QA/Jetpack/AddonBuilderTestPlan: Difference between revisions
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* [https://wiki.mozilla.org/QA/Jetpack/AddonBuilderTestPlan/test1 Results] | * [https://wiki.mozilla.org/QA/Jetpack/AddonBuilderTestPlan/test1 Trunk Results] | ||
* [https://wiki.mozilla.org/QA/Jetpack/AddonBuilderTestPlan/test2 Stage Results] |
Revision as of 22:31, 24 November 2010
Introduction
The Add-on Builder is the quick and easy way to develop an extension for Firefox using common web technologies. The Builder is essentially a web app that wraps the Add-on SDK for developers who do not possess extensive experience developing add-ons for Firefox or are not familiar with console-based development environments. Get started by clicking here.
Release Planning and Implementation
The linked document below is used for planning and development of specs for upcoming releases of the Add-ons Builder. See the features link in QA strategy section for the list of major features that have been implemented to date.
Add-on Builder Product Development Plan
Criteria to ship
The Builder can be pushed to production when the manual and automated tests pass based on the following criteria:
- All links on the website are working. There should be no 404 errors.
- The add-ons and libraries are being saved.
- We are able to write the code for an add-on inside the Skywriter editor and download it to Firefox to ensure it works as expected.
A test Add-on and Library will each be created that possess all the possible attributes of a fully featured package. Each item included in the Add-on or Library will be entered into the Builder and tested in a stepwise process that mocks the route a developer would take in creating such a package. See the QA strategy section below for details on how and what to test.
QA Strategy
The Add-on builder will be tested on different platforms and environments.
Browsers | Platforms |
Firefox 3.6+ | Mac OS X 10.6 and higher Windows XP, Vista and 7 Linux |
There are two types of testing for Add-on builder.
1. Manual:
Manual testing includes running Smoke tests, BFTs and FFTs. They should pass in order to release Add-on builder. We will use spot checks for feature testing to ensure that when new features land, they do not regress any functionality in the application and behave as expected.
Following is the list of the features that are implemented in the Add-on builder and its test cases.
2. Automation:
Being a web application, Add-on builder is a great candidate for automation tests. Here, we can basically test the flow of creating an add-on through Add-on builder. We can also test the creation of libraries as well. The flow can be -
- Login - Click on create Add-on - Typing in text editor for module - (Optional)Save - (Optional)Add attachment(s) - (Optional)save - (Optional)Add libraries - Edit add-on information - Save - Download add-on - Install to browser
This is a sample example for automation flow. We will have scripts to test different features like badging verification, notification verification etc.
- Tools used
- WIP(Talk about the automation tool to be used here)
Schedule
Milestone | Release Date | QA Sign off | Browser Status | Platform Status |
1.0a6 | November 22 | Firefox:result | Mac:result Windows:result Linux:result |