Xnee
Developer(s) | GNU Project, Henrik Sandklef |
---|---|
Stable release |
3.15
/ December 22, 2012[1] |
Operating system | X11 |
Type | X11 Test |
License | GNU General Public License |
Website |
www |
GNU Xnee is a suite of programs that can record, replay and distribute user actions under the X11 environment. It can be used for testing and demonstrating X11 applications.[2] Within X11 each user input (mouse click or key press) is an X Window System event. Xnee records these events into a file. Later Xnee is used to play the events back from the file and into an X Window System just as though the user were operating the system.[3] Xnee can also be used to play or distribute user input events to two or more machines in parallel.[2] As the target X Window application sees what appears to be physical user input it has resulted in Xnee being dubbed “Xnee is Not an Event Emulator.”[3][4]
As Xnee is free software, it can be modified to handle special tasks. For example, inserting time stamps as part of the playback.[5]
See also
- AutoHotkey
- AutoIt
- Automator (for Macintosh)
- Bookmarklet
External links
- Official website
- X11::GUITest::record - Perl implementation of the X11 record extension
- X11::GUITest - X11 Recording / Playbook using Perl script
References
- ↑ Sandklef, Henrik (2012-12-22). "GNU Xnee 3.15 ('Shankar') released" (Mailing list). info-gnu. Retrieved 2012-12-24.
- 1 2 Henrik Sandklef (January 1, 2004). "Testing Applications with Xnee". Linux Journal. Retrieved August 14, 2009.
- 1 2 Jerry yin Hom (May 2008). "An Execution Context Optimization Framework for Disk Energy" (pdf). pp. 56–57. Retrieved August 14, 2009.
- ↑ "Xnee FAQ". Free Software Foundation. Retrieved August 14, 2009.
- ↑ Gregory Hartman; Jack Lin; Michael Merideth (December 12, 2002). "Methods for Recognizing Service Quiescence" (pdf). pp. 7–8. Retrieved August 14, 2009.