Xcase™ creates multiple isolated, custom non-production databases.
Each environment serves specific stakeholder needs without affecting others.
Supports debugging, development, and testing with autonomous, relevant datasets.
Generates concise, representative subsets instead of full production copies.
Focuses on relevant business areas while keeping referential integrity and logical coherence.
Improves data relevance, test accuracy, and scalability.
Define specific criteria such as random samples, targeted or conditional data, and enable automated recursion to include all relevant related data. Set rules at the relationship level to incorporate associated data recursively. You can even configure it to extract children for only a percentage of a parent's records. This approach maintains the representativeness of the extracted data while keeping it concise.
The automated dataset curation ensures consistency and accuracy by adhering to relational rules defined at the model level, even when those relationships are not enabled in the database.
The extracted dataset is used to update the non-production database, either by replacing or modifying it to preserve its unique content.
Datasets are collections of definitions that reference dynamic data. A Snapshot is a static copy of the data at a specific moment.
You can compare a Dataset or a Snapshot to the data your model references. This comparison generates a detailed report of the differences.
After performing a test that alters the original data, you can restore the data to test again.
Fresh data extracted from Production is vital for quality testing and development, but it might not always be enough.
New tables or columns can exist in non-production databases and need relevant data.
Xcase™ lets you set precise rules for automatically generating such data.
Installed on a Personal Desktop, for one user
i.e $649/year- billed annually
i.e $649/year- billed annually
• Xcase is installed installed on a central Windows PC
• Multiple concurrent users can access it from their own computers
• Each user can be assigned specific modules
• Each user has his own Personal Models Folder, which can be shared with others