Elliot,
On 10/07/2011 05:05 PM, Elliot Poger wrote:
Presumably connecting to a KVM or other "fake monitor", as Ryosuke
mentions, would work.
You could try connecting VGA pins 4 (id2) and 11 (id0) to pin 5
(ground). This will signal the video controller that there's a monitor
which supports 1
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 3:06 PM, Ryosuke Niwa wrote:
> Yeah, layout tests fail on Mac without a screen connected to it. Chromium
> buildbots use Mac minis connected to KVMs for that reason. I'm actually
> surprised to learn that tests passed on a headless Mac mini.
>
Ah, then you will perhaps NOT
At least as of Snow Leopard, it was impossible to run the layout
tests, without a login-session/security context.
You would need to be physically logged into the machine, and then run
the tests from VNC/Remote Desktop for them to work. In snow leopard
SSHing to a machine (without being physically
Yeah, layout tests fail on Mac without a screen connected to it. Chromium
buildbots use Mac minis connected to KVMs for that reason. I'm actually
surprised to learn that tests passed on a headless Mac mini.
- Ryosuke
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 11:53 AM, Simon Fraser wrote:
> On Oct 7, 2011, at 11:45
On Oct 7, 2011, at 11:45 AM, Elliot Poger wrote:
> I was having problems with lots of image mismatches running WebKit layout
> tests on a headless MacPro (10.6.8). (The image diffs were very minor
> adjustments in scroll bar shading.)
>
> Eventually, out of frustration, I tried running the sam
I was having problems with lots of image mismatches running WebKit layout
tests on a headless MacPro (10.6.8). (The image diffs were very minor
adjustments in scroll bar shading.)
Eventually, out of frustration, I tried running the same test on that
headless MacPro as well as my desktop MacPro (a
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