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# You should be able to hear the sound playing. You should not have to adjust any default volume settings in order to hear the sound. | # You should be able to hear the sound playing. You should not have to adjust any default volume settings in order to hear the sound. | ||
# When testing GNOME, please report all failures to the GNOME tracker: [https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-control-center/ GNOME Settings], [https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/totem GNOME Videos]. | # When testing GNOME, please report all failures to the GNOME tracker: [https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-control-center/issues GNOME Settings], [https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/totem/issues GNOME Videos]. | ||
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[[Category:Audio_Test_Cases]] | [[Category:Audio_Test_Cases]] | ||
[[Category:Desktop_Acceptance_Test_Cases]] | [[Category:Desktop_Acceptance_Test_Cases]] |
Latest revision as of 11:07, 8 March 2023
Description
This test case tests whether basic sound playback is successful.
How to test
- Ensure your hardware is correctly connected so you ought to be able to hear sound: i.e., you have speakers or headphones connected to the speaker output on your sound adapter, or a receiver connected to a S/PDIF output.
- Open the sound settings (in GNOME, open Settings -> Sound) and verify that your output sound device is selected (usually called Speakers, Headphones or Line Out) and it has a reasonable volume level (it should not be zero, i.e. muted).
- If your system has multiple sound devices (like a sound card and also a graphics card which can send audio to a monitor), you might need to select the preferred sound output device manually. But at least some output device should always be selected by default.
- For some sound devices and in some desktop environments, you might also need to choose sound profile (like Digital Stereo (IEC958) for S/PDIF) and other attributes.
- Verify that you can hear sounds. If there's a Test button in the sound settings, use it. Otherwise play e.g. some music or perhaps a YouTube video.
- Shut your system down entirely, then start it up again and log in to the desktop
- Run the default desktop media player (in GNOME called Videos).
- Play some music (e.g. the one linked above) or a video in that media player. You should be able to hear the sound playing. You should not have to adjust any default volume settings in order to hear the sound.
- Be aware that only open multimedia codecs are supported by default.
- A failure to play video is not a failure of this test case. This is only about sound playback.
Expected Results
- You should be able to hear the sound playing. You should not have to adjust any default volume settings in order to hear the sound.
- When testing GNOME, please report all failures to the GNOME tracker: GNOME Settings, GNOME Videos.