* Given the nature of the project, the complexity of the codebase and the high level of quality assurance upstream, it is preferable to SRU a minor release rather than cherry-pick selected bug fixes.
[Testing]
* Upstream testing. Bugs fixed upstream typically include unit/regression tests, and the release itself is extensively exercised (both in an automated manner and manually).
* A minor release with a total of ?? bug fixes always carries the potential for introducing regressions, even though it is a bugfix-only release, meaning that no new features were added, and no existing features were removed.
* A combination of autopkgtests and careful smoke testing as described above should provide reasonable confidence that no regressions sneaked in.
[Impact]
* LibreOffice 7.2.3 is in its third bugfix release of the 7.2 line: /wiki.documentf oundation. org/ReleasePlan /7.2#7. 2.3_release
https:/
* Version 7.2.2 is currently released in impish. For a list of fixed bugs compared to 7.2.2 see the list of bugs fixed in the release candidates of 7.2.3 (that's a total of ?? bugs): /wiki.documentf oundation. org/Releases/ 7.2.3/RC1# List_of_ fixed_bugs /wiki.documentf oundation. org/Releases/ 7.2.3/RC2# List_of_ fixed_bugs
https:/
https:/
* Given the nature of the project, the complexity of the codebase and the high level of quality assurance upstream, it is preferable to SRU a minor release rather than cherry-pick selected bug fixes.
[Testing]
* Upstream testing. Bugs fixed upstream typically include unit/regression tests, and the release itself is extensively exercised (both in an automated manner and manually).
* A recent set of upstream's automated jenkins testing can be found here: /ci.libreoffice .org/job/ gerrit_ 72/1116/
https:/
* More information about the upstream QA testing can be found here: /wiki.documentf oundation. org/QA/ Testing/ Automated_ Tests /wiki.documentf oundation. org/Development /UITests /wiki.documentf oundation. org/QA/ Testing/ Regression_ Tests /wiki.documentf oundation. org/QA/ Testing/ Feature_ Tests
* Automated tests
https:/
* Automated UI tests
https:/
* Regression tests
https:/
* Feature tests
https:/
* Launchpad testing. The libreoffice packages include autopkgtests that were run and verified as passing. /autopkgtest. ubuntu. com/results/ autopkgtest- impish- libreoffice- libreoffice- prereleases/ impish/ amd64/libr/ libreoffice/ 20211121_ 122557_ 220e4@/ log.gz /autopkgtest. ubuntu. com/results/ autopkgtest- impish- libreoffice- libreoffice- prereleases/ impish/ arm64/libr/ libreoffice/ 20211121_ 140906_ e9b32@/ log.gz /autopkgtest. ubuntu. com/results/ autopkgtest- impish- libreoffice- libreoffice- prereleases/ impish/ armhf/libr/ libreoffice/ 20211121_ 135011_ ebc4d@/ log.gz /autopkgtest. ubuntu. com/results/ autopkgtest- impish- libreoffice- libreoffice- prereleases/ impish/ ppc64el/ libr/libreoffic e/20211121_ 121636_ a621c@/ log.gz /autopkgtest. ubuntu. com/results/ autopkgtest- impish- libreoffice- libreoffice- prereleases/ impish/ s390x/libr/ libreoffice/ 20211121_ 120225_ a0cce@/ log.gz /wiki.ubuntu. com/Process/ Merges/ TestPlans/ libreoffice
* [amd64] https:/
* [arm64] https:/
* [armhf] https:/
* [ppc64el] https:/
* [s390x] https:/
* General smoke testing of all the applications in the office suite were carried out by going through the manual testplan as documented by: https:/
[Regression Potential]
* A minor release with a total of ?? bug fixes always carries the potential for introducing regressions, even though it is a bugfix-only release, meaning that no new features were added, and no existing features were removed.
* A combination of autopkgtests and careful smoke testing as described above should provide reasonable confidence that no regressions sneaked in.