Testing
From openSUSE
| Revision as of 15:41, 1 August 2009 Davmont (Talk | contribs) link to the spanish article ? Previous diff |
Revision as of 08:26, 14 September 2009 Holgisms (Talk | contribs) Added openSUSE Core Test Team Next diff → |
||
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
| If you need help/support in testing, if you have topics to discuss or if you are just interested in this area, join the '''opensuse-testing@opensuse.org''' mailinglist (see [[Template:Mailinglists_openSUSE#Development_Lists|Mailinglists]] page how to subscribe). | If you need help/support in testing, if you have topics to discuss or if you are just interested in this area, join the '''opensuse-testing@opensuse.org''' mailinglist (see [[Template:Mailinglists_openSUSE#Development_Lists|Mailinglists]] page how to subscribe). | ||
| Furthermore the [[QA_Team|QA Team]] will be open for input at any time. | Furthermore the [[QA_Team|QA Team]] will be open for input at any time. | ||
| + | |||
| + | == openSUSE Core Test Team == | ||
| + | The [[OpenSUSE Testing Core Team]] is in charge of Tesing the openSUSE distro. | ||
Revision as of 08:26, 14 September 2009
Thank you for your interest in helping to test openSUSE Linux. It is people like you that make open source software happen.
Testing and finding issues is a critical component to the delivery of any software, and this page aims to bring together the required resources in one place. Especially to help new testers, but also be a resource for more experienced testers to help them maintain testing of a high quality and consistency between releases.
Contents |
The openSUSE Development Cycle
In addition to the current stable release of openSUSE Linux, there is a development version of openSUSE called Factory. On the roadmap you will see development releases such as Milestones and Release Candidates, these releases are snapshots in the ever changing Factory.
- Factory - More detail about the ever changing development tree.
- Factory/News - News about changes in Factory - in fact mostly about changes between the release snapshots.
Testing is generally done on the latest Development Release, with additional testing sometimes done using updates from Factory to verify bugfixes.
Bug Reporting
One very important aspect of being a good tester is to be able to report the issues that you find, that is, to 'Submit a Bug Report'. They need to be as clear as possible, so that the developers can understand exactly what component has an issue and under what circumstances. Don't worry, there are a lot of resources to help you learn how to write a good bug report.
Testing Mailinglist
If you need help/support in testing, if you have topics to discuss or if you are just interested in this area, join the opensuse-testing@opensuse.org mailinglist (see Mailinglists page how to subscribe). Furthermore the QA Team will be open for input at any time.
openSUSE Core Test Team
The OpenSUSE Testing Core Team is in charge of Tesing the openSUSE distro.
Test Plans
- SyncML OBEX Client plugin allows many modern mobile phones to do a local synchronization, help to test on your model.
- Help Update the HCL with information from your hardware.
Automation tools
- GUI Automation tools
- Linux Desktop Testing Project (LDTP in short)
| This page is a work in progress. If you have read this far, why don't you click on Edit and help? |
| This article is a stub! This article needs to be expanded. You are welcome to help in line with the openSUSE Style Guide. See also the other articles that need to be expanded. |

