You are testing a payment processing application that calls an external service at a bank to process monetary
transactions. The bank charges per transaction for the use of their service. You are creating an automation
suite that will be used as part of continuous testing. How could service virtualization benefit the project if a
virtualized service is created that will act in the same way as the bank application?
You are testing a payment processing application that calls an external service at a bank to process monetary
transactions. The bank charges per transaction for the use of their service. You are creating an automation
suite that will be used as part of continuous testing. How could service virtualization benefit the project if a
virtualized service is created that will act in the same way as the bank application?
You are testing a payment processing application that calls an external service at a bank to process monetary
transactions. The bank charges per transaction for the use of their service. You are creating an automation
suite that will be used as part of continuous testing. How could service virtualization benefit the project if a
virtualized service is created that will act in the same way as the bank application?
You are testing a payment processing application that calls an external service at a bank to process monetary
transactions. The bank charges per transaction for the use of their service. You are creating an automation
suite that will be used as part of continuous testing. How could service virtualization benefit the project if a
virtualized service is created that will act in the same way as the bank application?