By reading this guide you should understand enough to start experimenting and learning more, but it does not guide you step by step through the project.
1. Creating the JUnit example project
2. JUnit Project Area users and Client Access Licenses
3. JUnit project Sprints and planned work
4. JUnit project source code
5. JUnit project builds
6. JUnit project reports (Standard edition only)
7. Exploring the JUnit project in the Web interface
| User | user ID / password | Role/Description |
|---|---|---|
| Bill Cassavelli | bill / bill | JUnit team lead. Bill is the component lead for the JUnit team. He set up the plans and is the owner of several high level work items for the release. |
| Build | build / build | Special user for running the builds |
| Freddy Freund | freddy / freddy | |
| Jason Mitchell | jason / jason | JUnit team member. A number of work items are assigned to Jason. |
| Jennifer Ginness | jennifer / jennifer | |
| Markus Kent | markus / markus | JUnit team member. A number of work items are assigned to Markus. |
| Marlene Stamp | marlene / marlene | |
| Rick Yuen | rick / rick |
For more information, see Rational Team Concert 2.0.0.2 editions and licenses and Managing client access licenses.
To assign licenses to users:
The Team Organization view only shows the users who are part of the JUnit team. To assign Client Access Licenses for other users, use the Jazz Team Server Web interface (click ). This interface lists all users on the server:

To log in as a different user, modify the properties of your repository connection and specify a different user ID:

In the Team Artifacts view, you can see that the JUnit project includes a single source control stream called JUnit, owned by the JUnit Team. The stream includes a single component, also called JUnit. In the following screenshot, the JUnit component is at the initial baseline.

In the above screenshot, the current user has loaded a repository workspace called JUnit. You can search for other users' repository workspaces, then duplicate and load them; or you can create your own repository workspace.
When a repository workspace is loaded, the projects that are part of the loaded components will be available for you to work on within your development environment. In the JUnit component, there are three projects:

Read the Overview of Rational Team Concert source control section to learn more about streams, components, repository workspaces, and other concepts.

To manually initiate a snapshot of the data:


