And how do you tell if a test is using front buffer rendering? Is that
the only situation, or are there others?

On Fri, Nov 20, 2015 at 3:41 PM, Dylan Baker <baker.dyla...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Any tests that use front buffer rendering cannot be run concurrently. I
> think that's some other cases.
>
> On Nov 20, 2015 12:32, "Ilia Mirkin" <imir...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>>
>> It looks like we're up to something like 1K non-concurrent piglit
>> tests... maybe more. Can someone who actually understands the issues
>> explain what makes a piglit test unreliable when run concurrently with
>> another test? Then we can go and enable concurrency on probably 75% of
>> the currently-marked-nonconcurrent tests.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>>   -ilia
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