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{{admon/note | Live Environments | This test is not intended to be run on Live images.}} | {{admon/note | Live Environments | This test is not intended to be run on Live images.}} | ||
# Clean boot the Fedora you wish to test: this could be a system installed from a particular snapshot, pre-release, release, or a cloud image. It should be an image for which updates will be available. | # Clean boot the Fedora you wish to test: this could be a system installed from a particular snapshot, pre-release, release, or a cloud image. It should be an image for which updates will be available. | ||
# | # Open a console, and run the command {{command|yum update}} as root. If you have any difficulty opening a console in the normal fashion from the desktop you are testing, note this, but continue with the test. Complete the update process. If you encounter dependency problems, ensure a bug is reported for the issue, and try again with the --skip-broken parameter | ||
|results= | |results= | ||
# yum should complete the update process with no errors | # yum should complete the update process with no errors |
Latest revision as of 16:22, 7 August 2014
Description
This test case tests whether yum can check for and install package updates from the command line.
How to test
- Clean boot the Fedora you wish to test: this could be a system installed from a particular snapshot, pre-release, release, or a cloud image. It should be an image for which updates will be available.
- Open a console, and run the command
yum update
as root. If you have any difficulty opening a console in the normal fashion from the desktop you are testing, note this, but continue with the test. Complete the update process. If you encounter dependency problems, ensure a bug is reported for the issue, and try again with the --skip-broken parameter
Expected Results
- yum should complete the update process with no errors
- yum should check the appropriate repositories for the release when testing for updates, with no manual configuration required
- yum should list the number and details of available updates and await confirmation before proceeding with the actual update process
- yum should correctly install all available updates when you confirm that you wish to do so. Note that a failure caused by problems with the packages in the repositories, rather than yum or PackageKit misbehaving, should be reported against the offending package(s) and considered a 'warn', rather than 'fail', if you are performing desktop validation testing