The city is called Reykjavík (note the í). Previously our search
worked because the search function also looked in the name of the
timezone, and the *timezone* name is "Atlantic/Reykjavik" - i.e.
it's really Latin-ized in the name of the timezone. However,
upstream intentionally stopped including the timezone name in
search matches:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-clocks/-/merge_requests/199
so that doesn't work any more. Just searching for "Reykjav"
should solve the problem.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In 43-alpha it's gone, the replacement is Troubleshooting ->
Debugging Information. But it would be a pain to write two
forks in the code for handling both cases, and there's a ton
more stuff in the new-style About dialog that we're not
checking either. I don't think we really need to click on all
of it, and this bit of it isn't super important. So on the
whole I'd rather just keep things simple and drop this check.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
the new_file test failed today because it seems g-t-e now pre-
fills a suggested filename, with extension, and pre-selects the
name part but not the extension part. So when we type 'list.md'
we wound up saving the file as 'list.md.md'. I think hitting
ctrl-a should fix this, and not break when run on older versions
of g-t-e if we ever do that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
F35 to F36 FreeIPA server upgrade test is failing because the
latest F36 package is lower-versioned than the latest F35
package, and FreeIPA's upgrade scripts are written to fail if
this is the case. The update bumps the F36 NVR to be higher
than the F35 one.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
aarch64 looks like it often needs more time to settle after
restoring from snapshot before trying a key combo.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
bodhi-client should depend on it, but technically since we have
code that calls `koji` directly here, we should probably also
include it in our install anyway, so not marking this as a
workaround.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
That last commit to 'fix' the Clocks tests when Silverblue needs
location access to be granted wasn't complete, I left the needle
out. D'oh. Take the chance to give it a better name too.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Upstream recently implemented support for using the variable
RETRY to specify how many times a test should be restarted on
failure. This is something we currently handle with a downstream
openQA plugin; if we switch to using this upstream feature
instead, we can drop the plugin.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The previous commit is the correct fix for the problem here.
Adding a needle that matches on the tray icon was not correct,
we need to be sure that we can access the Updates view from
within Discover itself.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
If there are too many categories, we don't see the Updates entry
on the left, and this has been breaking Rawhide and F36 tests.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This PR changes the way to download the test data into the VM.
Although it does not use a disk image as suggested in one
of the review, it does not clone the entire repository, but
a simple tar.gz file that holds the data which will be
distributed into the directory structure.
This way, the amount of data needed to be downloaded dropped
from approximately 50MB to below 2MB.
Also, the existing test suites were adapted to this situation.
Clocks' aaa_setup did not ever actually check the app launched
properly. It also doesn't handle granting permissions if
necessary, which the apps_startstop test for Clocks does do.
This makes the permission check in the apps_startstop test more
efficient, and adds it to the Clocks app aaa_setup test too.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This was just doing something silly before, but with recent
os-autoinst having function signatures, it actually causes the
test to fail because '5' isn't a sane value for the argument
this was setting before. Fix it to set the timeout, as it was
trying to do all along.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>