Fedora-Atomic 27-20180308.0 compose check report

2018-03-07 Thread Fedora compose checker
No missing expected images.

Passed openQA tests: 2/2 (x86_64)
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Mail generated by check-compose:
https://pagure.io/fedora-qa/check-compose
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Re: Introduction - James Hawkins

2018-03-07 Thread James Hawkins

>Hi James,
>

>Welcome to Fedora QA Team!  So good you always come back, it happens
the same to me.
>Looking forward to see your contributions.

>Regards,
>Silvia
>FAS:  Lailah

Thanks Silvia. I'm happy to be here and looking forward to being a
part of the team and actually contributing something.  I forgot to
mention my FAS is jhawk. 

>Welcome James, thanks for volunteering! I have sponsored your group
 >membership. Do you think there's enough info on the wiki etc. to
help
 >you move forward, or is there anything we could help with further?
 >Thanks!

Hi Adam, I think the wiki is a good start so far for helping me get my
system setup for testing. (Setting the repos, setting up Karma, etc.)
I'm still a bit unclear as to how to test certain packages if I'm not
using anything on my system that requires them. I guess learning the
requirements of certain packages and what they do will help know what
to look for and test as I go along. The wiki is pretty straightforward
for testing pre-releases and I'm moving forward with testing the
Fedora 28 branch. I've also been making it a habit to hang out in the
#fedora-qa (and other Fedora related) IRC chat. You'll find me lurking
there with the username grimhawk.

James


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Re: Introduction

2018-03-07 Thread Sumantro Mukherjee


- Original Message -
> From: "Luis Roca" 
> To: test@lists.fedoraproject.org
> Sent: Wednesday, March 7, 2018 7:46:16 AM
> Subject: Introduction
> 
> Hello Fedora testers,
> My name is Luis and I am new to Fedora (late last year), not so new to Linux
> and quite less so to Unix. I've been impressed with Fedora and its
> community, with a desire to finally jump into serving a project. Having been
> introduced to BDD and exploratory testing I became interested in QA work. I
> thought Fedora would be a good place to pursue those interests while
> contributing to a project I've quickly grown to admire.
> 
> I look forward to working with each of you,
> Luis Roca
> luisr...@protonmail.com
> Twitter: @roca
> IRC: lroca
> 
> 
> Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email.
> 
> 
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Hey Luis,

Welcome to Fedora QA, It will be great if you apply for qa FAS group.
You can start off by testing updates in [http://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/] for 
Fedora 26, Fedora 27, and Fedora 28.  Update testing is where a tester tests a 
package and gives out a +1 Karma for PASS and -1 Karma for FAIL. You can go to 
bodhi.fedoraproject.org where you can sort the packages with Fedora Releases 
and tags viz "pending" & "testing". You can read much about update testing here 
[1]. You can also, use fedora-easy-karma for giving out feedbacks.


you can start with  Release Validation testing. In Release Validation all you 
need to do is to check the nightly/TC/RC against certain criteria. For example, 
let's take the latest compose (Fedora 28 Branched 20180301.n.1), you can run 
test cases which are mentioned [2] and submit your results in the test matrix.

Note that each of the test cases[3] will have "How to test" section which will 
have the steps (to be executed sequentially) and if the results match with the 
expected results you can mark it as pass by editing the wiki page 
{{result|PASS|}} . Always make sure to check for "Associated 
release criterion" which can be found on the top of test case page, if your 
test case fails you can mark it fail by editing the wiki page 
{{result|FAIL|}} and file a bug at RHBZ [4] under Fedora.


 You can always find the ‘current’ validation pages using these addresses:

https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Results:Current_Installation_Test
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Results:Current_Base_Test
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Results:Current_Desktop_Test
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Results:Current_Server_Test
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Results:Current_Cloud_Test


For Automation, you can start looking at Taskotron 
[https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Taskotron]
and Open QA[https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/OpenQA].



https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Updates_Testing
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Test_Results:Fedora_28_Branched_20180301.n.1_Summary?rd=Test_Results:Current_Summary
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Testcase_USB_stick_Live_luc
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/

Feel free to ping us on IRC if you need any help #fedora-qa@freenode.


Thanks
//sumantrom
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