Difference between revisions of "0.112/Testing"

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*can be installed as a virtual machine, with persistence and password protection,
 
*can be installed as a virtual machine, with persistence and password protection,
 
*contains a special libabiword-3.0 to fix a flickering Write activity (#4915), thanks to Simon Quigley (Ubuntu #1574278)
 
*contains a special libabiword-3.0 to fix a flickering Write activity (#4915), thanks to Simon Quigley (Ubuntu #1574278)
*is based on the Debian 9 Stretch Live Build, but does not contain EFI Secure Boot support or encumbered firmware,
+
*is based on the [[Debian]] 9 Stretch Live Build, but does not contain EFI Secure Boot support or encumbered firmware,
 
*for developers, contains all build dependencies, configured source trees (git clones in /usr/src), and binaries (make install) for the Sugar 0.112 Sucrose modules and the Fructose activity set, making it easy to use for GCI or GSoC tasks.
 
*for developers, contains all build dependencies, configured source trees (git clones in /usr/src), and binaries (make install) for the Sugar 0.112 Sucrose modules and the Fructose activity set, making it easy to use for GCI or GSoC tasks.
  

Revision as of 20:22, 8 October 2017

Welcome! This page is a section of the Sugar 0.112 release, please refer to 0.112 for related information.


Please test, and report problems on sugar-devel@ mailing list, github.com/sugarlabs/sugar issues, bugs.sugarlabs.org, or the discussion page here.

To date there has been little independent testing of Sugar 0.112.

What should I test?

How to test?

Use the GNU standard autogen, configure, make, and make install steps.

Or, use the Sugar Live Build dated 20171009 with Sugar 0.112;

  • can be booted from hard drive, flash drive, and optical media, automatically starting Sugar without persistence,
  • can be installed as a virtual machine, with persistence and password protection,
  • contains a special libabiword-3.0 to fix a flickering Write activity (#4915), thanks to Simon Quigley (Ubuntu #1574278)
  • is based on the Debian 9 Stretch Live Build, but does not contain EFI Secure Boot support or encumbered firmware,
  • for developers, contains all build dependencies, configured source trees (git clones in /usr/src), and binaries (make install) for the Sugar 0.112 Sucrose modules and the Fructose activity set, making it easy to use for GCI or GSoC tasks.

See http://people.sugarlabs.org/~quozl/sugar-live-build-20171009/

Debian

We are waiting for Debian to package Sugar 0.112. Check the Debian Source Package sugar.

Ubuntu

We are waiting for Debian to package Sugar 0.112, then it will be available in Ubuntu. Check the Ubuntu Source Package sugar.

Fedora

We are waiting for Fedora to package Sugar 0.112. Check the Fedora build system for package sugar.

OLPC

OLPC packages Sugar for OLPC laptops. People with OLPC laptops can test Sugar 0.112 now.

The OLPC Sugar packages contain extra commits:

  • remove frame animation, and transition box, as they are too slow for OLPC XO, but the changes were not accepted upstream,
  • manufacturing support (About my computer; CPU, disk, memory and wireless firmware specifications).

This makes the OLPC Sugar packages an incomplete test of Sugar 0.112, but sufficiently close to be useful to the community.

Ubuntu 16.04 on OLPC NL3

For OLPC NL3 laptops, using Ubuntu 16.04, use the OLPC packages, like this:

sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo service lightdm restart

Fedora 18 on OLPC XO

For OLPC XO laptops, using OLPC OS 13.x (Fedora 18), use the OLPC packages, and update only the Sugar packages to 0.112.olpc.x, like this:

sudo yum update sugar*
sudo service olpc-dm restart