Navigate the web portal in Azure DevOps

Azure DevOps Services | Azure DevOps Server 2022 - Azure DevOps Server 2019

The web portal for Azure DevOps is organized around a set of services and administrative pages and several task specific features, such as the search box. The service labels differ depending on whether you work from Azure DevOps Services or Azure DevOps on premises and its version.

Important

Select a version from Azure DevOps Content Version selector.

Select the version of this article that corresponds to your platform and version. The version selector is above the table of contents. Look up your Azure DevOps platform and version.

Each service provides you with one or more pages, which support many features and functional tasks. Within a page, you might then have a choice of options to select a specific artifact or add an artifact.

The web portal for Azure DevOps Server is organized around a set of services—such as, Overview, Boards, Repos, Pipelines, Test Plans, and **Artifacts—as well as administrative pages and several task-specific features such as the search box. Each service provides you with one or more pages that support many features and functional tasks. Within a page, you might then have a choice of options to select a specific artifact or add an artifact.

Each service provides you with one or more pages that support many features and functional tasks. Within a page, you might then have a choice of options to select a specific artifact or add an artifact.

Here's what you need to know to get up and running using the web portal.

Note

Only those services that are enabled will appear in the user interface. For example, if Boards is disabled, then Boards or Work and all pages associated with that service won't appear. To enable or disable a service, see Turn an Azure DevOps service on or off.

You select services—such as Boards, Repos, and **Pipelines—from the sidebar and pages within those services.

Vertical sidebar

Now that you have an understanding of how the user interface is structured, it's time to get started using it. As you can see, there are numerous features and functionality.

If all you need is a code repository and bug tracking solution, then start with Get started with Git and Manage bugs.

To start planning and tracking work, see About Agile tools.

Connect to the web portal, user accounts, and licensing

You connect to the web portal through a supported web browser—such as the latest versions of Microsoft Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox. Only users added to a project can connect, which is typically done by the organization owner.

Five account users are free as are Visual Studio subscribers and stakeholders. After that, you need to pay for more users. Find out more about licensing from Azure DevOps pricing.

Limited access is available to an unlimited number of stakeholders for free. For details, see Work as a Stakeholder.

You connect to the web portal through a supported web browser—such as the latest versions of Microsoft Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox. Only users who added to a project can connect, which is typically done by a member of the Project Administrators group.

Limited access is available to an unlimited number of stakeholders for free. For details, see Work as a Stakeholder. Most regular contributors must have a TFS client access license (CAL). All Visual Studio subscriptions include a TFS CAL.

Refresh the web portal

If data doesn't appear as expected, the first thing to try is to refresh your web browser. Refreshing your client updates the local cache with changes that were made in another client or the server. To refresh the page or object you're currently viewing, refresh the page or choose the Refresh icon Refresh icon if available.

To avoid potential errors, you should refresh your client application under the following circumstances:

  • Process changes are made
  • Work item type definitions are added, removed, renamed, or updated
  • Area or iteration paths are added, removed, renamed, or updated
  • Users are added to or removed from security groups or permissions are updated
  • A team member adds a new shared query or changes the name of a shared query
  • A build definition is added or deleted
  • A team or project is added or deleted

Differences between the web portal and Visual Studio

Although you can access source code, work items, and builds from both clients, some task specific tools are only supported in the web browser or an IDE but not in both. Supported tasks differ depending on whether you connect to a Git or TFVC repository from Team Explorer.


Web portal

Visual Studio



Note

Visual Studio 2019 version 16.8 and later versions provide a new Git menu for managing the Git workflow with less context switching than Team Explorer. Procedures provided in this article under the Visual Studio tab provide information for using the Git experience as well as Team Explorer. To learn more, see Side-by-side comparison of Git and Team Explorer.

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