Martin Hinshelwood's ALM Blog

A Scottish software developer: SSW Solution Architect, Microsoft Visual Studio ALM MVP & Scrum Developer Trainer

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www.SSW.com.auSSW was the first company in the world outside of Microsoft to deploy Visual Studio 2010 Team Foundation Server to production, not once, but twice.

Team Foundation Server

Visual Studi2010 ALM SSW provides expert Visual Studio ALM guidance including installation, configuration and customisation through our four Microsoft Visual Studio ALM MVP’s in three countries; Australia, Beijing and the UK. They have experience deploying to small development shops all the way through to large blue chips.

Call us on +(44) 141 416 0993 or +(61) 2 9953 3000 to get started!

Professional Scrum Developer Training

Professional Scrum Developer Training SSW has six Professional Scrum Developer Trainers who specialise in training your developers in implementing Scrum with Microsoft's Visual Studio ALM tools.

Call us on +(44) 141 416 0993 or +(61) 2 9953 3000 to get started!

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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

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VSTS

Easy peasy, all you need is the full URL from the project collection and you will be able to connect directly to it as if it was a different Team Server. This functionality was added with Visual Studio 2008 Service Pack 1, so if you don’t have SP1 installed yet you had better get it:

Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 Service Pack 1

You need to use the following in the connection box “http://[tfsserver]:[port]/[vdir]/[projectCollection]

Although this looks complicated, it makes some sense at least, but is nowhere as nice as using the 2010 connection box:

image

One of the new things in TFS 2010 is that you can specify a virtual directory that it will run under, the default being “tfs” so you can have everything on the same ports.

So, if your tfs server name is “tfs01.domainname.com” and you take the default vdir of “tfs”, all you need is the collection name. So you could end up with “http://tfs01.domainname.com:80/tfs/MyNewCollection”

image

Backward compatibility +1

Connecting from Visual Studio 2005 Service Pack 1 is a different story, there is currently no way to connect VS2005 to TFS2010. There has been some discussion around this and its importance to Business Intelligence teams. If you are just opening VS2005/VS2003 occasionally then you could probably get away with using 2010 to control TFS and working in 2005, but many BI developers are still spending a considerable amount of there time in 2005 :(

posted on Tuesday, May 26, 2009 4:05 PM

Feedback

# re: Connecting VS2008 to any TFS2010 Project Collection 8/11/2009 12:40 PM ITLackey
Thanks for the info! I was hoping you could let me know if there are any known issues or limitation that are expected with using TS 2010 with a TFS 2008 server? Our team will probably move to the new IDE long before the server folks get around to upgrading the TFS server.

Thanks again!

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