Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-25 Thread Adam Williamson
On Tue, 2023-04-25 at 12:20 -0400, Neal Gompa wrote: > On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 12:18 PM Adam Williamson > wrote: > > > > On Tue, 2023-04-25 at 13:49 +0200, Kamil Paral wrote: > > > On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 11:39 PM Neal Gompa wrote: > > > > > > > Is there a way we can add regular testing for it

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-25 Thread Neal Gompa
On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 12:18 PM Adam Williamson wrote: > > On Tue, 2023-04-25 at 13:49 +0200, Kamil Paral wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 11:39 PM Neal Gompa wrote: > > > > > Is there a way we can add regular testing for it without making it a > > > blocker then? > > > > > > > For popular

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-25 Thread Adam Williamson
On Tue, 2023-04-25 at 13:49 +0200, Kamil Paral wrote: > On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 11:39 PM Neal Gompa wrote: > > > Is there a way we can add regular testing for it without making it a > > blocker then? > > > > For popular third-party software, I think this testing occurs quite > naturally -

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-25 Thread Kamil Paral
On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 11:39 PM Neal Gompa wrote: > Is there a way we can add regular testing for it without making it a > blocker then? > For popular third-party software, I think this testing occurs quite naturally - people just use it. E.g. Steam, Chrome, VSCode, etc. I've been running

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-20 Thread Adam Williamson
On Thu, 2023-04-20 at 17:38 -0400, Neal Gompa wrote: > On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 2:28 PM Adam Williamson > wrote: > > > > On Thu, 2023-04-20 at 08:20 -0400, Neal Gompa wrote: > > > Hey all, > > > > > > I would like for us to have some testing criteria around gaming and > > > Steam so that we can

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-20 Thread Neal Gompa
On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 2:28 PM Adam Williamson wrote: > > On Thu, 2023-04-20 at 08:20 -0400, Neal Gompa wrote: > > Hey all, > > > > I would like for us to have some testing criteria around gaming and > > Steam so that we can ensure we're offering a working gaming experience > > in Fedora Linux

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-20 Thread Neal Gompa
On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 5:14 PM Peter Robinson wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 1:20 PM Neal Gompa wrote: > > > > Hey all, > > > > I would like for us to have some testing criteria around gaming and > > Steam so that we can ensure we're offering a working gaming experience > > in Fedora Linux

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-20 Thread John P
Being that Fedora is so strongly for open source sodtware, I personally think any blockers shouldn't be from or for any 3rd party proprietary software like Steam (or NVIDIA like mentioned). I would expect any blockers to be applications or packages that come with Fedora by default. I'd be happy to

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-20 Thread Peter Robinson
On Thu, Apr 20, 2023 at 1:20 PM Neal Gompa wrote: > > Hey all, > > I would like for us to have some testing criteria around gaming and > Steam so that we can ensure we're offering a working gaming experience > in Fedora Linux releases. This is motivated by the issue we had in the > F37 cycle

Re: Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-20 Thread Adam Williamson
On Thu, 2023-04-20 at 08:20 -0400, Neal Gompa wrote: > Hey all, > > I would like for us to have some testing criteria around gaming and > Steam so that we can ensure we're offering a working gaming experience > in Fedora Linux releases. This is motivated by the issue we had in the > F37 cycle

Introducing Steam + video game testing criteria

2023-04-20 Thread Neal Gompa
Hey all, I would like for us to have some testing criteria around gaming and Steam so that we can ensure we're offering a working gaming experience in Fedora Linux releases. This is motivated by the issue we had in the F37 cycle where glibc broke popular multiplayer games[1]. I was reminded of