98 lines
3.4 KiB
98 lines
3.4 KiB
# Release testing
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Before a new release of Kaleidoscope, the following test process should be run through on all supported operating systems.
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(As of August 2017, this whole thing really applies to Model01-Firmware, but we hope to generalize it to Kaleidoscope)
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# Tested operating systems
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* The latest stable Ubuntu Linux release running X11. (We _should_ eventually be testing both X11 and Wayland)
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* The latest stable release of macOS
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* An older Mac OS X release TBD. (There were major USB stack changes in 10.9 or so)
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* Windows 10
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* Windows 7
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* The current release of ChromeOS
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* A currentish android tablet that supports USB Host
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* an iOS device (once we fix the usb connection issue to limit power draw)
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# Test process
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## Basic testing
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1. Plug the keyboard in
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1. Make sure the host OS doesn't throw an error
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1. Make sure the LED in the top left doesn't glow red
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1. Make sure the LED in the top-right corner of the left side breathes blue for ~10s
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1. Bring up some sort of notepad app or text editor
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## Basic testing, part 2
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1. Test typing of shifted and unshifted letters and numbers with and without key repeat
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1. Test typing of fn-shifted characters: []{}|\ with and without key repeat
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1. Test that 'Any' key generates a random letter or number and that key repeat works
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1. Test fn-hjkl to move the cursor
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1. Test Fn-WASD to move the mouse
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1. Test Fn-RFV for the three mouse buttons
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1. Test Fn-BGTabEsc for mouse warp
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1. Test that LeftFn+RightFn + hjkl move the cursor
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1. Verify that leftfn+rightfn do not light up the numpad
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## NKRO
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1. Open the platform's native key event viewer
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(If not available, visit https://www.microsoft.com/appliedsciences/KeyboardGhostingDemo.mspx in a browser)
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1. Press as many keys as your fingers will let you
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1. Verify that the keymap reports all the keys you're pressing
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## Test media keys
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1. Fn-Any: previous track
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1. Fn-Y: next-track
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1. Fn-Enter: play/pause
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1. Fn-Butterfly: Windows 'menu' key
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1. Fn-n: mute
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1. Fn-m: volume down
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1. Fn-,: volume up
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## Test numlock
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1. Tap "Num"
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1. Verify that the numpad lights up red
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1. Verify that the num key is breathing blue
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1. Verify that numpad keys generate numbers
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1. Tap the Num key
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1. Verify that the numpad keys stop being lit up
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1 Verify that 'jkl' don't generate numbers.
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## Test LED Effects
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1. Tap the LED key
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1. Verify that there is a rainbow effect
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1. Tap the LED key a few more times and verify that other LED effects show up
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1. Verify that you can still type.
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## Second connection
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1. Unplug the keyboard
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1. Plug the keyboard back in
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1. Make sure you can still type
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## Programming
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1. If the OS has a way to show serial port devices, verify that the keyboard's serial port shows up.
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1. If you can run stty, as you can on linux and macos, make sure you can tickle the serial port at 1200 bps.
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Linux: stty -F /dev/ttyACM0 1200
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Mac:
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1. If you tickle the serial port without holding down the prog key, verify that the Prog key does not light up red
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1. If you hold down the prog key before tickling the serial port, verify that the Prog key's LED lights up red.
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1. Unplug the keyboard
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1. While holding down prog, plug the keyboard in
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1. Verify that the prog key is glowing red.
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1. Unplug the keyboard
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1. Plug the keyboard in
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1. Verify that the prog key is not glowing red.
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# If the current platform supports the Arduino IDE (Win/Lin/Mac)
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1. use the Arduino IDE to reflash the current version of the software.
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1. Verify that you can type a few keys
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1. Verify that the LED key toggles between LED effects
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