<metapackage xmlns:os="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install" xmlns="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install">
<group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP1">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP1 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP1-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP1</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP1">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP1 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP1-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP1</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP2">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP2 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP2-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP2</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP2">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP2 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP2-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP2</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP3">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP3 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP3-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP3</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP3">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP3 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP3-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP3</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP4">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP4 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP4-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP4</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP4">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP4 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP4-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP4</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP5">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP5 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP5-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP5</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP5">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP5 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP5-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP5</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP6 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP6-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP6</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP6 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP6-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP6</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP7">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP7 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP7-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP7</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP7">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP7 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP7-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP7</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 16.0">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 16.0 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-16.0-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 16.0</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 16.0">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 16.0 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install openQA</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-16.0-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 16.0</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>openQA</name>
        <summary>The openQA web-frontend, scheduler and tools</summary>
        <description>openQA is a testing framework that allows you to test GUI applications on one
hand and bootloader and kernel on the other. In both cases, it is difficult to
script tests and verify the output. Output can be a popup window or it can be
an error in early boot even before init is executed.

openQA is an automated test tool that makes it possible to test the whole
installation process of an operating system. It uses virtual machines to
reproduce the process, check the output (both serial console and screen) in
every step and send the necessary keystrokes and commands to proceed to the
next. openQA can check whether the system can be installed, whether it works
properly in &#x27;live&#x27; mode, whether applications work or whether the system
responds as expected to different installation options and commands.

Even more importantly, openQA can run several combinations of tests for every
revision of the operating system, reporting the errors detected for each
combination of hardware configuration, installation options and variant of the
operating system.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  </metapackage>