Hi all,
From a tester's views, I choose Ubuntu 12.04 as a test host. Firefox 11.0
is a default web browser in Ubuntu 12.04. Ubuntu 12.04 is a long-term support
release. It has continuous hardware support improvements as well as guaranteed
security and support updates until April 2017. However, Ubuntu 13.10(the latest
version) will be supported for *ONLY* 9 months. So I think that Ubuntu 12.04 is
a popular version and so many users would use it. Choose it as a test
environment would covers a great percentage of users.
Maybe we can create a recommendation list of web-browser for customers so
that it can lead to good user experience.
Thanks.
Yuan
On 14-03-20 02:14 AM, Damian, Alexandru wrote:
Our goal is not "decent" but complete HTML5 compatibility.
The target is that our HTML output is to be validated by HTML5 validators with
no errors shown. We already selected the industry-standard HTML5 validators to
verify this.
Specifically, we are using in development http://validator.w3.org/ through a
browser extension. This MUST be automated at a certain point.
What I'm trying to avoid here is coding specifically for a target browser or
platform. I suggest to not restrict testing to a certain
browser/platform/version, but use what ever the tester uses in real life.
In case of presentation bugs are discovered, first we have to rule out an
issue with the browser of choice by testing visual reproducibility with
another browser on the same page and verifying browser's HTML5 compatibility.
For visual reference, widgets in the page change across different platforms
and browsers. Do we have test cases for the appearance ?
The test cases should not be dependent or executed with a specified
platform/browser version.
Cheers,
Alex
On Wed, Mar 19, 2014 at 4:23 PM, Barros Pena, Belen
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
We should probably have raised this question earlier and had a plan in
place, but hey, better late ... The question is: which browsers should we
be using as a reference for QA purposes? Our guideline here is decent
HTML5 compatibility, but we never qualified what 'decent' means.
The other reference we could use is traffic to the Yocto Project website.
Visits are mainly coming from Chrome 32 and 33 on Windows, and Firefox 26
and 27 on Linux. I can put together more detailed numbers if anybody wants
to see them.
Those might be a bit too cutting edge, but could guide our decision
somehow. QA is currently testing with Firefox 11: that is probably too
old.
In light of the above, any suggestions about which browsers we should use
for testing?
Thanks!
Belén
--
Alex Damian
Yocto Project
SSG / OTC
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