webkit-patch find-flaky-tests can also show you what tests are recently flaky, but its not as nice as the dashboard.
-eric On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 12:06 PM, Ojan Vafai <[email protected]> wrote: > On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 11:44 AM, Alexey Proskuryakov <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> I agree that raising awareness of which tests or code areas are flaky >> seems useful. One problem I personally had was with digging up data on >> flakiness. The link for a dashboard that I found was >> <http://test-results.appspot.com/dashboards/flakiness_dashboard.html> - the >> URL was freezing my browser for several minutes on each move, and I couldn't >> make sense of what it was telling me UI-wise quickly enough. I'm not even >> sure how it's related to flakiness seen by commit queue, as it seems to be >> about chromium. > > That dashboard currently only supports the Chromium bots. If other bots > successfully switch over to new-run-webkit-tests, we'll be able to easily > add them to that dashboard. > The freezing issue is a recent one I plan on looking into soon. WebKit is > ridiculously slow at rendering this HTML for some reason (it's a single > large table). > The UI is very dense and confusing, but it gives you quite a bit of useful > information. Here's some limited documentation on making sense of the > dashboard > UI: http://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/developers/testing/flakiness-dashboard > Ojan > _______________________________________________ > webkit-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev > > _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev

