Mastering ALM (Application LifeCycle Management) for Microsoft Power Platform: A Comprehensive Guide (Part 1 - the basics)
Motivation
Low-code development is a contemporary method in software development that allows developers to construct applications with minimal coding by utilizing graphical interfaces and pre-built components. Low-code platforms provide numerous advantages, including quicker delivery, reduced costs, enhanced quality, and increased flexibility. Nevertheless, low-code development also presents particular challenges, such as guaranteeing application consistency, security, scalability, and maintainability. To address these issues, it is crucial to implement lifecycle management practices in low-code projects.
Lifecycle management refers to managing an application's entire lifecycle, from the initial idea to the final deployment and maintenance. This management involves various phases, such as defining the problem and scope, designing and architecting the solution, developing and iterating, testing and debugging, deploying and scaling, and enhancing and maintaining. Each phase requires specific tools, methods, and best practices to ensure the project's success.
The importance of lifecycle management within low code can be summarized as follows:
It helps to align the project goals with the user's needs and expectations. By involving stakeholders, end-users, and subject matter experts in the early stages of the project, lifecycle management ensures that the application solves the right problem and meets the specific requirements of the target audience.
It facilitates a smooth and organized development process. By providing a centralized hub for all the project information, lifecycle management enables the developers to access the necessary resources, collaborate effectively, and track the progress and status of the project. Lifecycle management also incorporates agile methodology and DevOps tools to support rapid prototyping, iterative development, and continuous delivery.
It improves the quality and performance of the application. By conducting thorough testing and debugging throughout the development process, lifecycle management ensures that the application is free of errors, bugs, and vulnerabilities. Lifecycle management also monitors and optimizes the application's performance after deployment, ensuring that it can handle high loads and scale as needed.
It reduces the technical debt and maintenance costs of the application. By following proper change management practices and documenting the application architecture and code, lifecycle management prevents the accumulation of technical debt that can hamper the future development and maintenance of the application. Lifecycle management also provides tools for enhancing and updating the application according to user needs and market trends.
ALM for Power Apps, Power Automate, Power Virtual Agents, and Dataverse
Dataverse in the Microsoft Power Platform allows secure storage and management of data and processes utilized by business applications. To take advantage of the Power Platform features and tools for Application Lifecycle Management (ALM), every environment involved in ALM must incorporate a Dataverse database.
The following concepts are crucial for understanding ALM using the Microsoft Power Platform:
Solutions serve as the mechanism for implementing ALM; they enable the distribution of components across environments through export and import. A component refers to an artifact employed in your application that can be customized. Components include any items that can be incorporated into a solution, such as tables, columns, canvas, model-driven apps, Power Automate flows, chatbots, charts, and plug-ins.
Dataverse stores all artifacts, including solutions and in-product deployment pipelines.
Source control should be your source of truth for storing and collaborating on components.
A continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) platform, such as Azure DevOps, allows you to automate your build, test, and deployment pipeline. It can also be used in conjunction with in-product pipelines.
Environment strategy
You must establish separate app development and production environments to adhere to application lifecycle management (ALM) principles. While basic ALM can be achieved with just separate development and production environments, I recommend maintaining at least one additional test environment distinct from your development and production environments. A separate test environment enables end-to-end validation, encompassing solution deployment and application testing. Some organizations may also require additional environments for user acceptance testing (UAT), systems integration testing (SIT), and training.
Distinct development environments can be beneficial in isolating changes from one work effort before it is completed, preventing premature check-ins. They can also help reduce instances where one person's changes negatively impact another's work.
Every organization is unique, so carefully assess your organization's specific environmental needs.
Next Steps
In the upcoming articles, I will provide you with step-by-step guides to:
Create multiple environments
Work with solutions
Collaborate on solutions within a team
Use pipelines to deploy solutions
Establish an approval process
In the upcoming articles, I will focus solely on using Power Platform elements and provide supplementary content on utilizing Azure DevOps and GitHub Actions as alternatives. There are several approaches to begin with ALM; in this series, I will concentrate on a lightweight and easy start for organizations and offer insights into more complex methods. During my "Power Virtual Agents in a Day" workshops, ALM is a topic that raises several questions from participants; often, a lightweight approach is preferred over using CoE, Power Platform Landing Zones, etc. This series is designed to start small and grow with your needs.
Conclusion
Mastering ALM for Microsoft Power Platform is essential for addressing challenges associated with low-code development. You can ensure application consistency, security, scalability, and maintainability by implementing lifecycle management practices. Understanding the key concepts of ALM, creating an environment strategy, and following the step-by-step guides in upcoming articles will help you effectively manage your applications throughout their lifecycle.
Subscribe to my newsletter
Read articles from Holger Imbery directly inside your inbox. Subscribe to the newsletter, and don't miss out.
Written by
Holger Imbery
Holger Imbery
I talk and write about conversational AI, robotic process automation, and things that keep an architect awake at night. Your feedback on my articles is highly appreciated, and I would like to invite you to a professional discussion. I'm a Principal Architect @NTTDATA focusing on Microsoft Power Platform and Azure.