### About the Converted Accessibility Tree For several applications like Firefox or Thunderbird, you should first enable ```sh gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface toolkit-accessibility true ``` to see their accessibility tree. #### Example of AT An example of a node: ```xml
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``` An example of a tree: ```xml ... ... ``` #### Useful attributes 1. `name` - shows the name of application, title of window, or name of some component 2. `attr:class` - somewhat the same role as `class` in HTML 3. `attr:id` - somewhat the same role as `id` in HTML 4. `cp:screencoord` - absolute coordinator on the screen 5. `cp:windowcoord` - relative coordinator in the window 6. `cp:size` - the size Also several states like `st:enabled` and `st:visible` can be indicated. A full state list is available at . #### How to use it in evaluation See example `thunderbird/12086550-11c0-466b-b367-1d9e75b3910e.json` and function `check_accessibility_tree` in `metrics/general.py`. You can use CSS selector or XPath to reference a target nodes. You can also check its text contents. An example of a CSS selector: ```css application[name=Thunderbird] page-tab-list[attr|id="tabmail-tabs"]>page-tab[name="About Profiles"] ``` This selector will select the page tab of profile manager in Thunderbird (if open). For usage of CSS selector: . For usage of XPath: . #### Manual check You can use accerciser to check the accessibility tree on GNOME VM. ```sh sudo apt install accerciser ``` ### Additional Installation Activating the window manager control requires the installation of `wmctrl`: ```bash sudo apt install wmctrl ``` To enable recording in the virtual machine, you need to install `ffmpeg`: ```bash sudo apt install ffmpeg ```