https://bz.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=118983
Kathrin Schellmann <[email protected]> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |kathrin_schellmann@hotmail. | |com --- Comment #6 from Kathrin Schellmann <[email protected]> --- Kathrin Schellmann retesting this issue on the 22.10.2016 For my tests I used two computers: 1. Windows 10 Pro N 64bit with Open Office 4.12 [(Build:9782) - Rev. 1709696] and MS Office 2007 [(12.06758.5000) SP3 MSO (12.0.6755.5000)] 2. Windows 10 Pro 64bit with Open Office 4.12 [(Build:9782) - Rev. 1709696] and MS Office 2007 [(12.0.4518.1014) MSO (12.0.4518.1014)] I prepared several documents for my tests and stored them in a folder that was shared in the network: • ODS (made in MS Excel and in OpenOffice) • ODT (made in MS Word and in OpenOffice) • ODP (made in MS Power Point and in OpenOffice) • DOC (made in MS Word and in OpenOffice) • DOCX (made in MS Word) • XLS (made in MS Excel and in OpenOffice) • XLSX (made in MS Excel) • PPT (made in MS Power Point and in OpenOffice) • PPTX (made in MS Power Point) Test steps: 1. Open a document on PC 1 with user1 2. Open the same document on PC 2 with user2 Results: Opening the document in the same office suite on both computers, e.g. in OpenOffice, results in the correct current user name (user1) shown in the 'document in use' info box. Opening the document in a different office suite on both computers (e.g. MS Word on PC 1 and Open Office on PC 2) results in "unknown user" (AOO)/"different user" (MS Office) shown in the 'document in use' info box instead of the correct current user name. All the above-mentioned formats showed the same behaviour. Creating one format in different office suites did not change the outcome of the test; A DOC file made in MS Word behaved the same as one made in OpenOffice. I could not recreate the bug with the wrong user shown in the 'document in use' info box, but that might be my lack of more users in my network. Expected results: Opening a document in different office suites on multiple computers at the same time shows the correct current user name in the 'document in use' info box. Opening a document that is currently in use is a frequent occurrence in a company where multiple users work on the same document. Knowing who exactly works on it, makes it possible to make faster arrangements to release the document for another user and it helps with trouble-shooting in case the document is still locked although it was saved & closed by the previous user. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the issue.
