Hi!

Yes, I would like to run performance tests. I've started to look into the
link about  automated testing that you reffered to.
There it says that I have to disable color calibration. But is this
possible in Windows Vista.? I just can't find out how to do it. As far as I
understand it this is only possible in Windows 7- which I don't have
unfortunately.

Anders
2013/2/26 Yi Xuan Liu <[email protected]>

> Rob, I agree with you. The test environment configuration would impact the
> performance test results. Therefore, we should keep the test configuration
> unchanged between build to build.
>
> I checked performance bugs list in bugzilla. 5 performance bugs are found
> in automation performance test, such as memory leak and save performance
> issue.
>
> Lots of performance bugs are found in AOO daily usage. Therefore, for
> volunteers who are not willing to run automation performance, you can also
> report bugs for any performance issue and it will be helpful for us.
>
> On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 9:16 PM, Rob Weir <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > On Sun, Feb 24, 2013 at 11:42 PM, Yi Xuan Liu <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> > > Hi, all:
> > >
> > > AOO 4.0 will release. Performance plays an important role in software
> > > quality. Is there any volunteer who want to run performance test?
> > >
> > > I've run AOO performance test on my own machines. I've tried on 3
> > > platforms: Windows XP, Ubuntu 10.04, Mac Mac OS 10.7.3. The test
> > configures
> > > are as follows:
> > >
> > > (1) W500; CPU:2.53 GHz; Mem: 3GB; OS: XP SP3
> > > (2) Ubuntu; CPU: Interl® Core™ 2 Duo 2 GHz; Mem: 3GB; OS: Ubuntu 10.04
> > > (3) Mac; CPU: Interl® Core™ 2 Duo 2 GHz; Mem: 3GB; OS: Mac OS 10.7.3
> > >
> >
> > I assume the volunteer does not need to have exactly the same machine
> > type as you had.   But they need some stability in the configuration.
> >  A performance test might be run first on the AOO 3.4.1 release to
> > establish a baseline.  Then re-test on a current 4.0 snapshot build.
> > And then re-run on new dev snapshot builds, maybe once a week.
> >
> > The goal is to detect performance regressions early, so developers can
> fix
> > it.
> >
> > The technical challenge here is to preserve a stable machine
> > configuration.  If the machine changes, because of an OS upgrade, or a
> > changed hard drive, or a different network environment, or because of
> > a new anti-virus product, then that confuses things.  We need to
> > "control all the variables".
> >
> > One approach to controlling all of the variables is to have a machine
> > that is used for nothing but performance testing.  That way we know
> > the machine's base performance does not change.
> >
> > Another approach is re-run the baseline AOO 3.4.1 performance tests
> > each week.  This is more tolerant of changes in machine configuration,
> > etc.
> >
> > -Rob
> >
> >
> > > The test scenario include: AOO startup, file open, and save.
> > >
> > > Volunteers could run performance test on other platforms.
> > >
> > > All the automation scripts could be downloaded in AOO project. And it
> is
> > > not difficult to set the automation environment. You could follow the
> > guide:
> > > http://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/QA/test_automation_guide
> > >
> > > For any questions, be free to contact with me :)
> >
>

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