240 likes | 459 Views
Certified for Windows Vista. Introducing the Windows Vista Logo Programs. Goals of the Logo Programs. Rapid Windows Vista adoption Profitable development platform Competitive differentiation Partner support. Certified for Windows Vista. Increase the quality of applications
E N D
Goals of theLogo Programs • Rapid Windows Vista adoption • Profitable development platform • Competitive differentiation • Partner support
Certified for Windows Vista • Increase the quality of applications • Increase customer confidence • Differentiate your product • Harness Microsoft marketing power • Associate with an instantly recognized brand • Meet enterprise, corporate, and retail purchasing criteria • Access resources that reduce development costs
Pretest with Test Cases Develop Application Prepare Select Certification Authority Take Advantage of Marketing and Distribution Benefits Submit Application for Certification Receive Confirmation of Successful Certification Receive the Certified for Windows Vista Logo The Certification Process Build / Learn Test Market
Reliability Normal Operations Test Cases Install and Uninstall Security and Compatibility Machine Setup and Configuration
Additional Resources • Innovate on the Windows Vista platform portal • http://microsoft.mrmpslc.com/InnovateOnWindowsVista/Default.aspx?LangType=1033 • Certified for Windows Vista requirements • http://download.microsoft.com/download/8/e/4/8e4c929d-679a-4238-8c21-2dcc8ed1f35c/Windows%20Vista%20Software%20Logo%20Spec%201.1.doc • Certified for Windows Vista test cases • http://download.microsoft.com/download/a/5/d/a5d3d02a-fd03-466f-9ba8-97f5e7a90a98/CertifiedforWindowsVistaProgramTestCases.doc
Windows Server 2003 R2 Platform SDK • Contains tools developers can use for: • Cryptography • Debugging • File management • Performance • Resources • Testing • Can be used to develop 32- and 64-bit applications
Installation Requirements • Use Windows components for installation • Support User Account Control for installation • Install to correct folders • Sign ClickOnce manifests • Keep ClickOnce installations isolated • Correctly configure package identity • Install Windows resources properly • Follow best practices for creating custom actions • Avoid reboots during installation • Support command-line installation • Follow component rules
Installation Options • Applications must use Windows Installer (MSI) or ClickOnce for installation • Follows good setup design • Are safer • Evolves with operating system • Preferred by enterprise customers
Restart Manager • Check if files that require updating are in use • Shut down applications, apply the update, restart • Applications listen to shutdown messages, and save state without prompting user • Applications restart as if they were never shut down • If system restart is unavoidable, schedule to minimize disruption
Installing to Correct Folder Locations • Applications installed to Program Files or AppData • User data written at first run • Users given location flexibility • Managing shared components • New folder hierarchy
Installation Test Cases • Verify application installer uses Windows Installer • Verify application’s MSI installer does not receive any errors from the Internal Consistency Evaluators • Verify application’s installer contains an embedded manifest • Verify application launches with installed user token • Verify application installs to the correct folders by default
Installation Test Cases • Verify the application rolls back the install and restores machine to previous state • Verify the application does not force a restart during install • Verify the application properly handles files in use during install • Verify the application can be installed quietly from the command line
Compatibility and Interoperability Requirements • Support x64 Versions • Sign files and drivers • Perform version checking properly • Support concurrent user sessions • Avoid loading services and drivers in safe mode • Follow anti-malware policies
Signing Files • Ensures files have not been tampered with • All executable files must be signed with an Authenticode certificate • Code-signing certificates are available from several vendors • Use the SignTool in the Windows SDK to sign files
Version Checking • Allows application to be used in future versions • Check for ≥ desired version number • Do not check CurrentVersion in registry • If EULA prohibits use on future operating systems, fail gracefully • GetVersionEx • Version-checking API • Check for capabilities rather than version • Windows build team recommendation • VerifyVersionInfo • Environment.Version property
Fast User Switching • Multiple users can log on • Switches quickly between open accounts • Does not change application state • Uses Terminal Services technology
Compatibility and Interoperability Test Cases • Verify application installer: • Does not have a 16-bit installer • Does not use or rely on 16-bit code or components • Does not attempt to install any non-64-bit drivers on x64 versions of the Windows operating system regardless of whether application is a Win32 application or is native to 64-bit
Windows Error Reporting • Mini-dump of crash reported to Microsoft • ISVs access crash data through Developer Portal • Clients that crash in the future are directed to the solution
Windows Error Reporting Requirements • Do not disable WER • Sign up to receive crash data • Map applications to company • ISVs MUST fix 60% of crash volume • ISVs MUST maintain an average fix rate of 10 buckets per month • ISVs can issue patches and service packs through the Windows Developer Portal