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Use links to view dependencies and track related work

TFS 2017 | TFS 2015 | TFS 2013

By linking work items to other work items, you can track related work, view a hierarchy of work, view dependencies, and more. By linking work items to devops and other objects, you support an auto trail of changes and enable quick navigation to work items and linked objects.

Different link types are used to link to the various objects. For example, you can use Parent/Child links to support a hierarchical tree structure of work items. The Commit and Branch link types support links between work items and Git commits and branches, respectively.

Link work items to support the following goals:

  • Track dependencies, related items, and work hierarchies
  • Track which work items are tested by test cases and test results
  • Support an audit trail of code changes and the work items they support
  • Support end-to-end traceability
  • Share information by linking work items to a network share, storyboard, or document.

This article describes the link types available for your use. You can link objects from the web portal or Visual Studio Team Explorer. For details on linking work items and deleting links, see Add link to work items.

Tip

You can set up automatic linking and other settings that link work items to Git commits, pull requests, builds, and more. To learn how, see the following resources:

View list of linked objects

To view the list of all objects linked to a work item, open the work item and choose the Links tab. The links tab indicates the count of all linked objects.

Screenshot of Links tab with count of linked objects.

Linked objects are grouped under their link type, with a count within each group. You can expand or collapse each group, and sort within each group by State, Latest Update, or Comment by choosing the corresponding column title.

For example, the following Links tab shows a portion of the 64 linked objects for a work item.

Screenshot of Links tab with many linked objects.

Links prefaced with the red exclamation mark indicate that the build, release, or other object has been deleted. This is usually due to retention policies which automatically delete these objects after a certain time period has passed.

Work items linked to work items

There are several system link types used to link work items to each other: two tree topology, one dependency topology, and one network. Tree topology links support nested hierarchies, tree queries, and several reports. Dependent links support tracking tasks that must be completed before others can be started. And, the Related link type supports connecting work items that are at the same level.

Work item link types

All two-way link types are characterized by a Forward and Reverse name, such as Parent/Child and Duplicate/Duplicate Of. When you link using one of these names, the linked work item is updated to include a link with the corresponding link type. For example, if you add a Parent link to a work item, the linked work item contains a Child link.

As a quick reference guide, use the following link types as indicated:

  • Use the Duplicate link type when two work items have been created that essentially capture the same information; close one of the work items and keep the other one active
  • Use the Parent/Child link types when you want to break down work items into smaller items—for example, break down features into stories, or stories into tasks
  • Use Predecessor-Successor link types when you want to track tasks that must be completed before others can be started; this link type is most often used when you plan work using Project
  • Use the Related link type when the work items being linked are at the same level—such as two user stories that define features that overlap one another—or to link work items that are defined in different projects or managed by different teams.

For guidance on choosing link types, review the Link type reference in the related notes section.

You can create links from within a work item form, from a work item that appears in a list of query results, in Microsoft Excel, or in Microsoft Project. You can also use any of the client programs for Team Foundation, such as Team Explorer and the web portal, to create links or attach files.

Also, you can use the context menu in the web portal or Team Explorer.

Note

For each work item, you can add a maximum of 1000 links to other work items.

You can create links between work items by using one of the links control tabs within a work item form. The user interface to link a work item differs based on the platform, version, and client you use. To link several work items to a new or existing item, see Add link to work items.

Note

Work item forms and features available to you can differ depending on whether you open the form from the web portal or Visual Studio Team Explorer.

From the new work item form, you can add a link using the Related Work section or from the Links tab.

Open a work item and choose the plus icon to add a link.

Web portal, work item form, Related work section Choose Existing item to link to a work item or other object using any supported link type. Choose New item to start a link and define a new work item at the same time. For details, see Add link to work items.

Screenshot of Related work control, link menu options.

From the Related Work or Links tab, you can also complete these actions:

From a query results page, you can also complete these actions:

  • Link selected items to a new work item
  • Link selected items to an existing work item

For details, see Add link to work items.

These features let you quickly link or change links that use the parent-child link type:

You can also use Excel to change the link structure. See Bulk add or modify work items with Excel.

Test related link types link test case management work items to one another, or to other work items. From the web portal or Microsoft Test Manager, you can view which test cases are defined for a test suite, and which test suites are defined for a test plan. However, these objects aren't linked to each other through link types.

You can link work items to test cases using the Tested/Tested By link types. You use the same link controls you use to link work items to other work items as described earlier.

The following image shows the full set of link types used in linking test management work item types. most links between test management artifacts occur by executing a task from the Test pages or Microsoft Test Manager.

Link types used to link test objects

For example, when you add Shared Steps to a Test Case, they are automatically linked using the Test Case/Shared Steps link types. See Share steps between test cases.

Test case work item form (TFS 2015)

Create shared steps

From Test you can add test plans, test suites, and test cases—which are linked, but not through a specific link type. Also, the test system creates and manages the associations of test results to test cases and test plans.

Work items linked to code artifacts and build and release pipelines

As you develop your software, you can capture which code changes and builds support the completion of a work item. In this way, your team can understand what work was done or how a bug was fixed through the audit trail of changes to the code base.

The link types used to construct these links—as illustrated in the following image—are: Branch, Build, Changeset, Commit, Pull Request, and Versioned Item.

Artifact-to-artifact link types

To learn more about the links control or to customize the Development links control, see LinksControlOptions elements, Development links control.

You can add a link from the work item to the supported artifacts using the method described earlier for linking work items. However, an easier method is to add the work item ID to a commit, pull request, changeset, or other supported Git or TFVC operation at the time you create those items. Also, you can link work items from the Development control within the work item form as described in Work items linked to Git code development.

Work items linked to Git code development

The recommended method is to drive development from the work item or add the work item ID when creating branches, commits, and pull requests.

Git lets you link work items to commits by using the Commit link type. You can do this in several ways:

  • In Visual Studio Team Explorer, add work item IDs before you commit your changes
    Add work item ID or drag items before you commit your changes
  • You can use the git-commit command and include the work item ID in your comment. For example, you apply this comment #35 Catch null exception to your commit. When you push the commit, the system creates a Commit link between the commit and work item #35.
  • And, with the Development control, you can drive your git development from the work item as shown in the following image.

Work item form, Development section

Work items linked to TFVC code development

Team Foundation version control (TFVC) lets you link work items to version control changesets or versioned source code files by using the Changeset and Versioned Item link types. When you check in pending changes or use My Work to check in changes, work items are automatically linked to your changes.

Team Explorer, My Work, Pending Changes, check in

Work items linked to a Web site, network share, storyboard, or document

You can use the Hyperlinks or Storyboard link type to link a work item to a Web site, network share, or document located on a network share. Both of these link types are one-way links. To add links of this type, you can use the same links controls described earlier for linking work items.

Use the Hyperlinks or Storyboard link type to link a work item to a URL.

By using the Storyboard link type, you differentiate the link you're adding to specify a storyboard or document that provides work item specifications. Use this link type to provide your team access to the shared file where they can add their comments.

Query for linked work items

To filter items based on hierarchical links, use the Tree of work items query type. To filter items based on all link types, use Work items and direct links.

You can search for work items that not only meet criteria for field values but also that are linked to other work items with specific types of links. This kind of query displays a primary set of work items, which meet the field criteria, and a secondary set, which is linked to items in the primary set.

For query examples, see Link and attachment queries.

Note

You can't construct a query that shows a hierarchical view of Test Plans, Test Suites, and Test Cases. These items aren't linked together using Parent/Child or any other link type. You can only view the hierarchy through the Test>Test Plans page.

You should now have a broad understanding of the various link relationships you can create to track dependencies and create an audit trail for your code development.

Once you've formed a link relationship, you can't edit the link type of that relationship from the web portal, but you can do it from Team Explorer.

For more information, see these articles:

You can view related work items and object within a work item form by installing the Work item visualization extension available from the Visual Studio Marketplace, Azure DevOps tab.