449b347644
The name CET is locale-dependent; but QLocale doesn't know about localization of time zone names. Such abbreviated zone names are, in any case, potentially ambiguous - various zones around the world have collisions - so they can't be relied on. QTimeZone's various backends have differing handlings of how to abbreviate zone names (MS's provides no abbreviated names at all); and it appears macOS actually follows the relevant localizations. So it is hopeless to hard-code the expected zone abbreviations. Changed the tests to consult QTimeZone for the abbreviation and compare what it gets with the results of checks which should match this. This is less stringent, but it is at least robustly correct, thereby getting rid of assorted kludges and #if-ery. Pick-to: 5.15 Task-number: QTBUG-70149 Change-Id: I0c565de3fd8b5987c8f5a3f785ebd8f6e941e055 Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io> |
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auto | ||
baselineserver | ||
benchmarks | ||
global | ||
libfuzzer | ||
manual | ||
shared | ||
testserver | ||
.prev_CMakeLists.txt | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
README | ||
tests.pro |
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.