This file contains some notes about things to try out to give the X.Org video driver a reasonably thorough test. We will add cases of things which have been known to fail in the past to this file as we discover them. * Test XFree86 guests (CentOS 3), early X.Org (CentOS 5) and recent (CentOS 6 and 7, current Ubuntu/Fedora). Test Solaris guests (10 and 11?). * Dynamic resizing should work, on CentOS 6 and later Linux guests it should work without VBoxClient running. * Disabling and enabling virtual screens (VBoxManage in 4.3). * Dynamic resizing with one of more virtual screens disabled. * Test switching to virtual terminals and back from windowed, full screen and seamless modes (seamless currently only works properly with VBoxClient running). * Test switching directly between normal, full-screen, seamless and scaled modes. * execute "xprop -root | grep VBOX" after resizing a screen: VBOX_SIZE_HINTS should be set, and VBOX_SIZE_HINTS_MISMATCH should equal 0 on CentOS 6 and later (4.4 and later). * Test re-ordering the virtual screen using the native guest operating system tools and make sure that mouse integration still works as expected. * Test disabling and re-enabling guest screens with the native system tools. * Try disabling and re-enabling mouse integration and check that capturing works with multiple guest screens. * Shutting down and re-starting a virtual machine should restore the last size for all monitors (note: currently only after log-in). Full shut-down, not a reboot. * Test power management by disabling guest screens ("xrandr --output VGA-n --off") and re-enabling them ("xrandr --output VGA-n --preferred --pos XxY") where X and Y are the position of the screen before disabling it. * Test sending video mode hints with screen position information via VBoxManage. The screen position is a hint only. The approximate position should be preserved after a shut down and re-start of the guest. * Test re-starting the X server after resizing all guest windows. The server should not crash.