There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+: * Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA. "Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+: * Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
This one is interesting as well, since I was bitten by it:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1614978
V.
Dne 20.9.2018 v 14:33 Stephen Gallagher napsal(a):
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
[1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1628255 _______________________________________________ devel mailing list -- devel@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe send an email to devel-leave@lists.fedoraproject.org Fedora Code of Conduct: https://getfedora.org/code-of-conduct.html List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 08:33:05AM -0400, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
Makes sense overall.
Perhaps we could compose a list of major CUPS drivers and make sure we test each with at least one printer.
P
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 8:40 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers:
I'm in agreement here -- they seem like very reasonable criteria. As for the printer drivers, I think that the Postscript ought to be in the list, and perhaps something along the lines of HP LaserJet 4, as there are lots and lots and lots of printers that try to stay compatible with that. I'd also love to see "Print to PDF" added to that list, as I find myself using that more and more as time goes on.
-Jared
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 8:33 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
+1 to this
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
My main concern here is making sure QA has at least one of each of the necessary printers. That could get large pretty quickly if we're not careful. I'm also concerned that we could end up blocking the final because a printer broke or is out of ink, or other hardware failure. I think I'd rather keep the Beta proposal for Final. Since we have no criterion currently, adding the Beta criterion is an improvement. We can always make the requirement more aggressive if it turns out to be insufficient.
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 9:47 AM Ben Cotton bcotton@redhat.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 8:33 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
+1 to this
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
My main concern here is making sure QA has at least one of each of the necessary printers. That could get large pretty quickly if we're not careful. I'm also concerned that we could end up blocking the final because a printer broke or is out of ink, or other hardware failure. I think I'd rather keep the Beta proposal for Final. Since we have no criterion currently, adding the Beta criterion is an improvement. We can always make the requirement more aggressive if it turns out to be insufficient.
We do in fact have criteria that we cannot always verify (like the Serial-Attached SCSI criteria). In this case, we don't always test it, but if someone who does have that hardware reports that it doesn't work, we generally will block on it. So I'd suggest that this criteria essentially means "We block if it is *known* to fail".
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018, 7:50 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 9:47 AM Ben Cotton bcotton@redhat.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 8:33 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com
wrote:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for
Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
+1 to this
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
Print to file (PDF) is available by default and should be in the list. " work" means - creates a file that, when opened with the default PDF reader and in Firefox using its built-in PDF support, is reasonably similar to the preview shown on the GNOME print preview display.
As for a real printer, I suggest limiting it to an IPP Everywhere printer (any make and model), also known as driverless printing.
Otherwise you can quickly get stuck in the mud.
So I'd suggest that this criteria
essentially means "We block if it is *known* to fail".
+1
Chris Murphy
Hi,
as CUPS maintainer, I agree with the idea of working printing as beta criteria for Fedora.
I have two printers (Canon, HP) at my disposal, which I test cups, cups-filters and hplip on when they have rebase. IMO it would be perfect if such tests can be run every time when a component, which CUPS requires, have an update - this way I could get know of glibc change or nsswitch change sooner...
I can cover two printer driver software, hplip and foomatic-db+foomatic with this testing (at least for these two printer models), but I would need other printers for others (like gutenprint, foo2zjs, not mention 3rd party ones like brother, lexmark, epson) and especially a printer which is capable of driver-less printing (like IPP everywhere standard, or Airprint), which is the newest way how to install printers (I mean most printers with release date after 2010). It would be great that we can test it out too...
This way I would like to reach who they have such printers and asked them for cooperation with testing - preferably on every cups update test if printer works as it should.
According cups-pdf, which is different project and isn't under my maintenance, I'm not sure, but I'm CCing cups-pdf maintainer, if he can say more about it. The same can be said about ghostscript - it should be tested properly too.
On 9/20/18 4:21 PM, Chris Murphy wrote:
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018, 7:50 AM Stephen Gallagher <sgallagh@redhat.com mailto:sgallagh@redhat.com> wrote:
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 9:47 AM Ben Cotton <bcotton@redhat.com <mailto:bcotton@redhat.com>> wrote: > > On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 8:33 AM Stephen Gallagher <sgallagh@redhat.com <mailto:sgallagh@redhat.com>> wrote: > > > > I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+: > > * Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA. > > "Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview > > shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in > > color reproduction are not considered "non-working".) > > > +1 to this > > > and this to Final for Fedora 30+: > > * Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the > > following drivers: > > (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to > > figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected > > user base).
Print to file (PDF) is available by default and should be in the list. " work" means
- creates a file that, when opened with the default PDF reader and in
Firefox using its built-in PDF support, is reasonably similar to the preview shown on the GNOME print preview display.
As for a real printer, I suggest limiting it to an IPP Everywhere printer (any make and model), also known as driverless printing.
Otherwise you can quickly get stuck in the mud.
So I'd suggest that this criteria essentially means "We block if it is *known* to fail".
+1
Chris Murphy
devel mailing list -- devel@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe send an email to devel-leave@lists.fedoraproject.org Fedora Code of Conduct: https://getfedora.org/code-of-conduct.html List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
I'm against this as a blocker for a number of reasons: * When we've tried to do hardware specific blocking at the time like dual boot with MacOS this has not worked well and the dual boot is testable with one piece of hardware * It's easy to do a zero day update or a standard update to fix it post release as doesn't affect the install path * We don't do it for other non critical hardware selections such as digital cameras, video cameras, and other such things * Hardware availability, I don't see blocking for one type of printer over another type is a good use of our time.
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 10:22 AM, Peter Robinson pbrobinson@gmail.com wrote:
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
I'm against this as a blocker for a number of reasons:
- When we've tried to do hardware specific blocking at the time like
dual boot with MacOS this has not worked well and the dual boot is testable with one piece of hardware
- It's easy to do a zero day update or a standard update to fix it
post release as doesn't affect the install path
- We don't do it for other non critical hardware selections such as
digital cameras, video cameras, and other such things
- Hardware availability, I don't see blocking for one type of printer
over another type is a good use of our time.
I think it's reasonable to block on some really basic aspects of printing breakage, like not being able to print to a PDF file, and possibly being unable to print to the far simpler realm of IPP Everywhere printers.
But model specific stuff. No way. I'd be generous with freeze exceptions, but not blocking the release. I'm even on the fence if I'd actually block on IPP Everywhere printing being broken. Once we're at a blocker, do we have the resources to get it fixed within a few days? If not, forget it. It can't be a blocker if we don't have the resources to support fixing the blocker in a time escalated manner.
On 9/20/18 6:47 PM, Chris Murphy wrote:
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 10:22 AM, Peter Robinson pbrobinson@gmail.com wrote:
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
I'm against this as a blocker for a number of reasons:
- When we've tried to do hardware specific blocking at the time like
dual boot with MacOS this has not worked well and the dual boot is testable with one piece of hardware
- It's easy to do a zero day update or a standard update to fix it
post release as doesn't affect the install path
- We don't do it for other non critical hardware selections such as
digital cameras, video cameras, and other such things
- Hardware availability, I don't see blocking for one type of printer
over another type is a good use of our time.
I think it's reasonable to block on some really basic aspects of printing breakage, like not being able to print to a PDF file, and possibly being unable to print to the far simpler realm of IPP Everywhere printers.
But model specific stuff. No way. I'd be generous with freeze exceptions, but not blocking the release. I'm even on the fence if I'd actually block on IPP Everywhere printing being broken. Once we're at a blocker, do we have the resources to get it fixed within a few days? If not, forget it. It can't be a blocker if we don't have the resources to support fixing the blocker in a time escalated manner.
IMHO for the specific stuff (main printer drivers packages - hplip, foomatic+foomatic-db, gutenprint) we could do a test of general functionality - like if there is at least one printer which works with ppd from the package, then package seems to okay to go.
On Thu, 2018-09-20 at 08:33 -0400, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
So as with the optical media proposal we had quite a lively discussion on this one, then it got stuck a bit. Stephen, can you take a look at all the followups and either restate or revise the proposal? Thanks!
On Fri, Nov 16, 2018 at 7:18 PM Adam Williamson adamwill@fedoraproject.org wrote:
On Thu, 2018-09-20 at 08:33 -0400, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
So as with the optical media proposal we had quite a lively discussion on this one, then it got stuck a bit. Stephen, can you take a look at all the followups and either restate or revise the proposal? Thanks!
Sorry that it's taken me so long to get back to this.
I think the feedback on this has been mostly positive on the Beta criteria, but I'd like to tweak the phrasing a bit and see if this comes off more favorable:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+: * Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA. "Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+: * Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
To clarify, this does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). Contrary to the first proposal, we won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
How does that sound to people?
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 9:58 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
On Fri, Nov 16, 2018 at 7:18 PM Adam Williamson adamwill@fedoraproject.org wrote:
On Thu, 2018-09-20 at 08:33 -0400, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
So as with the optical media proposal we had quite a lively discussion on this one, then it got stuck a bit. Stephen, can you take a look at all the followups and either restate or revise the proposal? Thanks!
Sorry that it's taken me so long to get back to this.
I think the feedback on this has been mostly positive on the Beta criteria, but I'd like to tweak the phrasing a bit and see if this comes off more favorable:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
Does the criterion pply strictly to the printing of text and line art, or does it also apply to gross departures in photographs? If the latter:
^minor differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working"; or ^only major differences in color reproduction are considered "non-working"
Major defined as any of: obvious and grossly incorrect scaling (e.g. +/- 20%) color inversion, torqued primaries (white becomes black, black becomes white; red becomes blue, blue becomes green, etc) tone reproduction that obliterates relevant identifying detail in two or more test images
With that language I'm trying to carve out only remarkable, WTF level, bugs as blockers.
Next question is what applications to use for printing, since the initiating application matters. What if there's a bug in just one application? That shouldn't be a printing blocker (it might be a basic functionality blocker for that application if it's included in default installations). So I'd say pick two. Firefox and LibreOffice? Firefox and evince?
Next question, test document(s). European Color Initiative has several test PDFs already prepared, perhaps the most applicable for our purposes is the visual test (and a subset of it).And for font scaling and reproduction, Ghent Working Group has test GWG 9.1 which tests various encodings of TrueType, PostScript, and OpenType rendering. Also, there's a suite of LibreOffice test files, and while I haven't gone through it, I'm willing to bet there's one or two that'd serve as a decent sanity tester (in any case I'm not proposing printing out entire test suites): https://github.com/freedesktop/libreoffice-test-files
The nice thing about standardized tests is the far lower risk of bugs in the test file itself, and for sure the applicable developers are familiar with them so as they get escalated, it eliminates the kick back "how did you create this test file? can you attach it to the bug?" etc.
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
To clarify, this does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). Contrary to the first proposal, we won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
I agree with this. One possible sanity test:
1. "Print" the standardized test file to a PDF file (using the built-in print to PDF driver) 2. Print both the resulting PDF from 1, and the original standardized test file, to the designated IPP printer.
i.e. two physical prints on paper. And within some ballpark on scaling, they should appear the same. Some of the subcriteria:
a. PDF file is created from test document b. PDF file is viewable with the default PDF viewer c. PDF file is printed d. Test document is printed e. minor differences aside: b, c, and d should not cause a WTF reaction by a human
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 2:24 PM Chris Murphy lists@colorremedies.com wrote:
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 9:58 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
Sorry that it's taken me so long to get back to this.
I think the feedback on this has been mostly positive on the Beta criteria, but I'd like to tweak the phrasing a bit and see if this comes off more favorable:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
Does the criterion pply strictly to the printing of text and line art, or does it also apply to gross departures in photographs? If the latter:
^minor differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working"; or ^only major differences in color reproduction are considered "non-working"
Major defined as any of: obvious and grossly incorrect scaling (e.g. +/- 20%) color inversion, torqued primaries (white becomes black, black becomes white; red becomes blue, blue becomes green, etc) tone reproduction that obliterates relevant identifying detail in two or more test images
With that language I'm trying to carve out only remarkable, WTF level, bugs as blockers.
I think we can *probably* leave this as a thing to be decided at a blocker bug review. I really want to avoid trying to set a hard line on a topic that is inherently subjective. In general, I think we can just rely on the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" test for this.
Next question is what applications to use for printing, since the initiating application matters. What if there's a bug in just one application? That shouldn't be a printing blocker (it might be a basic functionality blocker for that application if it's included in default installations). So I'd say pick two. Firefox and LibreOffice? Firefox and evince?
How about "Desktop environment's 'test page' functionality" and whichever basic text editor comes with it.
Next question, test document(s). European Color Initiative has several test PDFs already prepared, perhaps the most applicable for our purposes is the visual test (and a subset of it).And for font scaling and reproduction, Ghent Working Group has test GWG 9.1 which tests various encodings of TrueType, PostScript, and OpenType rendering. Also, there's a suite of LibreOffice test files, and while I haven't gone through it, I'm willing to bet there's one or two that'd serve as a decent sanity tester (in any case I'm not proposing printing out entire test suites): https://github.com/freedesktop/libreoffice-test-files
The nice thing about standardized tests is the far lower risk of bugs in the test file itself, and for sure the applicable developers are familiar with them so as they get escalated, it eliminates the kick back "how did you create this test file? can you attach it to the bug?" etc.
This sounds useful for automating the tests, but I think in general we don't need to write this into the criteria. They don't need to be that specific.
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
To clarify, this does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). Contrary to the first proposal, we won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
I agree with this. One possible sanity test:
- "Print" the standardized test file to a PDF file (using the
built-in print to PDF driver) 2. Print both the resulting PDF from 1, and the original standardized test file, to the designated IPP printer.
i.e. two physical prints on paper. And within some ballpark on scaling, they should appear the same. Some of the subcriteria:
a. PDF file is created from test document b. PDF file is viewable with the default PDF viewer c. PDF file is printed d. Test document is printed e. minor differences aside: b, c, and d should not cause a WTF reaction by a human
That seems reasonable, though I'd rather have Master Wordsmith Adam Williamson phrase that better.
Hi,
comments are in the text:
On 2/11/19 9:17 PM, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 2:24 PM Chris Murphy lists@colorremedies.com wrote:
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 9:58 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
Sorry that it's taken me so long to get back to this.
I think the feedback on this has been mostly positive on the Beta criteria, but I'd like to tweak the phrasing a bit and see if this comes off more favorable:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
Does the criterion pply strictly to the printing of text and line art, or does it also apply to gross departures in photographs? If the latter:
^minor differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working"; or ^only major differences in color reproduction are considered "non-working"
Major defined as any of: obvious and grossly incorrect scaling (e.g. +/- 20%) color inversion, torqued primaries (white becomes black, black becomes white; red becomes blue, blue becomes green, etc) tone reproduction that obliterates relevant identifying detail in two or more test images
With that language I'm trying to carve out only remarkable, WTF level, bugs as blockers.
I think we can *probably* leave this as a thing to be decided at a blocker bug review. I really want to avoid trying to set a hard line on a topic that is inherently subjective. In general, I think we can just rely on the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" test for this.
I agree with Stephen - such topics can be really subjective and even the fault does not have to be on Fedora side (f.e. when you catch the file which goes to the printer, you look into it and it looks fine, but output paper has 'slightly' different colors, scale etc... - so there can be issues in the printer itself).
Next question is what applications to use for printing, since the initiating application matters. What if there's a bug in just one application? That shouldn't be a printing blocker (it might be a basic functionality blocker for that application if it's included in default installations). So I'd say pick two. Firefox and LibreOffice? Firefox and evince?
How about "Desktop environment's 'test page' functionality" and whichever basic text editor comes with it.
IMHO it is not correct blocker criteria for printing as itself, but it is more like blocker for these applications. AFAIK blocker is the issue, which can not be worked around - if the file is printable by CUPS CLI commands 'lp'/'lpr', but not from a app, IMHO it is not blocker for printing.
IMO issues like 'not being able to print from X application' should be blocking/release criteria for some common/widely used apps like Firefox/evince/libreoffice, not for printing itself. (If the issue would be actually connected to CUPS, I'll cooperate with them to fix the issue).
Next question, test document(s). European Color Initiative has several test PDFs already prepared, perhaps the most applicable for our purposes is the visual test (and a subset of it).And for font scaling and reproduction, Ghent Working Group has test GWG 9.1 which tests various encodings of TrueType, PostScript, and OpenType rendering. Also, there's a suite of LibreOffice test files, and while I haven't gone through it, I'm willing to bet there's one or two that'd serve as a decent sanity tester (in any case I'm not proposing printing out entire test suites): https://github.com/freedesktop/libreoffice-test-files
Chris, would you mind elaborating more on the topic of these test files and tests from these sources? Martin (mosvald in CC) currently does only comparing sample file and output file in ghostscript and I'm on my way to do it the similar way in CUPS and printer driver packages.
Do they have special tests available to look into them? I saw mostly only pdf file in ECI downloads, I did not see anything in GWG and only docx or xlsx files in libreoffice tests.
The nice thing about standardized tests is the far lower risk of bugs in the test file itself, and for sure the applicable developers are familiar with them so as they get escalated, it eliminates the kick back "how did you create this test file? can you attach it to the bug?" etc.
This sounds useful for automating the tests, but I think in general we don't need to write this into the criteria. They don't need to be that specific.
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
To clarify, this does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). Contrary to the first proposal, we won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
I agree with this. One possible sanity test:
- "Print" the standardized test file to a PDF file (using the
built-in print to PDF driver) 2. Print both the resulting PDF from 1, and the original standardized test file, to the designated IPP printer.
i.e. two physical prints on paper. And within some ballpark on scaling, they should appear the same. Some of the subcriteria:
a. PDF file is created from test document b. PDF file is viewable with the default PDF viewer c. PDF file is printed d. Test document is printed e. minor differences aside: b, c, and d should not cause a WTF reaction by a human
That seems reasonable, though I'd rather have Master Wordsmith Adam Williamson phrase that better.
I agree, although I would add printing to generic postscript printer, because lots of devices are older and take postscript as input file type.
And IMO we can spare the paper in the most test runs, if we use FileDevice print queue device type in testing - it is special type of CUPS backend, which creates a file which should go to the printer in the place specified in URI. The file is final output of all filters needed for input file conversion (used filters differs according to input file document format and printer's model) and ipp backend (which used for sending filters output to printer), so it matches our needs imo.
But I will welcome suggestion for more sophisticated testing way than comparison or checking file type.
Best regards,
Zdenek
CUPS Fedora maintainer
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I just realized I only responded to Zdenek the other day. Re-sending my response now.
On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 9:13 AM Zdenek Dohnal zdohnal@redhat.com wrote:
Hi,
comments are in the text:
On 2/11/19 9:17 PM, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 2:24 PM Chris Murphy lists@colorremedies.com wrote:
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 9:58 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
Sorry that it's taken me so long to get back to this.
I think the feedback on this has been mostly positive on the Beta criteria, but I'd like to tweak the phrasing a bit and see if this comes off more favorable:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
Does the criterion pply strictly to the printing of text and line art, or does it also apply to gross departures in photographs? If the latter:
^minor differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working"; or ^only major differences in color reproduction are considered "non-working"
Major defined as any of: obvious and grossly incorrect scaling (e.g. +/- 20%) color inversion, torqued primaries (white becomes black, black becomes white; red becomes blue, blue becomes green, etc) tone reproduction that obliterates relevant identifying detail in two or more test images
With that language I'm trying to carve out only remarkable, WTF level, bugs as blockers.
I think we can *probably* leave this as a thing to be decided at a blocker bug review. I really want to avoid trying to set a hard line on a topic that is inherently subjective. In general, I think we can just rely on the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" test for this.
I agree with Stephen - such topics can be really subjective and even the fault does not have to be on Fedora side (f.e. when you catch the file which goes to the printer, you look into it and it looks fine, but output paper has 'slightly' different colors, scale etc... - so there can be issues in the printer itself).
Next question is what applications to use for printing, since the initiating application matters. What if there's a bug in just one application? That shouldn't be a printing blocker (it might be a basic functionality blocker for that application if it's included in default installations). So I'd say pick two. Firefox and LibreOffice? Firefox and evince?
How about "Desktop environment's 'test page' functionality" and whichever basic text editor comes with it.
IMHO it is not correct blocker criteria for printing as itself, but it is more like blocker for these applications. AFAIK blocker is the issue, which can not be worked around - if the file is printable by CUPS CLI commands 'lp'/'lpr', but not from a app, IMHO it is not blocker for printing.
IMO issues like 'not being able to print from X application' should be blocking/release criteria for some common/widely used apps like Firefox/evince/libreoffice, not for printing itself. (If the issue would be actually connected to CUPS, I'll cooperate with them to fix the issue).
Well, we don't have to be that specific in the release criteria, honestly. We're talking about blocker criteria specifically for blocking desktops, so in my opinion it's okay to have "test page" and "basic text editor" as the stand-ins for this. (This is similar to how we have "package manager must be able to download and apply updates" as a stand-in for "the network must not be totally broken".)
I'd be fine if we wanted to add a corollary that either of these are not blockers if it can be shown that other applications can print successfully. I just wanted to suggest those as the basic litmus test.
Next question, test document(s). European Color Initiative has several test PDFs already prepared, perhaps the most applicable for our purposes is the visual test (and a subset of it).And for font scaling and reproduction, Ghent Working Group has test GWG 9.1 which tests various encodings of TrueType, PostScript, and OpenType rendering. Also, there's a suite of LibreOffice test files, and while I haven't gone through it, I'm willing to bet there's one or two that'd serve as a decent sanity tester (in any case I'm not proposing printing out entire test suites): https://github.com/freedesktop/libreoffice-test-files
Chris, would you mind elaborating more on the topic of these test files and tests from these sources? Martin (mosvald in CC) currently does only comparing sample file and output file in ghostscript and I'm on my way to do it the similar way in CUPS and printer driver packages.
Do they have special tests available to look into them? I saw mostly only pdf file in ECI downloads, I did not see anything in GWG and only docx or xlsx files in libreoffice tests.
<snip>
I'm going to suggest that going into this level of detail on how to write the tests is mostly going to cloud the issue. I think we first want to make sure we agree that the basics of the proposal are sound. I'm perfectly happy to delegate the specifics of how to verify the functionality to the subject matter experts.
I'll update the proposal again with some of the feedback:
* Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA. "Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that non-ridiculous differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working". In general, we'll apply the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" principle here when deciding whether a print glitch is truly blocking.)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+: * Printing must work (as defined above) on at least one printer using each of the following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver * For each blocking desktop, it must be possible to print: - A test page from the desktop environment's built-in "test page" feature, if such a feature exists. - A simple text document of at least 100 words (lorem ipsum) from the standard basic text editor accompanying that desktop.
This does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). We won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
+1, I agree with proposed text.
On 2/28/19 10:56 PM, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
I just realized I only responded to Zdenek the other day. Re-sending my response now.
On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 9:13 AM Zdenek Dohnal zdohnal@redhat.com wrote:
Hi,
comments are in the text:
On 2/11/19 9:17 PM, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 2:24 PM Chris Murphy lists@colorremedies.com wrote:
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 9:58 AM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
Sorry that it's taken me so long to get back to this.
I think the feedback on this has been mostly positive on the Beta criteria, but I'd like to tweak the phrasing a bit and see if this comes off more favorable:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
Does the criterion pply strictly to the printing of text and line art, or does it also apply to gross departures in photographs? If the latter:
^minor differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working"; or ^only major differences in color reproduction are considered "non-working"
Major defined as any of: obvious and grossly incorrect scaling (e.g. +/- 20%) color inversion, torqued primaries (white becomes black, black becomes white; red becomes blue, blue becomes green, etc) tone reproduction that obliterates relevant identifying detail in two or more test images
With that language I'm trying to carve out only remarkable, WTF level, bugs as blockers.
I think we can *probably* leave this as a thing to be decided at a blocker bug review. I really want to avoid trying to set a hard line on a topic that is inherently subjective. In general, I think we can just rely on the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" test for this.
I agree with Stephen - such topics can be really subjective and even the fault does not have to be on Fedora side (f.e. when you catch the file which goes to the printer, you look into it and it looks fine, but output paper has 'slightly' different colors, scale etc... - so there can be issues in the printer itself).
Next question is what applications to use for printing, since the initiating application matters. What if there's a bug in just one application? That shouldn't be a printing blocker (it might be a basic functionality blocker for that application if it's included in default installations). So I'd say pick two. Firefox and LibreOffice? Firefox and evince?
How about "Desktop environment's 'test page' functionality" and whichever basic text editor comes with it.
IMHO it is not correct blocker criteria for printing as itself, but it is more like blocker for these applications. AFAIK blocker is the issue, which can not be worked around - if the file is printable by CUPS CLI commands 'lp'/'lpr', but not from a app, IMHO it is not blocker for printing.
IMO issues like 'not being able to print from X application' should be blocking/release criteria for some common/widely used apps like Firefox/evince/libreoffice, not for printing itself. (If the issue would be actually connected to CUPS, I'll cooperate with them to fix the issue).
Well, we don't have to be that specific in the release criteria, honestly. We're talking about blocker criteria specifically for blocking desktops, so in my opinion it's okay to have "test page" and "basic text editor" as the stand-ins for this. (This is similar to how we have "package manager must be able to download and apply updates" as a stand-in for "the network must not be totally broken".)
I'd be fine if we wanted to add a corollary that either of these are not blockers if it can be shown that other applications can print successfully. I just wanted to suggest those as the basic litmus test.
Next question, test document(s). European Color Initiative has several test PDFs already prepared, perhaps the most applicable for our purposes is the visual test (and a subset of it).And for font scaling and reproduction, Ghent Working Group has test GWG 9.1 which tests various encodings of TrueType, PostScript, and OpenType rendering. Also, there's a suite of LibreOffice test files, and while I haven't gone through it, I'm willing to bet there's one or two that'd serve as a decent sanity tester (in any case I'm not proposing printing out entire test suites): https://github.com/freedesktop/libreoffice-test-files
Chris, would you mind elaborating more on the topic of these test files and tests from these sources? Martin (mosvald in CC) currently does only comparing sample file and output file in ghostscript and I'm on my way to do it the similar way in CUPS and printer driver packages.
Do they have special tests available to look into them? I saw mostly only pdf file in ECI downloads, I did not see anything in GWG and only docx or xlsx files in libreoffice tests.
<snip>
I'm going to suggest that going into this level of detail on how to write the tests is mostly going to cloud the issue. I think we first want to make sure we agree that the basics of the proposal are sound. I'm perfectly happy to delegate the specifics of how to verify the functionality to the subject matter experts.
I'll update the proposal again with some of the feedback:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that non-ridiculous differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working". In general, we'll apply the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" principle here when deciding whether a print glitch is truly blocking.)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work (as defined above) on at least one printer using
each of the following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
- For each blocking desktop, it must be possible to print:
- A test page from the desktop environment's built-in "test page"
feature, if such a feature exists. - A simple text document of at least 100 words (lorem ipsum) from the standard basic text editor accompanying that desktop.
This does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). We won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work. _______________________________________________ devel mailing list -- devel@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe send an email to devel-leave@lists.fedoraproject.org Fedora Code of Conduct: https://getfedora.org/code-of-conduct.html List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org
On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 2:56 PM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that non-ridiculous differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working". In general, we'll apply the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" principle here when deciding whether a print glitch is truly blocking.)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work (as defined above) on at least one printer using
each of the following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
- For each blocking desktop, it must be possible to print:
- A test page from the desktop environment's built-in "test page"
feature, if such a feature exists. - A simple text document of at least 100 words (lorem ipsum) from the standard basic text editor accompanying that desktop.
This does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). We won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
I think "generic IPP driver" needs to be more specifically stated.
There's IPP protocol versions 1.1, 2.0, 2.1 and 2.2. The "driverless" specification is IPP Everywhere, which uses IPP protocol versions 2.0 or higher, along with additional requirements to support driverless device discovery and printing of text and images. There isn't strictly speaking a generic IPP driver, although PCL and PostScript are common.
What supports IPP Everywhere out of the box?
Any computer running CUPS 1.5 or later Mobile devices running Android 4.4 and later
Proposal for Fedora 30: If anyone is able to, with reasonable effort, successfully run the agreed test cases to any printer supporting IPP 2.0 or higher, using whatever driver is required, then we don't block. Proposal for Fedora 31: If anyone is able to, with reasonable effort, successfully run the agreed test cases to any IPP Everywhere printer, then we don't block.
Something I need to dig into deeper is how to create a virtual IPP Everywhere printer (a service); which would be useful for testing, in particular automated testing such that the virtual printer itself says "yes this is a valid print job". But also it might be possible to bridge the virtual IPP Everywhere printer with a conventional CUPS+gimp/foomatic driver based printer. If so, I'm thinking Fedora IoT on a Raspberry Pi Zero W, using a static containerized approach, that once working, should be a reliable indicator that any failures coinciding with print pipeline changes in the client, are in fact client bugs. But we'll see about that.
This might be useful: IPP Everywhere mini-tutorial https://github.com/apple/cups/wiki/IPP-(Everywhere)-Mini-Tutorial
Other references: IPP Everywhere FAQ: https://www.pwg.org/ipp/evefaq.html
IPP Everywhere self-certified printers list: https://www.pwg.org/dynamo/eveprinters.php
On 3/11/19 10:52 PM, Chris Murphy wrote:
On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 2:56 PM Stephen Gallagher sgallagh@redhat.com wrote:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that non-ridiculous differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working". In general, we'll apply the "last blocker at Go/No-Go" principle here when deciding whether a print glitch is truly blocking.)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work (as defined above) on at least one printer using
each of the following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
- For each blocking desktop, it must be possible to print:
- A test page from the desktop environment's built-in "test page"
feature, if such a feature exists. - A simple text document of at least 100 words (lorem ipsum) from the standard basic text editor accompanying that desktop.
This does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). We won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
I think "generic IPP driver" needs to be more specifically stated.
There's IPP protocol versions 1.1, 2.0, 2.1 and 2.2. The "driverless" specification is IPP Everywhere, which uses IPP protocol versions 2.0 or higher, along with additional requirements to support driverless device discovery and printing of text and images. There isn't strictly speaking a generic IPP driver, although PCL and PostScript are common.
IMHO Stephen meant it as driverless 'driver' or IPP everywhere enabled printer, since 'generic IPP driver' does not exist.
What supports IPP Everywhere out of the box?
Any computer running CUPS 1.5 or later
I beg to differ that it is not entirely correct. Yes, there are some features for driverless support in <2.1.0 (approximately), but since it was not so widely used at that time, some features were still missing or needed some more tweaks for make it right.
Mobile devices running Android 4.4 and later
Proposal for Fedora 30: If anyone is able to, with reasonable effort, successfully run the agreed test cases to any printer supporting IPP 2.0 or higher, using whatever driver is required, then we don't block.
I would go with 'if printing works on IPP everywhere printer available for Fedora QA' (hooray, we have one :) ) 'then do not block'. But it seems as technicality...
IMHO blocking the release if 'whatever' IPP everywhere printer does not work seems like a trap to me - you basically believe that every printer vendor implemented their IPP server and used HTTP server (IPP is transfered by HTTP protocol) into printers firmware correctly - which is not true till now.
Proposal for Fedora 31: If anyone is able to, with reasonable effort, successfully run the agreed test cases to any IPP Everywhere printer, then we don't block.
Something I need to dig into deeper is how to create a virtual IPP Everywhere printer (a service); which would be useful for testing, in particular automated testing such that the virtual printer itself says "yes this is a valid print job".
ippsample project does that, you can find it in that github link you posted, together with sample of ippserver, which should become 'server solution' for CUPS (the idea is to use CUPS only as client app, and any infrastructure servers will run only IPP server, which will present printers to other machines).
But also it might be possible to bridge the virtual IPP Everywhere printer with a conventional CUPS+gimp/foomatic driver based printer.
This idea is similar to which Mike Sweet presented on PWG meetup last year - printer applications - combination of IPP server(not CUPS)+specific printer driver provider. I created a report from that PWG meetup, please see that.
I plan to add all these projects into Fedora to have fully IPP everywhere solution (ippusbx, ipp-selfcert, ippsample), but not so much time to do it yet...
If so, I'm thinking Fedora IoT on a Raspberry Pi Zero W, using a static containerized approach, that once working, should be a reliable indicator that any failures coinciding with print pipeline changes in the client, are in fact client bugs. But we'll see about that.
This might be useful: IPP Everywhere mini-tutorial https://github.com/apple/cups/wiki/IPP-(Everywhere)-Mini-Tutorial
Other references: IPP Everywhere FAQ: https://www.pwg.org/ipp/evefaq.html
IPP Everywhere self-certified printers list: https://www.pwg.org/dynamo/eveprinters.php
On Tue, Mar 12, 2019 at 2:53 AM Zdenek Dohnal zdohnal@redhat.com wrote:
IMHO Stephen meant it as driverless 'driver' or IPP everywhere enabled printer, since 'generic IPP driver' does not exist.
OK.
What supports IPP Everywhere out of the box?
Any computer running CUPS 1.5 or later
I beg to differ that it is not entirely correct.
I got that straight out of the IPP Everywhere FAQ, but the point I did not state and should have is, Fedora 30 definitely far exceeds the minimum requirement. That was also the point of pointing out Android 4.4 supports it.
Proposal for Fedora 30: If anyone is able to, with reasonable effort, successfully run the agreed test cases to any printer supporting IPP 2.0 or higher, using whatever driver is required, then we don't block.
I would go with 'if printing works on IPP everywhere printer available for Fedora QA' (hooray, we have one :) ) 'then do not block'. But it seems as technicality...
I'm completely fine with narrowing this to an IPP Everywhere printer for Fedora 30. From yesterday's QA meeting, I was understanding they don't have an IPP Everywhere printer, but figured it should be possible to track down an IPP 2.0+ printer. So yeah if there's an IPP Everwhere test printer handy, just go with that from the outset.
On 3/12/19 11:28 PM, Chris Murphy wrote:
On Tue, Mar 12, 2019 at 2:53 AM Zdenek Dohnal zdohnal@redhat.com wrote:
IMHO Stephen meant it as driverless 'driver' or IPP everywhere enabled printer, since 'generic IPP driver' does not exist.
OK.
What supports IPP Everywhere out of the box?
Any computer running CUPS 1.5 or later
I beg to differ that it is not entirely correct.
I got that straight out of the IPP Everywhere FAQ, but the point I did not state and should have is, Fedora 30 definitely far exceeds the minimum requirement. That was also the point of pointing out Android 4.4 supports it.
Proposal for Fedora 30: If anyone is able to, with reasonable effort, successfully run the agreed test cases to any printer supporting IPP 2.0 or higher, using whatever driver is required, then we don't block.
I would go with 'if printing works on IPP everywhere printer available for Fedora QA' (hooray, we have one :) ) 'then do not block'. But it seems as technicality...
I'm completely fine with narrowing this to an IPP Everywhere printer for Fedora 30. From yesterday's QA meeting, I was understanding they don't have an IPP Everywhere printer, but figured it should be possible to track down an IPP 2.0+ printer. So yeah if there's an IPP Everwhere test printer handy, just go with that from the outset.
I'm not entirely sure who is exactly meant as Fedora QA to be honest. IMHO since most developers in Fedora works on RHEL+CentOS too, I would expect similar thing on QA part. And RHEL QE now has IPP Everywhere printer available, so as CUPS maintainer can test if it works.
On Mon, 2019-02-11 at 11:56 -0500, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
On Fri, Nov 16, 2018 at 7:18 PM Adam Williamson adamwill@fedoraproject.org wrote:
On Thu, 2018-09-20 at 08:33 -0400, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
There was a bug[1] filed recently that indicated that printing was broken on certain printers. As a result of that discussion, it became apparent that there was no criteria for printing to work at all, which seems like an oversight.
I discussed this briefly with Matthias Clasen this morning and he agreed that this should be treated as blocking for Workstation.
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: (I don't know which ones to specify here, but we ought to try to figure out a cross-section that covers a large swath of our expected user base).
So as with the optical media proposal we had quite a lively discussion on this one, then it got stuck a bit. Stephen, can you take a look at all the followups and either restate or revise the proposal? Thanks!
Sorry that it's taken me so long to get back to this.
I think the feedback on this has been mostly positive on the Beta criteria, but I'd like to tweak the phrasing a bit and see if this comes off more favorable:
I'd like to propose that we add the following criteria to Beta for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer available to Fedora QA.
"Work" is defined as the output from the device matching a preview shown on the GNOME print preview display. (Note that differences in color reproduction are not considered "non-working".)
and this to Final for Fedora 30+:
- Printing must work on at least one printer using each of the
following drivers: - The built-in print-to-PDF driver - The generic IPP driver
To clarify, this does not mean that all printers need to function properly that use the IPP driver, just that at least one does (so we know that printing as a whole is unbroken). Contrary to the first proposal, we won't specify any particular hardware makes or models that must work.
How does that sound to people?
There was broad support for this proposal both on lists and in meetings, so I am now implementing it with minor tweaks. Thanks Stephen!
devel@lists.stg.fedoraproject.org