commit | 3905507f8ffe2fc179b1bf5860eba482d82a1e2e | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Fil Maj <maj.fil@gmail.com> | Fri Feb 22 13:39:38 2013 -0800 |
committer | Fil Maj <maj.fil@gmail.com> | Fri Feb 22 13:39:38 2013 -0800 |
tree | 8591e4d19f93854e494d5796117c1bb40b3445e7 | |
parent | 50141d2ccebe661ca46a2bad94476565ae74d919 [diff] |
Should resolve CB-1478. Added XHR and FileReader benchmarks to autobench.
These specs are designed to run inside the mobile device that implements it - it will fail in the DESKTOP browser.
These set of tests is designed to be used with Cordova. You should initialize a fresh Cordova repository for a target platform and then toss these files into the www folder, replacing the contents.
Make sure you include cordova-*.js in the www folder. You also need to edit cordova.js to reference the version of cordova-*.js file you are testing. For example, to test with cordova-0.9.6.1, edit the VERSION variable in the cordova.js file as follows:
var VERSION='0.9.6.1';
This is done so that you don't have to modify every HTML file when you want to test a new version of Cordova.
The goal is to test mobile device functionality inside a mobile browser. Where possible, the Cordova API lines up with HTML 5 spec. Maybe down the road we could use this spec for parts of HTML 5, too :)
Various parts of this test suite communicate with external servers. Therefore, when you wrap up the test suite inside a Cordova application, make sure you add the following entries to the whitelist!