On Saturday 19 March 2011 05:30 PM, ubuntu-qa-requ...@lists.ubuntu.com
wrote:
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> Today's Topics:
>
>    1. Re: Newbie questions (Ronald McCollam)
>    2. Re: Ubuntu-qa Digest, Vol 41, Issue 17 (Auny kamal)
>    3. Re: Newbie questions (Joseph Areeda)
>    4. Re: Newbie questions (Jeff Lane)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 08:53:01 -0400
> From: Ronald McCollam <ronald.mccol...@canonical.com>
> To: Joseph Areeda <newsre...@areeda.com>
> Cc: ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com
> Subject: Re: Newbie questions
> Message-ID: <1300452781.2070.11.camel@cavil>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>
> On Fri, 2011-03-11 at 07:06 -0800, Joseph Areeda wrote:
>> Greetings,
> Howdy! :)
>
>> I'm just getting used to all the changes in the UI in Natty.  I'm using
>> zsync to update the daily iso.  Is it necessary [or helpful] to wipe and
>> reinstall the iso every day?  I guess since I'm having install issues, I
>> should, but it's a bit of a process.
> Do you mean wipe the [virtual] machine that you tested the install on?
> If so, not really -- the install process should do that for you as long
> as you select 'erase and use the entire disk' during install.
>
> If you mean should you delete the ISO file before running zsync,
> definitely not.  zsync will use the file you have and download only the
> parts that have changed, so you'll download much much less data (and it
> will go faster).  If you delete the ISO first, zsync will have to grab
> the entire thing.
>
> zsync performs tests to be sure you have the correct bits, but you can
> always check yourself as well.  Use 'md5sum' and the published md5sums
> on cdimage.ubuntu.com in the same directory as the ISO.
>
>> Once I install an iso, should I do apt-get upgrade or work with the
>> packages on the CD?
> That depends a bit on what you're testing.  If you're testing a
> particular image (ISO testing) you want to stick with what was installed
> from the CD.  If you're doing general testing, you can do either -- but
> if you find a bug you'll want to upgrade anyway to make sure it hasn't
> been fixed since the image was created.
>
>> What about reporting problems that show up in the logs but not in the
>> UI?  Are those worth emails to this list?  For example, I'm having
>> trouble with the Update Center so I have to run it from the command line
>> with LD_PRELOAD and in the window I see "software-center.apt.aptcache -
>> WARNING - broken packages encountered while getting deps for daily-journal"
> The deps issue is *probably* just an indication that some packages
> haven't been fully updated in the repository.  I wouldn't worry about it
> unless it persists.
>
> Why are you having to run Update Manager with LD_PRELOAD?  That one does
> sound like a bug, but it may be a known one (I haven't checked).
>
>> As the new guy, I'm a little shy about filing bug reports until I can
>> figure out if it's me or Natty.  Is it better to ask or file bugs that
>> turn out to be my inexperience?
> When in doubt, file the bug. :)  It's better to catch things as early as
> possible, and if it turns out to not be a bug it's generally pretty
> quick to tell and close it out.  Just be sure to search in launchpad
> before filing a bug to make sure it's not already there. :)
>
>> I have a lot more questions like these but let's see if this email makes
>> it to the list.
> Got it here!  Thanks for helping!
>
>  - rm
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 21:14:01 +0600
> From: Auny kamal <auny.ka...@gmail.com>
> To: ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com
> Subject: Re: Ubuntu-qa Digest, Vol 41, Issue 17
> Message-ID:
>       <aanlktim6xatnovh_mrmqp2qha41phdpukd1awv5oc...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> hi all i am onik
>
> On 18/03/2011, ubuntu-qa-requ...@lists.ubuntu.com
> <ubuntu-qa-requ...@lists.ubuntu.com> wrote:
>> Send Ubuntu-qa mailing list submissions to
>>      ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com
>>
>> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
>>      https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-qa
>> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
>>      ubuntu-qa-requ...@lists.ubuntu.com
>>
>> You can reach the person managing the list at
>>      ubuntu-qa-ow...@lists.ubuntu.com
>>
>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
>> than "Re: Contents of Ubuntu-qa digest..."
>>
>>
>> Today's Topics:
>>
>>    1. Hi Everybody (Jesus)
>>    2. Re: Hi Everybody (Sina)
>>
>>
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 1
>> Date: Thu, 17 Mar 2011 21:28:44 -0600
>> From: Jesus <jesus.mtz...@gmail.com>
>> To: Quality Assurance <ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com>
>> Subject: Hi Everybody
>> Message-ID: <4d82d16c.1020...@gmail.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>>
>> Hi everybody,
>>
>>    My name is Jesus and a few years ago I start using Ubuntu and since
>> then I've been trying to collaborate, but maybe I didn't try too hard
>> until now. What I'm expect is help in some way and retrieve some of what
>> I receive from Ubuntu collaborators and volunteers.
>>
>>    Finally what I want mostly is learn as much as I can and I really
>> hope that I can be helpful in some way or another.
>>
>> Best Regards
>>
>> Jesus
>>
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 2
>> Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 10:28:50 +0330
>> From: Sina <sina.sabb...@gmail.com>
>> To: ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com
>> Subject: Re: Hi Everybody
>> Message-ID: <4d8302aa.7090...@gmail.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>>
>> On 03/18/2011 06:58 AM, Jesus wrote:
>>> Hi everybody,
>>>
>>>    My name is Jesus and a few years ago I start using Ubuntu and since
>>> then I've been trying to collaborate, but maybe I didn't try too hard
>>> until now. What I'm expect is help in some way and retrieve some of what
>>> I receive from Ubuntu collaborators and volunteers.
>>>
>>>    Finally what I want mostly is learn as much as I can and I really
>>> hope that I can be helpful in some way or another.
>>>
>>> Best Regards
>>>
>>> Jesus
>>>
>> Hi Jesus,
>> Welcome to the community.
>>
>> Sina
>>
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> --
>> Ubuntu-qa mailing list
>> Ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com
>> Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
>> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-qa
>>
>>
>> End of Ubuntu-qa Digest, Vol 41, Issue 17
>> *****************************************
>>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 3
> Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 12:49:15 -0700
> From: Joseph Areeda <newsre...@areeda.com>
> To: ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com
> Subject: Re: Newbie questions
> Message-ID: <4d83b73b.4080...@areeda.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
>
> Thank you for the discussion Ronald.  I've been experimenting with natty 
> and gaining confidence in a VM with a little dabbling on a new system.  
> I've been working with CUDA apps on Maverick so I will probably 
> participate in the nVidia installation tests
>
> If I understand the gist of your comments I'd say:
>
> There are so many things to test that using Natty anyway I can is 
> helpful to some extent.  To test the installation uses the live CD, to 
> test the packages update regularly, to test the hardware drivers use 
> real hardware.
>
> Is that close?
>
> Some of my questions weren't clear but your discussion was useful.  My 
> first question would have been better phrased "Should I start with a 
> live CD install every time?".  And the answer is yes, if I'm testing 
> installation procedures.
>
> Your question:
>> Why are you having to run Update Manager with LD_PRELOAD?  That one does
>> sound like a bug, but it may be a known one (I haven't checked).
> Yes it is a known bug, that's how I got the work around.  Seems to be 
> fixed now, it had to with the order libraries were loaded.
>
> I've also been trying to get started with the Bug squad and now have a 
> better feel for when to report something as a bug.  I still like to get 
> a crash report request or see it twice before I do but I'm less shy 
> about filing an operator error as a bug.
>
> As a newb in qa and bug squad (not development or unix) I have to say my 
> biggest frustration is the proper answer to "where do I start?",  "what 
> do I do now?"  seems to always be "start anywhere you want and do 
> anything you want".  Not knowing what I want yet makes that weird.
>
> I'm keeping notes with a wiki page in mind for the new guy.  Like so 
> much in this business things things seem incomprehensible and 
> overwhelming one minute then trivial and obvious the next.  That makes 
> it real hard for those of you who know what you're doing to communicate 
> to those of us who haven't had that AHA moment.
>
> You've been a big help.
>
> Thanks!
> Joe
>
> On 03/18/2011 05:53 AM, Ronald McCollam wrote:
>> On Fri, 2011-03-11 at 07:06 -0800, Joseph Areeda wrote:
>>> Greetings,
>> Howdy! :)
>>
>>> I'm just getting used to all the changes in the UI in Natty.  I'm using
>>> zsync to update the daily iso.  Is it necessary [or helpful] to wipe and
>>> reinstall the iso every day?  I guess since I'm having install issues, I
>>> should, but it's a bit of a process.
>> Do you mean wipe the [virtual] machine that you tested the install on?
>> If so, not really -- the install process should do that for you as long
>> as you select 'erase and use the entire disk' during install.
>>
>> If you mean should you delete the ISO file before running zsync,
>> definitely not.  zsync will use the file you have and download only the
>> parts that have changed, so you'll download much much less data (and it
>> will go faster).  If you delete the ISO first, zsync will have to grab
>> the entire thing.
>>
>> zsync performs tests to be sure you have the correct bits, but you can
>> always check yourself as well.  Use 'md5sum' and the published md5sums
>> on cdimage.ubuntu.com in the same directory as the ISO.
>>
>>> Once I install an iso, should I do apt-get upgrade or work with the
>>> packages on the CD?
>> That depends a bit on what you're testing.  If you're testing a
>> particular image (ISO testing) you want to stick with what was installed
>> from the CD.  If you're doing general testing, you can do either -- but
>> if you find a bug you'll want to upgrade anyway to make sure it hasn't
>> been fixed since the image was created.
>>
>>> What about reporting problems that show up in the logs but not in the
>>> UI?  Are those worth emails to this list?  For example, I'm having
>>> trouble with the Update Center so I have to run it from the command line
>>> with LD_PRELOAD and in the window I see "software-center.apt.aptcache -
>>> WARNING - broken packages encountered while getting deps for daily-journal"
>> The deps issue is *probably* just an indication that some packages
>> haven't been fully updated in the repository.  I wouldn't worry about it
>> unless it persists.
>>
>> Why are you having to run Update Manager with LD_PRELOAD?  That one does
>> sound like a bug, but it may be a known one (I haven't checked).
>>
>>> As the new guy, I'm a little shy about filing bug reports until I can
>>> figure out if it's me or Natty.  Is it better to ask or file bugs that
>>> turn out to be my inexperience?
>> When in doubt, file the bug. :)  It's better to catch things as early as
>> possible, and if it turns out to not be a bug it's generally pretty
>> quick to tell and close it out.  Just be sure to search in launchpad
>> before filing a bug to make sure it's not already there. :)
>>
>>> I have a lot more questions like these but let's see if this email makes
>>> it to the list.
>> Got it here!  Thanks for helping!
>>
>>   - rm
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 4
> Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 17:48:51 -0400
> From: Jeff Lane <jeffrey.l...@canonical.com>
> To: ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com
> Subject: Re: Newbie questions
> Message-ID: <4d83d343.9070...@canonical.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
>
> On 03/18/2011 03:49 PM, Joseph Areeda wrote:
>> There are so many things to test that using Natty anyway I can is
>> helpful to some extent. To test the installation uses the live CD, to
>> test the packages update regularly, to test the hardware drivers use
>> real hardware.
>>
>> Is that close?
> Yep...
>
> Also keep in mind that the BIG thing for natty that needs a LOT of 
> testing and bug filing is Unity... Natty itself isn't too much of a 
> departure from Maverick in general terms, but Unity is the BIG thing for 
> Natty and it needs a lot of testing.
>
> The second biggest thing is uTouch, but that only works if you have 
> touch devices... I still need to buy a MagicTrackpad to do some touch 
> testing with... but a touch screen netbook or a tablet would be even 
> better :)
>
> Unfortunately, to use Unity, you need 3d, so that means either running 
> on bare metal that supports it or running on a VM that includes that 
> support (VirtualBox doesn't without addon stuffs, so getting Unity in a 
> VBox VM requires some extra work).
>
> But yeah, you got it figured out ;-)
>
>> Some of my questions weren't clear but your discussion was useful. My
>> first question would have been better phrased "Should I start with a
>> live CD install every time?". And the answer is yes, if I'm testing
>> installation procedures.
> Yep...
>
> Consider this... I do installer testing in VMs and I maintain a local 
> mirror of cdimages.ubuntu.com for doing so.
>
> I run Natty on a netbook (Lenovo S-10) and on a Laptop (Thinkpad x201) 
> and keep those up to date with package updates (except when I'm doing 
> something special like my recent Lucid -> Maverick -> Natty upgrade 
> test).  But that's my setup, and I'm weird like that :-)
>
>> As a newb in qa and bug squad (not development or unix) I have to say my
>> biggest frustration is the proper answer to "where do I start?", "what
>> do I do now?" seems to always be "start anywhere you want and do
>> anything you want". Not knowing what I want yet makes that weird.
> Unfortunately, that is the correct answer.  Perhaps there's a better way 
> to address it, but it is what it is... the things I did when I first 
> started mucking about with Linux are certainly not the things you're 
> going to want to do (that was back when you had to compile most drivers 
> on your own, compile your own kernels for everything, and use keyboards 
> carved out of stone using primitive tools).
>
> But just go where your interest lies... if you enjoy fixing bugs or 
> writing code, learn to use Launchpad and Bazaar and start contributing code.
>
> If you like working with bugs in general, triaging and even testing and 
> filing bugs is a great way to start.
>
> ISO test days are always pretty fun if you enjoy doing test cases and 
> trying to break things.
>
> And that's just three examples from a QA point of view... You could also 
> help writing translation strings if you speak other languages and want 
> to help make sure Ubuntu is translated properly.  I only mention that 
> one because it recently became a little more important to me by 
> happenstance...
>
>> I'm keeping notes with a wiki page in mind for the new guy. Like so much
>> in this business things things seem incomprehensible and overwhelming
>> one minute then trivial and obvious the next. That makes it real hard
>> for those of you who know what you're doing to communicate to those of
>> us who haven't had that AHA moment.
> That's cool... but be sure you check around the wiki first as a lot of 
> info may already exist (however, centralizing wiki information is always 
> a good idea, IMO, and I really am NOT a fan of wikis in general). 
> Speaking of which, writing and editing things on the wiki is yet another 
> way to help out if editing and writing is your cup of tea...
>
> Welcome to the party!
>
> Cheers
> Jeff
>
Hello everyone,

I am Himanshu from India.
I have gone through whole natty configuration and files.I figured out
some of the similarities between the bug of UI actually... Remember the
bug that 10.10 was having.? Users were getting the problem with some of
onboard cards (can be not sure ) that whenever they login to Ubuntu they
get the are dropped into text console instead. I don't know whether that
issue is still resolved or its open..... So i think the issue is that only.

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