Skip to content

vinnitu/webdriverio

 
 

Repository files navigation

Selenium Test Status

This library is a webdriver module for Node.js. It makes it possible to write super easy selenium tests in your favorite BDD or TDD test framework. It was originated by Camilo Tapia's inital selenium project called WebdriverJS.

Have a look at the many examples.

For news or announcements follow @webdriverio on Twitter.

How to install it

npm install webdriverio

Usage

Make sure you have a running Selenium standalone/grid/hub. Or use selenium-standalone package to run one easily.

Once you initialized your WebdriverIO instance you can chain all available protocol and action commands to execute asynchronous requests sequentially. WebdriverIO supports callback and promise based chaining. You can either pass a callback as last parameter to handle with the command results:

var webdriverio = require('../index');
var options = {
    desiredCapabilities: {
        browserName: 'chrome'
    }
};

webdriverio
    .remote(options)
    .init()
    .url('http://www.google.com')
    .getTitle(function(err, title) {
        console.log('Title was: ' + title);
    })
    .end();

or you can handle it like a A+ promise:

webdriverio
    .remote(options)
    .init()
    .url('http://www.google.com')
    .getTitle()
        .then(function(title) {
            console.log('Title was: ' + title);
        })
        .reject(function(error) {
            console.log('uups something went wrong', error);
        })
    .end();

Using promised based assertion libraries like chai-as-promised it makes functional testing with WebdriverIO super easy. No nested callbacks anymore! No confusion whether to use callbacks or promises!

describe('example page', function() {

    before(function() {
        return client.init().url('http://example.com');
    });

    it('should display right title and #someElem', function() {
        return client.getTitle().should.become('Example Title')
                     .isVisible('#someElem').should.eventually.be.true;
    });

    after(function() {
        return client.end();
    });

});

Options

desiredCapabilities

Type: Object

Example:

browserName: 'chrome',  // options: firefox, chrome, opera, safari
version: '27.0',        // browser version
platform: 'XP',         // OS platform
tags: ['tag1','tag2'],  // specify some tags (e.g. if you use Sauce Labs)
name: 'my test'         // set name for test (e.g. if you use Sauce Labs)

See the Selenium documentation for a list of the available capabilities.

logLevel

Type: String

Default: silent

Options: verbose | silent | command | data | result

screenshotPath

Saves a screenshot to a given path if Selenium driver crashes

Type: String|null

Default: null

singleton

Type: Boolean

Default: false

Set to true if you always want to reuse the same remote

waitforTimeout

Type: Number

Default: 500

Default timeout for all waitForXXX commands

Selector API

The JsonWireProtocol provides several strategies to query an element. WebdriverIO simplifies these to make it more familiar with the common existing selector libraries like Sizzle. The following selector types are supported:

  • CSS query selector
    e.g. client.click('h2.subheading a', function(err,res) {...}) etc.
  • link text
    To get an anchor element with a specific text in it (f.i. <a href="http://webdriver.io">WebdriverIO</a>) query the text starting with an equal (=) sign. In this example use =WebdriverIO
  • partial link text
    To find a anchor element whose visible text partially matches your search value, query it by using *= in front of the query string (e.g. *=driver)
  • tag name
    To query an element with a specific tag name use <tag> or <tag />
  • name attribute
    For quering elements with a specific name attribute you can eather use a normal CSS3 selector or the provided name strategy from the JsonWireProtocol by passing something like [name="some-name"] as selector parameter
  • xPath
    It is also possible to query elements via a specific xPath. The selector has to have a format like for example //BODY/DIV[6]/DIV[1]/SPAN[1]

In near future WebdriverIO will cover more selector features like form selector (e.g. :password,:file etc) or positional selectors like :first or :nth.

List of current commands methods

To see the full list of available commands check out the WebdriverIO API.

Eventhandling

WebdriverIO inherits several function from the NodeJS EventEmitter object. Additionally it provides an experimental way to register events on browser side (like click, focus, keypress etc.).

Eventhandling

The following functions are supported: on,once,emit,removeListener,removeAllListeners. They behave exactly as described in the official NodeJS docs. There are some predefined events (error,init,end, command) which cover important WebdriverIO events.

Example:

client.on('error', function(e) {
    // will be executed everytime an error occured
    // e.g. when element couldn't be found
    console.log(e.body.value.class);   // -> "org.openqa.selenium.NoSuchElementException"
    console.log(e.body.value.message); // -> "no such element ..."
})

All commands are chainable, so you can use them while chaining your commands

var cnt;

client
    .init()
    .once('countme', function(e) {
        console.log(e.elements.length, 'elements were found');
    })
    .elements('.myElem', function(err,res) {
        cnt = res.value;
    })
    .emit('countme', cnt)
    .end();

Note: make sure you check out the Browserevent side project that enables event-handling on client side (Yes, in the browser!! ;-).

Adding custom commands

If you want to extend the client with your own set of commands there is a method called addCommand available from the client object:

var client = require("webdriverio").remote();

// example: create a command the returns the current url and title as one result
// last parameter has to be a callback function that needs to be called
// when the command has finished (otherwise the queue stops)
client.addCommand("getUrlAndTitle", function(customVar, cb) {
    this.url(function(err,urlResult) {
        this.getTitle(function(err,titleResult) {
            var specialResult = {url: urlResult.value, title: titleResult};
            cb(err,specialResult);
            console.log(customVar); // "a custom variable"
        })
    });
});

client
    .init()
    .url('http://www.github.com')
    .getUrlAndTitle('a custom variable', function(err,result){
        assert.equal(null, err)
        assert.strictEqual(result.url,'https://github.com/');
        assert.strictEqual(result.title,'GitHub · Build software better, together.');
    })
    .end();

Selenium cloud providers

WebdriverIO supports

See the corresponding examples.

How to run tests

  1. Download the latest Selenium standalone server and run it via

    $ java -jar selenium-server-standalone-2.41.0.jar
  2. Make sure you have all the dependencies installed

    $ npm install

    also all Bower packages required by our testpage

    $ cd test/site/www && bower install && cd ../../..
  3. Start a local server that delivers our test page to the browser. We recommend to use http-server

    $ cd /root/dir/of/webdriverio
    $ http-server -p 8080
  4. Depending on your feature/fix/patch make sure it gets covered by a test. To ensure that you can run one of the following commands:

    # if your patch is browser specific
    # (e.g. upload files)
    npm run-script test-desktop
    
    # if your patch is mobile specific
    # (e.g. flick or swipe tests)
    npm run-script test-mobile
    
    # if your patch is functional and hasn't something to do with Selenium
    # (e.g. library specific fixes like changes within EventHandler.js)
    npm run-script test-functional

    While developing you can run tests on specific specs by passing another environment variable _SPEC, e.g.

    $ _SPEC=test/spec/YOURSPEC.js npm run-script test-desktop

NPM Maintainers

The npm module for this library is maintained by:

About

Webdriver/Selenium 2.0 JavaScript bindings for Node.js

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 98.5%
  • CSS 1.5%