Yeah, it's the needles that confuse me really.
I may give it another try, if I find something worth testing that isn't being tested already.
Well when writing a new test, you end up coding tests with needles with tags that don't exist yet Then you run those tests, until they fail, and take the screenshots and define the needles using the webUI, then assign the correct tags to those needles In an ideal world an awesome openQA test writer might do all of that on their own machine and then send a pull request for both the code and the needles Occasionally we're quick and dirty and just write the test code, test it on our own machines, then throw the test code in a PR and handle the needles fresh in production when the test is run for the first time.. ;) Not good practice, but in your case, if you did write a new test 'blind' without any needles, once it passed review I'd happily give some time to a google hangout or so to give you a 10-20 minute explanation on how to use the Needle editor in openQA -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org