{"id":11419,"date":"2017-07-03T17:35:26","date_gmt":"2017-07-03T12:05:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cigniti.com\/blog\/?p=11419"},"modified":"2017-07-03T17:35:59","modified_gmt":"2017-07-03T12:05:59","slug":"service-virtualization-helps-accelerate-testing-cycles","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.cigniti.com\/blog\/service-virtualization-helps-accelerate-testing-cycles\/","title":{"rendered":"Service Virtualization: How it helps Accelerate Testing Cycles?"},"content":{"rendered":"

What do you do if the purpose of a cyber-attack is to create disruption? Post the recent Ransomeware cyber-attacks, security researchers are anticipating whether a virus is being designed and released just to create disruption. The overall premise of testing and developing applications changes in a backdrop that implies disruption. Service Virtualization can come in handy to determine the detrimental impact of a virus on an application with its fundamental factors.<\/p>\n

Virtualization has matured as a technology over the years, with many advanced best practices. The practice has been endorsed by teams to emulate behaviour of particular components in varied component-based applications \u2013 API-driven, Cloud-based, service-oriented architectures, etc. Teams leverage the virtualized dependent components to check the behaviour of the application under test (AUT). Practically, it is miles different from mocking a particular environment.<\/p>\n

Security, Performance, Resilience, are some prerequisites of a robust and market-ready application. Enterprises need to pace up to the market, but not at the cost of losing out on the quality. Let\u2019s look at some best practices of Service Virtualization that can be recommended to ensure a faster but quality-empowered testing cycle.<\/p>\n