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README
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README
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webbrowser-app has been replaced by morph-browser in never versions of Ubuntu
Touch. See https://github.com/ubports/morph-browser for its source code and
issue tracking.
webbrowser-app is a lightweight web browser tailored for Ubuntu,
based on the Oxide web engine and using the Ubuntu UI components.
It requires Qt 5.5 to build and run.
= Building =
The build system uses cmake.
To compile, simply invoke cmake and then make:
$ cmake .
$ make
The application can also be cross compiled for an ARM target on a X86 host.
To do that, just pass this additional parameter to cmake:
$ cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=cmake/ubuntu-arm-linux-gnueabihf.cmake .
= Running =
webbrowser-app can be run from the development branch without the need to
install any files. Just run:
$ ./src/app/webbrowser/webbrowser-app
The executable accepts command line switches and parameters. To find out which,
just run:
$ ./src/app/webbrowser/webbrowser-app --help
= Build with docker =
First we need to build the image
$ docker build -t ubports_xenial .
Then we can build the app
$ docker run --privileged -ti --rm -e DISPLAY=:0 -v /var/run/dbus:/var/run/dbus -v /tmp/.X11-unix:/tmp/.X11-unix -v `pwd`:/home/developer/ubports_build ubports_xenial bash -c "cmake . && make"
Now we can run the app
$ docker run --privileged -ti --rm -e DISPLAY=:0 -v /var/run/dbus:/var/run/dbus -v /tmp/.X11-unix:/tmp/.X11-unix -v `pwd`:/home/developer/ubports_build ubports_xenial bash -c "./src/app/webbrowser/webbrowser-app"
= Unit tests =
To run the unit tests, you can use the commands below:
$ make test
- or -
$ ctest
= Automated UI tests =
webbrowser-app uses autopilot (https://launchpad.net/autopilot) to test its UI.
To run the tests locally, you will need to install python3-autopilot and
autopilot-qt5.
Then do the following:
$ cd tests/autopilot/
$ autopilot3 run webbrowser_app
You can get a list of all available tests with the following command:
$ autopilot3 list webbrowser_app
In order to run the tests in a virtual machine with an environment closer to
what a user will get in Ubuntu Touch, see the Dep8 tests section.
= Code coverage =
To generate a report with detailed code coverage, you need to re-run cmake with
"CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=coverage":
$ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=coverage .
$ make
$ make test
$ make coverage
This will generate a coverage report in XML format (coverage.xml) and an
interactive human-readable report in HTML format (coveragereport/index.html).
= Dep8 tests =
Dep8 tests exercise the package "as-installed".
Currently, the webbrowser-app has one suite of dep8 tests that uses autopilot
(https://launchpad.net/autopilot) to test from the point of view of the user.
To run the tests you will need autopkgtest:
$ sudo apt-get install autopkgtest
You can use multiple test beds to execute the tests. Below you will find
instructions to run them in a virtual machine
You can find more information with:
$ man adt-run
== Run dep8 tests ==
To run the tests in a qemu virtual machine, you will first have to create it
(see /usr/share/doc/autopkgtest/README.running-tests.rst.gz). We output the
image to ~/ rather than the current directory, so it will be in a safer
place to avoid rebuilding images every time. You can store it in any
directory you wish. This image is better consumed "fresh", building it daily
will avoid long updates/upgrades when running the tests.
$ adt-buildvm-ubuntu-cloud -r $(lsb_release -c -s) -a amd64 -o ~/
Then run the tests using adt-run with the qemu virtualization host against
the current archive.
$ adt-run -B -U --unbuilt-tree . \
-o ~/adt-browser-test/$(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H-%M) \
--- qemu ~/adt-$(lsb_release -c -s)-amd64-cloud.img
The tests can also be run on a local phone.
$ adt-run -B -U --unbuilt-tree . \
-o ~/adt-browser-test/$(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H-%M) \
--- ssh -s adb -- -p <password> --serial <ADB_SERIAL>
== Examine the dep8 autopilot results ==
To examine the test results, which are in subunit format, additional tools are
required, such as trv (https://launchpad.net/trv).
You can find the results file in the directory
~/adt-browser-test/$(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H-%M)/artifacts.
= Settings =
webbrowser-app supports a limited set of custom settings, persisted on disk in
the following INI-like file:
$HOME/.config/webbrowser-app/webbrowser-app.conf
The following keys are supported:
- 'homepage': a URL that the browser will open when launched if no URL is
specified on the command line
- 'searchengine': a custom search engine specification, looked up in
$HOME/.local/share/webbrowser-app/searchengines/{value}.xml and following
the OpenSearch document description format
(http://www.opensearch.org/Specifications/OpenSearch/1.1)
- restoreSession: whether to restore the previous browsing session at startup
(defaults to true)