Testing Guide¶
Welcome to the Testing Guide for JabberCat.
About this Document¶
This document is intended to give a quick guide for testing early JabberCat releases. If you are not comfortable with filing bugreports on GitHub or directly to the developers, this document is not for you.
Throughout this document, terminal commands will be suggested. Those prefixed
with $
shall be executed by a normal, unprivileged user. Those prefixed
with #
(usually) need root privilegues to work correctly.
$ echo "foo"
About testing JabberCat¶
The stated goals of the current round of testing are the following:
- get early feedback on the User Experience choices made in JabberCat
- allow prioritization of features based on feedback
Warning
Notably, in the current state, JabberCat is not intended to be used in a production environment. Please consider the following:
- data and config stored by JabberCat in this version may not be readable by future JabberCat versions
- conversations may appear incomplete, messages may be missing or not be transmitted despite the UI giving a different appearance.
Installing and starting JabberCat¶
Note
This guide is written with Linux in mind. No tests (at all) have been made on other platforms at the time of writing. If you are interested in getting JabberCat on a non-Linux platform, please get in touch.
Preparations¶
We recommend to do everthing in a fresh directory. Let’s call this directory
jctest
. We will now clone a few repositories:
$ git clone https://github.com/horazont/aioxmpp
$ git clone https://github.com/jabbercat/jclib
$ git clone https://github.com/jabbercat/jabbercat
See also
aioxmpp
is the XMPP library used by JabberCat. jclib
is the
middle-end library between XMPP and the user interface.
Installing dependencies via distributions package managers¶
ArchLinux¶
# pacman -S python-pyqt5 python-pyopenssl python-xdg python-keyring \
python-sqlalchemy python-virtualenv python-pyasn1 python-pyasn1-modules
Debian/Ubuntu¶
# apt install python3-pyqt5 python3-pyqt5.qtwebchannel \
python3-pyqt5.qtwebengine python3-sqlalchemy virtualenv \
qtbase5-dev-tools python3-keyring python3-xdg python3-pyasn1 \
python3-pyasn1-modules
(If you encounter issues when running make
later, try installing
qt5-default
, too.)
Gentoo¶
# emerge -av dev-python/sqlalchemy dev-python/keyring \
dev-python/pyopenssl dev-python/PyQt5 dev-python/pyxdg
Fedora¶
# dnf install python-qt5 python3-qt5-webengine python3-sqlalchemy \
python3-virtualenv qtchooser python3-keyring python3-pyxdg \
python3-pyasn1 python3-pyasn1-modules
Setting up a virtual environment¶
Note
This guide recommends the use of a virtual Python environment. If you are comfortable with managing the dependencies yourself, you can skip this section. Skipping this section is not recommended for people not familiar with Python and PyQt5 development.
The virtual environment is created and activated using the following commands. Make sure to select a Python interpreter with at least Python 3.5 support.
Note
Please check which version of Python 3 is installed on your system with
python3 --version
and use the minor version of that. E.g. if the output
is Python 3.6.4
, use python3.6
in the command line below.
Note
If you experience issues down the road and are re-using a virtual environment from a previous test (e.g. a few weeks old), try re-creating the environment.
If a module is supposedly missing, definitely do try re-creating the environment and pay attention to the version of python.
$ virtualenv --system-site-packages --python python3.5 env
$ . env/bin/activate
From this point forward, operations on python packages will happen within the virtual environment. This is to protect your system and user python libraries from unintended mixing with the dependencies we’re going to install.
Note that we intentionally use --system-site-packages
. You don’t want to
install PyQt5 via Pip, really.
Packages from PyPI¶
$ pip3 install aioopenssl aiosasl quamash
$ (cd aioxmpp && pip install -e .)
$ (cd jclib && pip install -e .)
Starting JabberCat¶
Now before we get to the interesting part, a word of warning: You are testing absolute pre-alpha software here. As already mentioned, it may have interesting and possibly bad bugs, which may corrupt the conversations you’re having. Do not use this for anything important (yet). Some things aren’t entirely sorted out yet.
Also, JabberCat will produce a whole bunch of output. This is necessary to debug any issues you find during testing. However, it may also include your password in readable form, especially during the initial startup of an account, but also in general (when a reconnect is made for whatever reason).
Note
The inclusion of your password only happens with aioxmpp version from before 2017-12-05. It took a while to fix, because the fix was not entirely trivial (spanning several layers), and we wanted to keep the quality of aioxmpp up.
It only happens when the server only offers plaintext password authentication, and we don’t really have control over that. The debug logs include everything sent over the wire, and previously there was no way to reliably strip the password out of that.
Just be careful when pasting things, and when in doubt, ask for advice.
Now, let’s build the files needed for JabberCat to run (assuming you are in the
jctest/jabbercat/
directory):
$ make
If make
fails with an error related to an invocation of rcc
and you are
running debian, try installing qt5-default
.
Note
You need to have a UTF-8 locale set.
Note
Make may print “failed to load emoji database” as the last line; this is a warning which can safely be ignored (because it comes from the process which builds the very emoji database; it foolishly tries to load it before building, non-fatally).
With that finished, you can start JabberCat with the following command:
$ make run-debug
This will:
- create a log file with the current timestamp where all jabbercat output goes
- make a QWebEngineView debugger listen at TCP port 1234; with a Chromium-based browser, you can open the debugger by navigating to `http://localhost:1234`_.
Testing notes¶
Known issues¶
- Handling of highlighting/mentions in MUCs is not implemented yet; we notify on all messages. This will be fixed at some point (#56).
- Setting avatars, account tags and account colors isn’t implemented yet.
- The text input will be sized more reasonably at some point.
- Some kind of nickname and emoji completion suggestions will be implemented for the text input. Suggestions welcome.
- You will sometimes see exception tracebacks – if they are preceded by a
line starting with
DEBUG
, do not report them (those are normal and verbose, indeed, but sometimes tremendously useful). - No logging of messages to persistent storage and no access of server-side archives is supported yet.
Focus areas¶
For the early testing, there’s not really a focus. Report each and every thing which you feel is off with the UX. If you think it may simply be a missing feature, you can either ask a dev in the MUC or directly (see below), or simply report it (see below). Issues are cheap.
Reporting issues¶
When reporting issues, if possible please get in contact with a developer before filing an issue on GitHub. This is to avoid incomplete bug reports and tedious back-and-forth, or worse, accidental and unnecessary exposure of your private information.
To get in touch, you can:
- join our MUC at jabbercat@conference.zombofant.net,
- directly send Jabber IMs to jonas@wielicki.name (adding them to the roster before sending a message is recommended; there are some anti-spam measures in place which may catch you otherwise.).
- send an e-mail to jonas@wielicki.name.
Of course, if you feel confident with reporting issues, feel free to open one at GitHub right away.
Warning
The Python Console inside JabberCat DANGEROUS. This is also mentioned above the console itself: it can be used to steal or delete all your personal data, even outside of JabberCat, just like any other program can. Do not enter untrusted code in there.
Information to include in issue reports¶
If possible, please include the output of:
$ python3 -m jabbercat --version
This will print the JabberCat version, as well as the versions of a few key dependencies and basic information about your OS. This helps with debugging. If you don’t feel comfortable sharing any of the included information, feel free to redact.
This information is also at the top of the log files.