I am a newbie to Selenium.I want to know do we have any interactive mode to automate Selenium webdriver.Because i want to test each and every line is correct or not while automating.I have Automated Watir earlier,i have used "irb" to interact with.Please help me do we have any similar kind of mode in Selenium webdriver.
IRB is nothing Watir specific it is just an interactive ruby shell (IRB = Interactive Ruby Shell) and thus you can also use it to work with Selenium. You only need the selenium-webdriver gem and then you can start.
You can also find a good getting started tutorial here: http://aspyct.org/blog/2012/09/09/functional-web-testing-with-selenium-and-ruby/
I'm sorry if this topic may feel so old, but I have an idea for this.
You can use the python interpreter in the terminal and type each line:
from selenium import webdriver
b = webdriver.Firefox()
b.get('https://www.google.com')
And so on :)
I use a debugger (byebug gem) to stop tests at the point where I need to continue the automation interactively. I prefer to have all gems, modules, and classes available when I hit the breakpoint.
I also wrote a couple methods that will reload page object classes from the commandline/breakpoint. I can add a new method, reload, and verify it works, and move on to the next action; all without restarting the test.
Related
i'm using selenium ide to test webapp frontend webpages.
I'd like to test via cli AND via gui having to mantain one scripts only.
When automating tests via selenium-side-runner it does not handle alert/confirm command if i don't change any "choose ok on next confirmation" with "webdriver choose ok on visible confirmation", but after change it side gui does not handle it.
Even exporting to python has some incokmpatiblity with gui.
Anyone knows the proper way to record a side.script with gui and run with cli without having to modify it and letting run the tests with the gui again?
I've see many complaining about this without solution, do you advise to use another fronted tester in the place of side? Why?
Thanks.
Just reporting what said on github's bug tracker issue 1270 by toddtarsi.
There's no way to have one script only to handle gui and cli tests. We have to wait for selenium-ide v4 (not SELENIUM).
The correct way is webdriver one.
I’m going through the documentation for the Selenium WebDriver, and it can drive Chrome for example. I was thinking, wouldn't it be far more efficient to ‘drive’ PhantomJS?
Is there a way to use Selenium with PhantomJS?
My intended use would be web scraping: The sites I scrape are loaded with AJAX and lots of lovely JavaScript, and I’m thinking this setup could be a good replacement for the Scrapy Python framework that I’m currently working with.
PhantomJS now includes the GhostDriver project.
You are also suggested to use PhantomJS directly or with a convenience library such as CasperJS. CasperJS is specifically designed to make it easy to do sequential operations to web pages, perfect for many automation tasks.
Disclaimer: I am the author of PhantomJS.
Edit: As noted in Nick's answer, GhostDriver is now included in PhantomJS.
#Joseph, since the 1.8 release GhostDriver is included in the stable release of PhantomJS. Here is the exact release notes: http://phantomjs.org/release-1.8.html.
You can simply start PhantomJS process to listen on some port, like this:
phantomjs --webdriver=PORT
Kudos to #detro and PhantomJS team for awesome work!
I'm trying to do set up some Selenium WebTests using PHPUnit, but php is no longer supported by Selenium IDE, does this mean I have to re-write all my tests into php in order to use this method?
I'm trying to set up a continuous integration system, but have never even used one before, I tried using jenkins-php.org but it wasn't very helpful.
The newer releasee Selenium IDE "claims" it does not support PHP,
But you can still convert your IDE to PHP or PHPUnit.
(In Selenium IDE) Option > Options > Enable Experimental Functions.
With this option checked you can switch your format under Options again.
You may still want to review your code.
Hope this helps and it is what you meant by "Selenium IDE does not support PHP".
I was able to find: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/selenium-ide-php-formatters/
It allows output from Selenium to PHP, either PHPUnit format or Selenium Testing.
However after all this playing around it became apparent that the best way was to use htmlSuite, it has the most support when it comes to automation and seems to work out of the box, whereas PHPUnit testing requires lots of tinkering.
After a lot of hacking around it became apparent that the best solution is this tool:
http://www.enjoyxstudy.com/selenium/autoexec/index.en.html
It works out of the box, supports htmlSuite, works with windows and linux, runs most browsers, sends email reports, can get new tests from SVN, integrates with Jenkins well, and works with Selenium tests, its not PHP based tests but it works wonders compared to the other tools I tried out.
Really, so much easier, very user friendly, free and works out the box.
What is the easiest way to control Chrome (pc/mac) from an NUnit test?
Things I want it to do:
Use a proxy server I specify
not bring up any dialog boxes that need to be clicked.
open a url I specify
close
With firefox I can do all these things by writing out a temp firefox profile, and telling firefox to use it. If someone knows an answer to this question for IE, I'd also love to hear about it.
You need Watin
You can use Watir to do this:
http://watirwebdriver.com/browser-proxies/
Unfortunately I don't know if you can use Watir from Ironruby to make this work in an NUnit test without having to many ruby dependencies.
I am wondering what tool(s) do you use for front-end testing...
Currently I am using Selenium RC as tool to test the front-end. I am quite happy with the result as I managed to integrate it with the ms build process etc. The problem with Selenium tests is that they are not always reliable especially if you browse with something else than Firefox.
I am looking for open source alternatives (tools for front-end testing)?
I'd recommend TestPlan which can use Selenium as a backend, or HTMLUnit. It also allows you to do a myriad of other testing. It also works around several of the problems Selenium has, making it a bit easier to user than Selenium directly.
My experience shows, Selenium works the best from everything I tried. Even now I work with Firefox 6 and Selenium IDE works perfectly with it.
Together with selenium, we're also using twill. However, it is because of its speed and it is used only for "quick & fast" tests, I'm afraid not a lot of things are better then selenium out there.
On the other hand, I find Selenium quite reliable, even in another browsers - it's just hard to build tests in such way, to think about race conditions etc.
Have you heard of Watin ?
There is a great tool named cypress.
With cypress it is possible to write
End-to-end tests, Integration tests & Unit tests.
It is open source.
Learning curve is very low.
https://docs.cypress.io/guides/overview/why-cypress