Hi Javier, thanks for your email. Nice to see other fellow Spanish collaborator in the list (apart from the ones I already knew :)!
Regarding the blueprints, we normally put them together before UDS and discuss them there. For those of you who weren't there, this is the overall strategy we presented for the coming two years. It is only very clear for the next six months and we will be defining together the coming cycles as we get closer and see what we have achieved: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QATeam/AutomatedTesting/Strategy As per the definition of test case, that is my mistake, I should have pointed to the exact same public page in the wiki (I will change that in the blueprint): https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QATeam/TestCase As you can see the blueprints more or less match what is explained in the strategy, some of them have tasks that we also need to do due to the lab requiring updates, etc. that are not necessarily there. This cycle is all about enabling the developers and engineering teams do their job better. Next one will be about adding more test cases (increasing the coverage) to our test suites. As I said, I will try to put a list of tasks together for Monday, where people can choose the ones they like from the ones we have available and are doing in those blueprints. Things keep coming up and we keep adding more things to the blueprints as we go along. One thing you could do is express your interest in one blueprint or another and we can match tasks with people's levels of expertise or get the people with less experience to collaborate with the more experienced ones. We can also look into the minimal CDs testing if you want, but at the moment we are going to focus on getting right the ISOs we have available, before expanding into new things. More info to come soon, Gema On 01/12/11 07:45, Javier Domingo wrote: > Hi all, > > First of all, I want to say that I have been reading all the mails you > have regularly sent, and I want to say I'm glad that there are going to > happen big changes. > > Refering to those changes, thought I have not been quite active this > year, I am particularly interested on minimal CD installations. I think > they are the best way to install OS for people that already knows they > want it, and they don't want to install it and then update it [1]. In > this way, I would like to see those Minimal CDs into the iso tracker. I > don't know actually why they are not there. > > What involves the test-case definition blueprint, I am not allowed to > see the canonical wiki (don't know if this is actually pretended). And > it would be nice an explanation of what blueprints, etc. are. I actually > pretend to do more than just testing, I have no idea of how are things > organized, which teams there are, etc. > > Greetings, > > Javier Domingo > > > [1] I would like to say that I random times experienced problems when > installing from minimal CDs. Those times were when I used my spain's (my > country) archive copy. I don't know if there might not be any > difference, but after selecting the archive, it gets stuck randomly.I > would like to have more facilities at install time to know what is > happening (any debug info or sth). Would be perfect a debugging flag at > boot time or something. > > > > -- Gema Gomez-Solano <gema.gomez-sol...@canonical.com> QA Team https://launchpad.net/~gema.gomez Canonical Ltd. http://www.canonical.com -- Ubuntu-qa mailing list Ubuntu-qa@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-qa