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Schedule projects using Microsoft Project

TFS 2018 | TFS 2017 | TFS 2015 | TFS 2013

You can use Project to plan and schedule work items that you define in Team Foundation Server (TFS). Some features may require customizing the Microsoft Project Mapping file which is only supported for the On-Premises XML process model. For an overview of process models and supported customizations, see Customize your work tracking experience.

Important

Microsoft Project Integration and the TFSFieldMapping command are not supported for:

  • Visual Studio 2019 and Azure DevOps Office® Integration 2019
  • Azure DevOps Server 2019 and later versions, including Azure DevOps Services.

However, full support for Microsoft Excel integration is maintained and supports bulk import and update of work items. Alternatives to using Microsoft Project include the following:

You can use Project 2010 or later versions to plan projects, schedule tasks, assign resources, and track changes to data that is stored in Azure Boards and TFS. By using Project, you can access many tools and functions through the simplified graphical menus and Office Ribbon. The Team tab menu, as shown in the following illustration, displays the same functions that are available from the Team tab in Excel.

Note

For version compatibility and Office clients, see Requirements and compatibility, Office.

Project team tab ribbon

Team Menu ribbon

Project 2010 and later versions support several new project fields and functions. Depending on how you use Project to schedule team tasks, you may want to update the task work item form to display some of the new fields. To maintain new Project fields in both your project plan and in TFS, you have to customize the task work item type and the Microsoft Project Field mapping file for the project.

Note

Customizing the Project Field mapping file is only support for TFS 2018 and earlier versions.

Schedule tasks manually or automatically

By using Task Mode, which is accessed through the following Ribbon menu, you have more flexibility in the way you and team members schedule tasks.

Task mode scheduling ribbon menu options

By using manually scheduled tasks, which are indicated by the Pinned task icon icon, you can manually schedule the duration and the start and finish dates for a task. Team members can place a manually scheduled task anywhere in their schedules, and Project will not move it.

Important

In order for team members to manually schedule their tasks, you'll have to add the necessary project fields to the task work item. You can only modify the task WIT definition for the On-premises XML process model.

Start and finish dates for autoscheduled tasks (Auto Update Task Mode icon) are determined by the scheduling engine based on task dependencies and the project calendar, as in previous releases of Project. Project managers who are accustomed to automatic scheduling with past versions of Project can turn the new manual scheduling feature off for specific tasks or the entire project.

Perform what-if analysis by inactivating select tasks (Project 2010 Professional Edition Project Professional only).

By using Active Mode, you can determine the impact to the schedule when you specify some tasks as inactive. When you mark a task as inactive, you maintain all the data that is associated with the task, but you remove it from consideration in the schedule and resource allocation.

Important

When you inactivate a task in Project, you do not inactivate the task in Azure Boards and TFS. Inactive tasks are published and refreshed according to their Publish and Refresh assignment in the Project plan.

Scalable 64-bit support. With 64-bit compatibility, Project provides performance improvements to support creation of very large and complex projects.

Add Project fields to TFS (On-premises XML)

For team members to be able to view or modify new Project fields from the web portal or Team Foundation client, you must customize both the task WIT definition and update the Microsoft Project Mapping file. By making these changes, you maintain the data fields in both the Project plan and in the work tracking database. You can make these fields read-only or modifiable. You can use them to find work items by using queries and construct reports. Specifically, you can add fields that enable team members to specify their start and end dates for pinned tasks. By adding these fields to the task work item form, you can view and modify the start and end dates using a Team Foundation client.

The following table provides the sequence of tasks to perform and related topics for completing these tasks.

Determine the Project fields to add to your project

If you want team members to schedule tasks manually from a Team Foundation client, you must add the Project fields that store the manual date and duration for tasks to the work item form and project mapping file. You can use the following information to determine which of these Project scheduling fields to add:

  • To support manually scheduled tasks, add one or more of the pjTaskStartText, pjTaskFinishText, or pjTaskDurationText fields to the mapping file. You must map pj*Text fields to String fields in Team Foundation. These fields accept text strings only.

  • The pjTaskStart, pjTaskFinish, and pjTaskDuration fields contain the scheduled committed dates and duration of a task.

    Tip

    By default, these fields are mapped based on the process template that was used to create your project.

  • The scheduling engine uses the pjTaskScheduledStart, pjTaskScheduledFinish, and pjTaskScheduledDuration fields to store the calculated dates and duration of an autoscheduled task.

  • The pjTaskManual, pjTaskPlaceholder, and pjTaskWarning fields indicate whether a task is scheduled manually or automatically, whether a manual task has insufficient information to be scheduled, and whether a Project has identified a potential scheduling conflict with the start date, finish date, or duration, respectively, of a manually scheduled task.

To learn more, see:

Add fields to the task work item type

To update a work item type, you add a FIELD element for each new field you want to track and a CONTROL element for each field you want to display on the work item form. You use the witadmin command-line tool to export and import the definition file for each work item type.

Tip

With witadmin, you can import and export definition files. Other tools you can use include the Process Editor (requires that you have installed a version of Visual Studio). Install the TFS Process Template editor from the Visual Studio Marketplace. You can use this version of the Process Editor to modify the old-style work item forms. You can't use it to edit forms associated with the new web forms.

Or, you can use the TFS Team Project Manager, an open-source client available from github.

For more information, see:

Update the Microsoft Project Mapping File

The project mapping file determines how the fields in each task are mapped to fields in Team Foundation and how each field is published and refreshed. Each project is associated with its own mapping file. You use the TFSFieldMapping command-line tool to download and upload the project mapping XML file.

To learn more, see TFSFieldMapping.