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Progress update, 2018-09-11

To avoid losing information while this discussion is in progress, most tag mergers described below have been postponed; however, the vsts tags have been renamed as follows:

vsts-release-task -> azure-pipelines-release-task
vsts-local-build-agent -> azure-devops-self-hosted-agent
vsts-extension -> azure-devops-extensions
vsts-package-management -> azure-artifacts
vsts-api -> azure-devops-rest-api
vsts-build-task -> azure-pipelines-build-task
vsts-release -> azure-pipelines-release-pipeline
vsts-build -> azure-pipelines
vsts -> azure-devops

So, is now Azure DevOps. While this change has been a little controversial, it's kind of nice that folks like Microsoft realize that Stack Overflow needs to be kept up to date and that work comes from volunteers.

We've been in touch with our friends there (disclaimer: they are a client and do sponsor VSTS along with quite a few other tags on the site) to discuss the best way to handle the change on our end. We wanted to make sure that y'all didn't shoulder the brunt of the re-tagging work, and that we left some opportunity to bring up any caveats.

They worked with us to hammer out a plan and some synonyms. Here's what we came up with together, broken down by area of responsibility:

Legend: | proposed

Stack Overflow Employees:

That's approximately 95% of the heavy lifting done.

Microsoft Employees:

Microsoft has folks active in all related tags with enough rep to handle the remainder of stuff, which includes:

  • Editing tag wiki / tag info excerpts
  • Making a sweep of quite a few of the tagged questions to make sure the right tags are there
  • Updating some external links (there shouldn't be much of this needed)

Folks active / vested in any of these tags:

  • Look out for broken things.
  • Sanity check our hare-brained scheme, here.

That's it, essentially. Don't feel like you can't jump into editing tag wikis and stuff, or fixing links, just take care to know that our friends over at Microsoft aren't presuming you will, so they'll actively be working on it.

Does anyone see any major problems with how we've got this laid out? I'm going to let this soak until late today / tomorrow to get any last feedback before I fire up the TagMutator3000.

I think we can do this quickly enough to make it appear to be atomic from most outsider's perspectives, so there shouldn't be a need to blacklist or warn prior to creating the synonyms.

With under 7k total affected visible questions, this isn't the biggest undertaking we've ever done, but it's definitely going on the list of big ones.

Did we miss anything? A hat tip again to our friends over at Microsoft, all too often these things hit without any warning or planning at all, the brief head's-up saved a lot of confusion and double work by volunteers.

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  • 5
    @GrantWinney I am pretty sure that the joke is wrong.
    – Braiam
    Sep 10, 2018 at 18:47
  • 11
    Is combining vsts-release and vsts-build into the same azure-pipelines tag going to cause confusion? It sounds like it could making searching for information more difficult.
    – Calidus
    Sep 10, 2018 at 19:38
  • 25
    Please ask devops questions at DevOps Stack Exchange. We don't need more off-topic crap here. How many times do we have to endure questions like how to operate a terminal, how to ssh into the cloud, how to make a backup, how to provision a disk and vm, etc.
    – jww
    Sep 10, 2018 at 23:51
  • 11
    "Updating some external links (there shouldn't be much of this needed)" - Microsoft links break all the time (KB numbers? Microsoft Connect?), please be thorough.
    – molnarm
    Sep 11, 2018 at 7:05
  • 32
    @jww Just because it’s called “Azure DevOps” that doesn’t mean that it is only DevOps. Many parts of that (source control, build and release management) are very much on-topic here.
    – poke
    Sep 11, 2018 at 10:00
  • 44
    I can't believe they've renamed this product again. We've been using it for about four years and in that time it's been TFS Online, Visual Studio Online, Visual Studio Team Services and now Azure DevOps. It genuinely confuses the management where I work and whilst that's a trival problem it's still a problem. Still the heads-up from MS is welcome. Sep 11, 2018 at 14:46
  • 7
    @GrantWinney I'm inclined to think they spend more on renaming.
    – jpmc26
    Sep 11, 2018 at 15:20
  • 10
    @jww DevOps doesn't have an on topic definition yet. It is nowhere near ready for general recommendation. Besides, DevOps is not a field. It's a coordination mindset between two fields that have (rather wrongly) been siloed from each other traditionally. The idea of being a "dev ops expert" holds about as much weight as being an "agile expert."
    – jpmc26
    Sep 11, 2018 at 15:22
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    @TimPost Grammar Nazi here. It is harebrained.. merriam-webster.com/dictionary/harebrained. Cheers
    – vandre
    Sep 11, 2018 at 17:14
  • 6
    @PhilipStratford For what it is worth, TFS is still called TFS, at least for now.
    – TylerH
    Sep 11, 2018 at 17:21
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    @TylerH: Nope. It's going to be "Azure DevOps Server", though that probably won't come until the next major release. Getting everyone to update TFS just to change the name is an untenable prospect to say the least. Sep 11, 2018 at 19:48
  • 9
    @PhilipStratford: The reason for the change is supposedly to broaden the market for the components formerly collectively called VSTS. From what I read, they want to remove the confusion that you need to use Visual Studio to use something like build and release, work items, repositories, etc. You will supposedly be able to take just the pieces you want and use whatever else you like for the rest. You could kind of do this already, but it wasn't as obvious. Sep 11, 2018 at 19:52
  • 3
    @GrantWinney, when was the last renaming? Sep 12, 2018 at 4:44
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    Hey Tim, just a whinge: can you please not use American format dates in your update - I think most SO members would understand ISO format.
    – slugster
    Sep 13, 2018 at 11:45
  • 10
    Let's just call it Azure DOS. Sep 17, 2018 at 19:31

9 Answers 9

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vsts-release -> azure-pipelines-release-pipeline
vsts-build -> azure-pipelines

That seems oddly inconsistent. Why not:

vsts-release -> azure-pipelines-release
vsts-build -> azure-pipelines-build

?

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  • 2
    Especially taking vsts-release-task -> azure-pipelines-release-task and vsts-build-task -> azure-pipelines-build-task into consideration Sep 12, 2018 at 20:12
  • 10
    Stumbled upon that to and I think your suggestion should really be taken into consideration
    – joacar
    Sep 13, 2018 at 14:54
  • This seems to make a lot of sense
    – Alfredo A.
    Sep 19, 2018 at 17:51
59

Build and Release overlap but not perfectly. There are build and release specific tasks as well as them have different predefined variables, and interact with agents differently. Combining them into a single tag is going double the search area for users when they are trying to find a solution. That might not be huge right now with 7k visible questions, but what does look like a year or two in the future? Is there any benefit to the stack overflow user for having these two tag combined into one?

Can tags be hierarchical? Could azure-pipelines contain azure-pipelines-build and azure-pipelines-release?

There is also vsts-api that will need renamed: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/rest/api/vsts/?view=vsts-rest-5.0

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    Tags cannot be hierarchical, but we could probably use azure-pipelines-build and azure-pipelines-release - anyone wishing to follow both could follow azure-pipelines-*
    – Shog9
    Sep 11, 2018 at 17:52
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    @Shog9 it'd be interesting to see how many users know you can do that or would do that even if aware. Sep 11, 2018 at 21:04
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    About three thousand users have 36 thousand-some saved wildcard tags, @JonClements.
    – Shog9
    Sep 11, 2018 at 21:17
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    @Shog9 I still think that we are failing at UX.
    – Braiam
    Sep 12, 2018 at 20:56
  • 1
    @Braiam: wildcard search is good UX for developers..
    – awe
    Sep 18, 2018 at 9:07
  • 4
    @awe usability and discoverability are two aspects of UX
    – Braiam
    Sep 18, 2018 at 14:22
  • 3
    Is it documented anywhere? I mean, the whole wildcard tag thing (I don't care about VTST or whatever it's called today). Sep 20, 2018 at 8:18
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    @Braiam Yes, wel.. maybe it is only for database developers wildcard is an intuitive and self-explanatory thing - and then the wildcard character should rather be %
    – awe
    Sep 24, 2018 at 12:07
  • // , I've seen this pretty often, especially when my job was "release" and someone else's job was "build" Oct 4, 2018 at 17:26
27

I note from the linked article that Team Foundation Server is also to be renamed

Starting with next version of TFS, the product will be called Azure DevOps Server and will continue to be enhanced through our normal cadence of updates.

so I think that the idea that "95% of the heavy lifting done" may be an underestimate.

(FWIW, I think renaming an on premise product into the Azure brand is going to cause no end of confusion)

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    The next release could well be months away. I guess this rename will go on the tag shuffle backlog and will become of concern once the release has dropped.
    – Peter B
    Sep 11, 2018 at 11:50
  • It's not the re-branding, that causes the confusion. The confusion as to what cloud computing really is has always existed. Until now, the notion of the cloud being the internet has been widespread. While incorrect, it didn't have any immediate bearing on securing intellectual assets. There was VSTS, and there was the cloud. The re-branding forces clients (and managers in particular) to re-align their understanding of cloud computing with reality. That's not a bad thing, even if it won't go unnoticed. Sep 19, 2018 at 10:18
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    @IInspectable, I don't get it. VSTS was always MS-hosted (and thus "cloud"), while TFS is local, in the same way that Office 365's mail is MS-hosted Exchange (and thus "cloud"), while Exchange Server is local. The re-branding podiluska's talking about is essentially a name that means Cloud Local Server, which is silly and contradictory. Just because Azure is a big part of MS's current strategy doesn't mean it needs to have its name applied to things that aren't really Azure. Remember when they did that with the .NET name, including calling the Microsoft Account a .NET Passport?
    – Mathieu K.
    Sep 22, 2018 at 4:44
  • @mat: "VSTS" in my previous comment was meant to read "TFS". Still, "Cloud Local Server" is only "silly and contradictory", if you introduce an invalid meaning to "cloud computing". The term "own cloud" has existed for so long, that I'm genuinely confused by people attributing "cloud computing" to 3rd-party, web-hosted platforms only. At any rate, the point I was making: The confusion will end, and if the re-branding triggers discussion that leads to a better understanding, then that is a Good Thing, even if just by coincidence. Sep 28, 2018 at 6:43
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    @IInspectable How is calling two different flavours of the same product the same thing going to "lead to a better understanding"? "Azure" will now sometimes have its original meaning of "hosted by Microsoft as a service, rather than on-premises", and sometimes just mean "sold by a Microsoft department who think that the word Azure is cool". Meanwhile, people will continue to equate "cloud computing" with remote, X-as-a-Service, offerings; and this will continue to be a useful distinction, whether or not it is how the term was originally used.
    – IMSoP
    Sep 28, 2018 at 16:50
  • @MathieuK. I agree with most of your comment. "Cloud Local Server" is technically called Private Cloud (in the new cloud marketing era) and has existed since always Oct 13, 2018 at 0:45
  • @Camilo, unfortunately, "Private Cloud" seems to have meanings ranging from "resources allocated to a single consumer" to "local server". "Cloud Local Server" seems contradictory to me, and fails at least the resource pooling characteristic in NIST's definition, and probably the on-demand self-service and rapid elasticity characteristics too. To my thinking, that just leaves broad network access and measured service, which sounds a lot to me like just a regular old Internet-facing server.
    – Mathieu K.
    Oct 15, 2018 at 14:47
  • Also just found out the other day about the Surface Laptop, an MS laptop named after their family of tablets but without a tablet form factor. Yay, name confusion!
    – Mathieu K.
    Oct 15, 2018 at 14:49
19

I think it'd make sense to create new tags for every specific topic and not mapping everything to , so my suggestion is:

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19

The situation is terrible now.

I see a lot of questions that are related to Azure and NOT to VSTS (Azure DevOps) with the tag azure-devops, and of course, the question is not related to VSTS (Azure DevOps).

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    It's not a great naming scheme, but there's not a lot we can do about it. Keeping the VSTS name will confuse people in the future when the old name is forgotten. I'm gonna blame Microsoft for this one. Perhaps an edit to the tag wiki excerpt would help? Sep 12, 2018 at 16:16
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    The tag wiki written well, the problem is that people don't read it... for some reason, people ask a question regarding azure and push the azure-devops tag also. Sep 12, 2018 at 17:05
11

Why not creating aliases, so both tags are working, and using old ones redirect to posts with new tag? This should work both with tags and research. Least surprise. Least friction.

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    Yeah, why mass rename, when we can create synonyms? Sep 28, 2018 at 20:29
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All vsts should be named azure-devops throughout.

We still need to distinguish on the difference in resources and resource providers in Microsoft Azure to this Azure DevOps rebranding: azure-{Resource}

The pipelines in azure-pipelines is not a resource in Microsoft Azure as far as I know.

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vsts-release -> azure-release-pipeline
vsts-build -> azure-build-pipelines
0

I just noticed an issue with the on-prem version (and the same applies for MS forums): the full name of the cloud service is "Azure DevOps Service(s)", which is separate from "Azure DevOps Server", which is the on-prem version.
The problem I've seen is that someone posted a question tagged Azure-DevOps but they really meant Azure-DevOps-Server.
The solution was to fix the tagging issue, but maybe we could think of a better way to differentiate (e.g. rename Azure-DevOps to Azure-DevOps-Service)?

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