The device can be lost when physically removing the graphics adapter, disabling the driver (Device Manager), upgrading/uninstalling the graphics driver, and when it is reset due to an error. Some of these can (and should) be tested manually, but the last one has a convenient, programmatic way of triggering: by triggering the timeout detection and recovery (TDR) of WDDM. A compute shader with an infinite loop should trigger this after 2 seconds by default. All tests in tests/manual/rhi can now be started with a --curse <count> argument where <count> specifies the number of frames to render before breaking the device. Qt Quick will get an environment variable with similar semantics in a separate patch. Change-Id: I4b6f8d977a15b5b89d686b3973965df6435810ae Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io> |
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| .. | ||
| auto | ||
| baselineserver | ||
| benchmarks | ||
| global | ||
| libfuzzer | ||
| manual | ||
| shared | ||
| testserver | ||
| README | ||
| tests.pro | ||
README
This directory contains autotests and benchmarks based on Qt Test. In order
to run the autotests reliably, you need to configure a desktop to match the
test environment that these tests are written for.
Linux X11:
* The user must be logged in to an active desktop; you can't run the
autotests without a valid DISPLAY that allows X11 connections.
* The tests are run against a KDE3 or KDE4 desktop.
* Window manager uses "click to focus", and not "focus follows mouse". Many
tests move the mouse cursor around and expect this to not affect focus
and activation.
* Disable "click to activate", i.e., when a window is opened, the window
manager should automatically activate it (give it input focus) and not
wait for the user to click the window.