From Fedora Project Wiki
Fedora Test Days
FedUp

Date 2015-04-21
Time all day

Website QA/Fedora_22_test_days
IRC #fedora-test-day (webirc)
Mailing list test


Can't make the date?
If you come to this page before or after the test day is completed, your testing is still valuable, and you can use the information on this page to test, file any bugs you find at Bugzilla, and add your results to the results section. If this page is more than a month old when you arrive here, please check the current schedule and see if a similar but more recent Test Day is planned or has already happened.

What to test?

Today's instalment of Fedora Test Day will focus on FedUp, the Fedora system upgrade tool.

Who's available

The following cast of characters will be available testing, workarounds, bug fixes, and general discussion ...

Prerequisite for Test Day

A system with Fedora 20 or 21 you can use for test purposes (i.e. you don't mind if it all goes wrong and you lose the system)! Testing with a virtual machine will be useful for many cases, and will let you run multiple tests easily.

How to test?

The test procedure is simply to take a Fedora 20 or Fedora 21 installation and upgrade it to Fedora 22. To ensure you get the latest fedup for testing, run one of these two commands (depending on whether it's already installed):

yum --enablerepo=updates-testing install fedup
yum --enablerepo=updates-testing update fedup
Check for 0.9.2-1
The newest build of fedup - 0.9.2-1 - was pushed to the mirrors only recently. The above command should install it, but please make sure that fedup-0.9.2-1 is installed after running it. If you got an older version (perhaps because of a mirror that has not yet synced) please download and install the updated version directly:

To upgrade, run (F21):

fedup --network 22 --instrepo https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/stage/22_Beta_RC3/Server/(arch)/os

or (F20):

fedup --network 22 --product (product) --instrepo https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/stage/22_Beta_RC3/Server/(arch)/os

where (arch) is the appropriate architecture (armhfp, x86_64, or i386) and (product) is the most appropriate 'product' for the install - see this note.

The idea is to test upgrades from as many different starting situations as possible - particularly with different package sets, languages, keyboard layouts, and storage configurations.

If the upgrade completes successfully, test the upgraded system to ensure it works correctly.

Test Results

If any of your upgrades fails (or leads to a broken system), report a bug to Bugzilla. The correct component will depend on the exact nature of the bug - ask in IRC if you're unsure. If you can't find out what component to file against, file the bug against usually for the component fedup. Include any useful details about the system's configuration, and note that your result is part of this Test Day and mention that you followed the instructions on this page.

If you are unsure about exactly how to file the report or what other information to include, just ask on IRC and we will help you. Once you have completed the tests, add your results to the Results table below, following the example results from the first line as a template. The first column should be your name with a link to your User page in the Wiki if you have one. In the 'Results' column, you can link to bug reports of any failed tests, and very briefly summarize your results. Please don't post long comments here, it will make the table hard to read: anything longer than a few words is likely fodder for a bug report, or mailing list post, or you can use <ref>comment</ref> to make the comment appear as a footnote below the table.

User Results
Sample User 2 pass 2 fail, RHBZ #12345 RHBZ #54321
Petr Schindler tested UEFI/BIOS, encrypted/non-encrypted, Server/Workstation 21, works fine - found RHBZ #1213868, met RHBZ #1209941
langdon tested UEFI, encrypted, Workstation 21, works fine - met RHBZ #1209941 and attached screenshot, although evo-data-server just threw an error
Matthew Bunt tested UEFI, non-encrypted, Workstation 21, real install with many packages. Found RHBZ #1209941 but upgrade was successful
juliuxpigface Tested FedUp (version 0.9.0) on Fedora 'Non-Product' 21 (x86_64). Met RHBZ #1209941, but after ctrl+alt+del everything worked.
satellit Tested fedup/0.9.2/1.fc21/noarch/fedup-0.9.2-1.fc21.noarch.rpm on Fedora workstation-netinstall 21 (Virtualbox 15GB HD) (x86_64). Met RHBZ #1209941 [1]
satellit Tested Fedup_0.9.1-1.fc21 on Fedora workstation-netinstall 21 (Virtualbox 15GB HD) (x86_64). Met RHBZ #1209941 [2]
Eric Blake Tested fedup-0.9.2-1.fc20 on a Fedora20 VM (x86_64). Specifying --product workstation downloaded lots of files, but then failed to find GPG key. Trying again with --nogpgcheck added...
Abdel Martínez Tested fedup-0.9.2-1.fc21 on a Fedora Live Workstation 21 (x86_64) virtual machine on VirtualBox. Met a warning RHBZ #1214130 and finally RHBZ #1209941, but CRTL+ALT+DEL solved it.
juliuxpigface Tried fedup-0.9.2-1.fc20 on a Fedora 20 KVM guest (Mate Spin, x86_64) specifying --product=nonproduct. As Eric, I found GPG Key error. I opened a report: RHBZ #1214150