# HG changeset patch # User herrick # Date 1573263674 18000 # Node ID 74e44250e3a7d423195723a91a96941c903c3657 # Parent 58391f650fd7a74214cf8b72c50bec41ba413378# Parent 90cf1d4e712fe3fae27b9611e3e5d09ad9612a56 Merge diff -r 58391f650fd7 -r 74e44250e3a7 .hgtags --- a/.hgtags Fri Nov 08 16:48:20 2019 -0500 +++ b/.hgtags Fri Nov 08 20:41:14 2019 -0500 @@ -594,3 +594,4 @@ 9b67dd88a9313e982ec5f710a7747161bc8f0c23 jdk-14+19 54ffb15c48399dd59922ee22bb592d815307e77c jdk-14+20 c16ac7a2eba4e73cb4f7ee9294dd647860eebff0 jdk-14+21 +83810b7d12e7ff761ad3dd91f323a22dad96f108 jdk-14+22 diff -r 58391f650fd7 -r 74e44250e3a7 doc/testing.html --- a/doc/testing.html Fri Nov 08 16:48:20 2019 -0500 +++ b/doc/testing.html Fri Nov 08 20:41:14 2019 -0500 @@ -43,6 +43,7 @@
It is highly recommended to use the latest NSS version when running PKCS11 tests. Improper NSS version may lead to unexpected failures which are hard to diagnose. For example, sun/security/pkcs11/Secmod/AddTrustedCert.java may fail on Ubuntu 18.04 with the default NSS version in the system. To run these tests correctly, the system property test.nss.lib.paths
is required on Ubuntu 18.04 to specify the alternative NSS lib directories. For example:
$ make test TEST="jtreg:sun/security/pkcs11/Secmod/AddTrustedCert.java" JTREG="JAVA_OPTIONS=-Dtest.nss.lib.paths=/path/to/your/latest/NSS-libs"
For more notes about the PKCS11 tests, please refer to test/jdk/sun/security/pkcs11/README.
+Some Client UI tests use key sequences which may be reserved by the operating system. Usually that causes the test failure. So it is highly recommended to disable system key shortcuts prior testing. The steps to access and disable system key shortcuts for various platforms are provided below.
+Choose Apple menu; System Preferences, click Keyboard, then click Shortcuts; select or deselect desired shortcut.
+For example, test/jdk/javax/swing/TooltipManager/JMenuItemToolTipKeyBindingsTest/JMenuItemToolTipKeyBindingsTest.java fails on MacOS because it uses CTRL + F1
key sequence to show or hide tooltip message but the key combination is reserved by the operating system. To run the test correctly the default global key shortcut should be disabled using the steps described above, and then deselect "Turn keyboard access on or off" option which is responsible for CTRL + F1
combination.
Open the Activities overview and start typing Settings; Choose Settings, click Devices, then click Keyboard; set or override desired shortcut.
+Type gpedit
in the Search and then click Edit group policy; navigate to User Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> Windows Components -> File Explorer; in the right-side pane look for "Turn off Windows key hotkeys" and double click on it; enable or disable hotkeys.
Note: restart is required to make the settings take effect.