From Fedora Project Wiki
(create a first initialization (systemd) test case) |
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# Boot the installed system | # Boot the installed system | ||
# Boot the installed system with each of the following kernel parameters, in turn: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, single, S, s, -s. During one of the single user mode boots, exit single user mode and observe the result | # Boot the installed system with each of the following kernel parameters, in turn: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, single, S, s, -s. During one of the single user mode boots, exit single user mode and observe the result | ||
# Configure the system to boot to console (runlevel 3), using the recommended method for the initialization system in use (for systemd, run the command {{ | # Configure the system to boot to console (runlevel 3), using the recommended method for the initialization system in use (for systemd, run the command {{command|ln -s /lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target /etc/systemd/system/default.target}}), and reboot the system with none of the above kernel parameters | ||
|results= | |results= | ||
# The first boot of the installed system should boot to a graphical login manager, and the graphical login sequence should be displayed during boot (if the tested system configuration is capable of it) | # The first boot of the installed system should boot to a graphical login manager, and the graphical login sequence should be displayed during boot (if the tested system configuration is capable of it) |
Revision as of 18:50, 27 August 2010
Description
This test case checks the basic boot process.
How to test
- Perform a clean, graphical installation of the Fedora release you wish to test
- Boot the installed system
- Boot the installed system with each of the following kernel parameters, in turn: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, single, S, s, -s. During one of the single user mode boots, exit single user mode and observe the result
- Configure the system to boot to console (runlevel 3), using the recommended method for the initialization system in use (for systemd, run the command
ln -s /lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target /etc/systemd/system/default.target
), and reboot the system with none of the above kernel parameters
Expected Results
- The first boot of the installed system should boot to a graphical login manager, and the graphical login sequence should be displayed during boot (if the tested system configuration is capable of it)
- Booting with kernel parameters 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 should boot to those runlevels, or their equivalents under an init system that does not implement runlevels directly. Booting with kernel parameters single, S, S or -s should boot to single user mode (and this mode should be usable)
- Exiting single user mode should result in the system returning to the default boot state
- The system should correctly boot to a console when configured to do so