An prototype for one language would be easy, a few hours or work. The more languages (browsers, operating systems...), the more complicated it would become.
This sounds like a fun project. Want to pair on it? We could timebox for 4 hours and see how far we get. (If our managers agree that that is something we should do.) #wikidev17 would probably be a good time to pair in-person, if both of us are there. If not, we can pair via hangouts and/or IRC. Željko On Wed, Sep 21, 2016 at 7:38 PM, Andre Klapper <aklap...@wikimedia.org> wrote: > A clueless late night thought, probably somewhere between Pywikibot, > Selenium, headless browsers, and helping our communities. > > Have some code that > * goes to $langcode.$site.org > * logs in on that site > * enables all gadgets in user preferences of that sites > * goes to a random page on that sites > * attaches ?action=edit&debug=true to the URL > * collects all JS error messages, deprecation warnings, and related > URLs for broken gadgets etc. (browser's developer tools' console) > * knows the corresponding village pump of that site, or gathers > the user account who was the last editor of the affected gadget > * posts the error message and the gadget URL on that local village > pump or the user talk page of the last gadget editor. > > Has someone tried that before? > Do I miss any steps? > And does that make any sense? > > Thanks, > andre > -- > Andre Klapper | Wikimedia Bugwrangler > http://blogs.gnome.org/aklapper/ > > _______________________________________________ > QA mailing list > QA@lists.wikimedia.org > https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/qa >
_______________________________________________ QA mailing list QA@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/qa