
01-20-2006 11:40 AM
Going back and re-reading the original post, I think you're right. To me, that's even scarier. My present configuration management team and others I worked with in the past are non-technical and could not (and would not) recreate any software. They simply file software and documentation that has been re-created by others.
Anyways, mrbean, ignore everything what I originally said.
01-20-2006 11:57 AM
01-20-2006 12:14 PM
01-20-2006 01:23 PM
01-20-2006 02:51 PM