Creating the .invisible.txt file was done using non-assertion commands.
The tests have been failing for some and it seems like the commands
did not run correctly. Running them with assertions will make sure
that they will run (or fail correctly).
These loops make us click extremely fast. This may cause
unreliable results, I think. At least, the test is failing a
lot lately, with results that look like it's not always getting
the expected four levels of zoom. Let's try a short sleep
between clicks.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems like the export screen takes a while to appear on 40 and
Rawhide ATM, and we might start typing before it's there. Let's
assert it's actually there before we start doing stuff.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In current F40 and Rawhide, this test is frequently failing
because gnome-software is behaving weirdly at startup - the
third-party software dialog moves around even more than before,
the app seems to get stuck in the "not responding" state
briefly sometimes, and there's a very weird state it gets into
sometimes where the window is shorter than usual and clicks
don't seem to register in the right place. While I'm trying to
bisect these bugs, these magic voodoo incantations (tested on
the staging instance) seem to mostly work around the weird
behaviour, and setting RETRY=2 should backstop it a bit further.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The place where repos are defined changed on the F40+ branches
of workstation-ostree-config, this handles both possibilities.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
GNOME Software seems to be doing some kind of animation between
the third party dialog and the main UI, and we're clicking on
a banner instead of the update button. Try a wait_still_screen
to deal with this.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Another bunch of these timed out. Not sure why. Maybe it's when
I run a lot of them at the same time? Let's try this, again.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
accounts.fp.o seems to be unreliable again today, let's drop this
again so tests don't fail on it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 56c9e80f60.
Things seem to have settled down with the mass rebuild and this
test seems to be back to consistently taking about 90 minutes.
It seems to be timing out a lot on Rawhide lately. Not sure if
it's just mass rebuild stuff, but anyhow...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This reverts commit ab5b1a4367. A
new colord build has been pushed which should resolve the issue,
so I'm disabling the workaround to ensure that's the case.
Somehow, colord is sometimes failing to start in stable Rawhide
ATM - I don't know how this problem got through testing. It's
now blocking other updates.
Doing this only on x86_64 is lazy and wrong, but the logic gets
way more complicated if we need to allow potentially *two* things
to fail on aarch64 and ppc64le, and it's the weekend and we
don't gate updates on those arches so I'm not doing it. Hopefully
this will be resolved quite quickly.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We're taking a long time to reach it on aarch64 on prod recently
for some reason. It's probably some weirdness with qemu/edk2. So
let's just bump the timeout as I don't have an easy fix on hand
and this won't hurt anything.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We seem to be getting quite a lot of failures in update tests
where this times out. Let's try a longer timeout.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is a surprisingly large change as we want to go back to
the console we were previously on after doing it. To do that we
need to know what console we were on, and to know *that*, we need
to port everything that currently uses (ctrl-)alt-fX to switch
consoles to use select_console instead.
This is primarily intended to make running setup_repos.py faster
when it has to download a lot of packages (as typing in hundreds
of package names is quite slow). But it actually makes the whole
thing faster, even when only downloading one or two packages.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This uses a Python script which implements concurrent downloads
(via asyncio) to download workaround and update packages and
configure the repos. This should speed up the process for large
multi-package updates.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This effectively reverts 97618193 - but had to be done manually
and adjusted to maintain support for testing side tags and for
testing multiple tasks, since those features were added since
the update ISO change.
The 'scheduler injects ISOs of packages into the tests' approach
was intended to speed things up, especially for large updates,
and it did, but it had a few drawbacks. It means restarting
older tests from the web UI doesn't work as the ISOs get garbage
collected (you have to re-schedule in this case). And it has the
rather large problem that you can now only schedule tests from
the openQA server (or at least a machine with the openQA asset
share mounted), because the package download and ISO creation
just happen wherever the scheduler is running and assume that
the openQA asset share that will be used by the tests is at
/var/lib/openqa/share in that filesystem.
That's too big of a drawback to continue with this approach, IMO,
so this reverts back to the old way of doing things, with a bit
of refactoring to clean up the flow a little, and with support
for testing side tags and multiple tasks maintained.
As a follow-up I'm going to see if I can replace
_download_packages with a much more efficient downloader script
to mitigate the time this process takes on each test, especially
for large updates.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This test had special flags because it used to be run first and
did the prep steps for the other tests. Now the aaa_setup test
does that job, so there's no reason for this test to have these
flags any more, and somehow they seem to be breaking the test on
Rawhide. Let's give it the same flag as all the other normal
tests.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Per the needle cleanup, it hasn't been seen for some time. The
test is failing ATM but even the last time it passed -
https://openqa.fedoraproject.org/tests/2311371#step/kontakt/3 -
we did not see this.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The bug this was meant to fix hasn't happened for months. Back
in Fedora-Rawhide-20230629.n.0 we were seeing every line in the
poem marked as a spelling error until we did this, but that's
not happening any more, we don't need this.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This breaks things until a compose has happened and comps data
with the new group in it is actually out there in the repos. So
we need to hack it back out again till a compose goes through.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In some tests on staging this seems to help with the 'clicks
don't work in later test steps' problem we're seeing a lot.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It seems Python 3.12.1 changed unittests' behaviour so that all
tests being skipped is now a fail not a pass. That breaks this
test because TestAtomic01Status only does anything if this is
an atomic system. So, let's just skip that test entirely if we
aren't one. As things stand this means the test will never run,
because we only test on Cloud_Base which is not atomic.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There used to be a theme.conf.user file, there isn't any more.
I think this should work both before and after.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
os-autoinst is set so that if you once manually set the cursor
somewhere, all subsequent calls to `assert_and_click` will return
the cursor to the last manually-set position (if you never set
the cursor anywhere manually, it uses the `mouse_hide` location).
The mouse_hide location is no good for modern desktops as they
use hot corners in various ways, so for the desktop tests, early
in login, we set the mouse to 300/800, which we hope is a kind
of neutral location that doesn't interfere with matches of the
desktop_background needles (which I usually put towards the
right of the screen).
Unfortunately, KDE can show fairly big previews of active windows
down there, and hovering over one causes that window to be
displayed and all others to be hidden. Which rather breaks the
desktop browser test, when we have the Welcome Center popping up
on boot.
We already moved the mouse set point from 300/200 a few years
back because of a *different* awkward interaction with the browser
test, so we can't go back there. Let's try 1023/384 instead -
that's all the way on the right hand side of the screen, but half
way down, not in either corner. I really hope this doesn't cause
problems for any tests cos I don't know where else to stick the
damn thing if this doesn't work.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Several needle updates and a tweak to the text we type to launch
kinfocenter (just "info" now launches something else).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
khotkeys was removed from Plasma 6, and qdbusviewer was only on
the live image because khotkeys recommended it, so now it's gone.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
tab will both reach the environment selection list and then go
through it, so we don't need to start out with tab and then
switch to down. And since all we need to do is hit one key until
a needle matches, let's use the handy function os-autoinst
provides for doing this...
This should fix it on current Rawhide (where it only takes one
tab, or zero tabs - not sure which - to reach the list).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
You can see what these args are trying to do, but the function
does not currently work that way. I think running it without
args should get what the test wants. If Lukas wants to refine
download_testdata so you can specify the payload and where to
extract it, he can do that, then put this back...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The KDE welcome tour is getting in the way of the desktop login
test. Try getting rid of it after logging in.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Per https://progress.opensuse.org/issues/151258 , PXEBOOT=once
doesn't work right in current os-autoinst. Now I look at it,
PXEBOOT is just pretty ropey in general; on UEFI and aarch64 it
doesn't actually do anything at all, we're actually just relying
on the default boot order there.
Since it doesn't seem like there's a practical way to make
PXEBOOT=once work as intended on all platforms, let's just drop
use of it and make it clear that we rely on the default boot
order: we hope that on first boot we'll get a PXE boot since no
local media are bootable, then on second boot we'll get a local
disk boot.
We set up a new IS_PXE variable to cue the couple of places where
the test logic needs to be different.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This PR tries to respond to issue #294.
On Silverblue, this will try:
* flatpak install
* flatpak remote-add
* flatpak list
* flatpak remotes
* flatpak remove
* flatpak update
and also it tests that a flatpak can be built.
It seems like in current Rawhide (since about Saturday - possibly
due to new mesa?), g-t-e quite often dies after we print. This
messes up the test because we wind up quitting the terminal
instead of g-t-e. Let's handle it as a soft failure instead,
until we can figure out why g-t-e is dying.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
desktop_printing is failing a lot in recent Rawhide (and so are
some other tests, but this one is nice and easy to target). Add
some wait_still_screens and save_screenshots to try and see
exactly what's going on when we exit gnome-text-editor before
switching to a VT.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In today's Rawhide, two dialogs have to be cancelled on krfb
launch before we see the UI: a remote control permission screen
and a kwallet creation flow.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We often get a failure where it's stuck at a spinner here, let's
see if waiting to settle the snapshot resume helps.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It looks like
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-system-monitor/-/issues/262
won't be fixed for a while - the fixes are tied up with the GTK
4 port - so let's just work around it for now by clicking instead
of using keyboard shortcuts.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
A new app called snapshot (Camera, on the menus) has replaced
cheese in F40 (but not F39). Adjust to that. We can simplify
this when F39 is out.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
If we do it after forcing the clock to 18:30, doing it takes so
long we wind up at 18:32, and that kinda sets the rest of the
test out of whack (we have several needles that assume we start
at 18:30 or 18:31 after the snapshot). So let's set the update
timestamp *before* we force the clock. This will mean it's waay
in the future after we force the clock, but that should still
do the job of avoiding notifications showing up, I hope.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
KDE replaced Konversation (IRC client) with Neochat (Matrix
client) in Rawhide. As the replacement isn't done in F39 we can't
just switch the test out, we have to handle both, so for now,
let's have the "konversation" test run neochat on Rawhide.
We can't really proceed through neochat's first run wizard as
it needs a Matrix account name and password and we don't want
the hassle of handling a secret just for this, so we'll just
quit out once we see it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This PR adds a test for a new Image Viewer called Loupe.
It is based on the old Image Viewer test, newly reneedled
with some of the tests shortened, deleted or edited
as the new Image Viewer has a little bit less functions
compared to the previous one.
Add needles.
webUI has been deferred to F40, so we need to expect the old UI
flow on F39 now. This should cover everything, I hope.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We're reverting webUI for Fedora 39.
https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2023-73c4f1a802
is the update that implements this; adapt the tests to handle it
(by expecting the old flow when testing that update, and editing
the kickstart to drop anaconda-webui when building the live
image).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This seems to have started failing periodically at the start of
this month, I've no idea why. For now, let's retry it a few
times and see if that helps.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There isn't any Help in the webUI installer, really. In future
it's meant to have more 'contextual' help - little question
mark icons next to elements of the UI that explain them when
clicked on - which we could implement tests for, but this isn't
done yet.
Let's not skip scheduling the test entirely, because we can
still run it on F38 respins, and we may be able to implement
testing of the contextual help in future. So let's just soft
fail and return immediately. If we get to F39 stable without
the contextual help being implemented (or it turns out not to
be testable within the confines of this design), we can skip
scheduling the test on webUI images entirely.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We just landed the webUI stuff for F39, so now we need these
conditionals to kick in for F39+, not F40+.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Loupe's Open dialog defaults to Recent, not Pictures, so when
we're using Loupe we need to click into Pictures to find the
exported image.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Loupe has replaced EOG on F39 and Rawhide, and it can be found
with "image viewer", so let's just go with that. The rest of the
logic should be OK but we will likely need some new needles,
will do that next.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
EOG has been replaced by Loupe in F39+. We will need to add a
test for Loupe, but first let's remove the EOG test so it does
not fail on every compose.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is tailored to the initial deployment of webUI in
Workstation live images only; we may need to tweak flows and
approaches as webUI goes further.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
A new FreeIPA update adds a check which causes a failure when
we try to decommission the original server with the replica
still alive. Let's see if decommissioning the replica helps.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Per https://github.com/containers/podman/pull/19302 and
https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/19299 , upstream
have kindly set things up so we can easily run relevant parts of
the upstream test suite as an integration test in openQA. This
should help us catch if changes in other components break key
features of podman.
This only runs any tests with podman 4.6.1 or higher, but with
earlier versions it just does nothing and exits 0, so that's
fine. 4.6.1 is in F39 and Rawhide already, will land for F37
and F38 shortly.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
dnf seems to have some odd trouble with these updates. It
really wants to use the older 2.rc2 builds, even though there
doesn't seem to be any actual *problem* with the 3.rc2 builds.
For the samba server test, passing `--best` to dnf seems to be
enough to make it use the .3.rc2 builds. For the FreeIPA tests,
we have to do a second pass with `--best` after the initial
install.
It's weird that we have to do this, but to get these updates
through - because there doesn't really seem to be a problem
here - let's do it. They will replace the 2.rc2 builds in the
main F39 and Rawhide trees once they land in 'stable' so the
problem shouldn't persist.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
mock still thinks the releasever for Rawhide is 39, which causes
it to use the wrong GPG keys and not be able to install packages.
This overrides that setting in our mock config file, until
mock-core-configs is updated in the distro.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The numbered config file won't always exist right after branch
(there is no fedora-40-x86_64 now, for e.g.) But the named one
always does. This additional variable is a small price to pay for
making the test more robust.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We know this is broken and we don't want it to fail on every
update, so we need to work around the problem for now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
abbra told me where I was going wrong with the 'expected' target
of the getent command ("AD/" is not a magic string, it's just
"(netbiosname)/", and our netbios name is "SAMDOM"...) so this
fixes that too, trying to avoid hard-coding stuff.
For the kickstart test, it seems like it's a timing issue. We
added this 'install sssd-tools and enable debugging' step to try
and debug it, and instead it fixed it. So...let's just stick
with this, for now, because it's useful to have this debugging
anyway. If the problem starts happening again, we can fiddle
about with it more.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
As 'real' upgrades (using releases/development/rawhide on the
mirrors) do not hit this bug because it has a stale Modular
tree, it makes sense to work around the bug in testing so we can
see if upgrades are broken in any *other* way.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We're seeing a lot of tests fail on 404s when trying to access
the koji-rawhide repo (the repo for the Rawhide build tag, which
we use to get packages tagged since the last compose. nirik is
trying to figure this out from the server end, but for now at
least, let's mark the repo as skip_if_unavailable. This should
mean that if we hit a 404, the test will continue, it just won't
have access to the packages from that repo. Occasionally this
will cause a problem - a false failure or false pass - but this
still seems better than every test that hits it failing. The
false pass case is the most concerning, but I would hope in that
case some other tests from the same update would fail, making it
not an issue.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Per nirik, 'repos/rawhide' is just a symlink to 'repos/fXX-build'
and this could possibly be part of our 404 problem. So let's
try using fXX-build directly instead of the symlink.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a Samba AD server test, and client enrolment tests via
sssd, Cockpit and kickstart. Requires the matching createhdds
commit to add the kickstart to the disk_ks image.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The change to the curl commands to force HTTP/1.1 seems to have
stopped them failing, so let's try doing it for the git clones
too and see if that avoids the problem till we can work out
what is causing it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Modularity will be retired in Fedora 39 and the modular repository
removed. Also, the upcoming version of DNF that is default in
Rawhide, does not support modularity, so the tests are currently
failing anyway.
This tweaks all pagure.io downloads to be retried a few times,
since we seem to be getting failures quite often. We use curl
for this as it has nice options for it.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The Flatpak build doesn't have the spellcheck issue at the
moment, and it may be fixed soon in the RPM build. Trying to
'fix' the issue on the flatpak build actually makes the test
fail. So, let's only do the fix if we actually have a misspelled
word.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The tests after it assume new_file ran - they rely on the file
it creates - so it should be considered fatal.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Seems in Rawhide the menu is loading without dividers briefly,
we match there, then the dividers load in and make the menu
longer, so when we click, we hit a different entry in the menu.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The editor started to show spell-checking that would require a lot
of new needles to be created. Theredore, we set the language to
English to stop showing the spelling mistakes in aaa_setup.pm
Also, the application started to have problems with getting correct
focus, so we want to click into the text before the status gets
recorded.
Change the comment on why we put /var/lib/mock on the third hard
disk: we probably can cut it down to two, now, but I don't want
to do it right now.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
D'oh. This is the first time we actually tried to use the new
workarounds ISO thing for real, I forgot to update some paths.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This requires a change in the package we use for base_update_cli
because pandoc-common is not in ELN.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The shifted characters here frequently get mistyped. Let's use
type_safely. If this isn't enough we can try very_safely.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We drop the line for the update ISO from /etc/fstab before
uploading the image after the cockpit_default test, but we don't
make sure it's set up again before Cockpit tries to use it, in
the subsequent Cockpit tests. I don't know why this didn't fail
on stg before, but it sure as hell is failing in prod...
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I'm attempting a new approach to the update and workaround repos.
Instead of having each update test recreate them for itself -
which is slow and wastes bandwidth - the dispatcher will create
an ISO at test schedule time and pass it as ISO_2. Then the test
just mounts the ISO. This makes the necessary adjustments on the
test side.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
With the new 2G max EFI system partition size, we were trying to
stuff 12G of Fedora into a 10G disk. That wasn't going to work.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I don't think we need an alternative needle for ppc - the
current 'boot_inactive' needle should work fine on ppc. Let's
just always use that.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
As of yesterday's Rawhide, the modular repos are not installed by
default, so of course all the modular tests fail. So, install
the repos before running the tests.
This isn't conditionalized on release version as I don't think
we ever run this test on anything other than Rawhide and
Branched.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This checks we actually deployed the 'fedora-openqa' ref as we
intended to (if not, the rebase test probably won't work
properly or won't test what we want it to).
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We have had several problems where rebasing from one release to
another just doesn't work, and we have to work around it somehow.
Sometimes it's difficult or impossible to do. All we want to do
here is check the rebase mechanism itself; we don't actually want
to assert that you can rebase to any specific other release.
For update tests, we should be able to use a non-standard ref
name for the ostree we build, embed into the installer image,
and install. That should mean we can then rebase to the standard
ref name for the same release, which should be much safer than
trying to rebase to a different release. We can't do this for
the compose tests, but at least for update tests I'm hoping this
makes things more robust.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
It's not in the images any more. As aleasto pointed out, we're
actually being sent to Discover to install it, and matching on
*that* screen, which isn't what we intend.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
util-linux-user subpackage was removed but comps wasn't updated.
I've fixed comps now, but that won't "kick in" until after the
next Rawhide compose; we need to workaround the issue until then.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
If install errors out, currently we still wait like an hour for
an "install_done" screen that will never come, before we give
up. Since we have a needle for the "unknown error has occurred"
screen, we may as well use it here - if we see that screen, we
can just die immediately. This may go stale if we forget to
update the needle, but it's only one line, so meh.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This adds a new script - cleanup-needles.py - to use for cleaning
up old needles. It has to be used in conjunction with a database
query; the comment at the top explains how to do that query and
export the needed information. It produces a git commit with
needles that haven't matched since a certain date (specified in
the sql query) removed, subject to a 'keeplist' of needles we
keep even if they seem to be old.
I also enhanced check-needles.py to check for cases where tests
seem to be trying to match a tag we have no needles for. This
was necessary to find cases where the cleanup script was too
aggressive (i.e. the things that wound up in the 'keeplist'),
but it also turned out to find quite a lot of cases where the
code really *was* looking for a needle that had gone in a
previous cleanup or that never existed; the commits before this
one clean up a lot of those cases.
The code to decide which string literals are needle tags is
pretty dumb and hacky and needs some manual cueing sometimes -
that's what the `# testtag` changes in this commit are for.
Making it smarter would probably require this script to get a
lot more complicated and either incorporate or become a
tokenizer, which I don't really want to do.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
We never hit this path without a system menu button any more,
due to changes in KDE over time. It hasn't been hit for two years.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Now both GNOME and KDE do offline updates on all supported
releases, we never see an 'update done' screen any more. This
branch is left over from when the KDE offline update branch was
still conditional on release number.
If we ever implement this test on a desktop that doesn't do
offline updates, we can put this back easily enough.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There's no need to do all this 'check whether it's selected and
click it if not' stuff (for three different mount points). Just
always click it. If it's already selected, clicking it again
doesn't hurt (one of these stanzas even clicks it *even if it's
selected*!)
If we need to cover both cases, we just need two needles with
the same tag, we don't need separate code paths. In each case,
though, we actually haven't matched one of the needles for ages
(the most recent was part_boot_selected, but now we're using
GPT by default, we won't hit that any more as it'll be the BIOS
boot partition that's selected by default), so delete the needles
we aren't matching any more. If we *do* hit any case where we
need to handle the 'other' state, we can just add the alternative
needle with the same tag.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This has not been hit for a year (on stg; three years on prod).
I *think* it would only be hit if we ran the test on an Everything
image, but as the test is now specifically associated with the
Server install DVD, that doesn't seem likely to happen.
If we somehow *do* hit ext4 pre-selected again, this can still
be handled simply by adding an alternate
anaconda_blivet_part_fs_ext4 needle which matches on ext4 already
being selected; that avoids the need to keep an alternate code
path around.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>