WebdriverIO
This WebdriverIO guide expects you to have already gone through the example Application setup in order to follow step-by-step. The general information may still be useful otherwise.
This WebDriver testing example will use WebdriverIO and its testing suite. It is expected to already have Node.js
installed, along with npm
or yarn
although the finished example project uses yarn
.
#
Create a Directory for the TestsLet's start off by creating a space in our project to write these tests. We are going to be using a nested directory for
this example project as we will later also go over other frameworks, but typically you will only need to use one. Create
the directory we will use with mkdir -p webdriver/webdriverio
. The rest of this guide will assume you are inside the
webdriver/webdriverio
directory.
#
Initializing a WebdriverIO ProjectWe will be using a pre-existing package.json
to bootstrap this test suite because we have already chosen specific
WebdriverIO config options and want to showcase a simple working solution. The bottom of this section has a collapsed
guide on how to set it up from scratch.
package.json
:
{
"name": "webdriverio",
"version": "1.0.0",
"private": true,
"scripts": {
"test": "wdio run wdio.conf.js"
},
"dependencies": {
"@wdio/cli": "^7.9.1"
},
"devDependencies": {
"@wdio/local-runner": "^7.9.1",
"@wdio/mocha-framework": "^7.9.1",
"@wdio/spec-reporter": "^7.9.0"
}
}
We have a script which runs a WebdriverIO config as a test suite exposed as the test
command. We also have various
dependencies that were added by the @wdio/cli
command when we first set it up. In short, these dependencies are for
the most simple setup using a local WebDriver runner, Mocha as the test framework, and a simple Spec Reporter.
Click me if you want to see how to set a project up from scratch
The CLI is interactive, and you may choose the tools to work with yourself. Note that you will likely diverge from the rest of the guide, and need to set up the differences yourself.
Let's add the WebdriverIO CLI to this npm project.
- npm
- Yarn
npm install @wdio/cli
yarn add @wdio/cli
To then run the interactive config command to set up a WebdriverIO test suite, you can then run:
- npm
- Yarn
npx wdio config
yarn wdio config
#
ConfigYou may have noticed that the test
script in our package.json
mentions a file wdio.conf.js
. That's the WebdriverIO
config file which controls most aspects of our testing suite.
wdio.conf.js
:
const os = require("os");
const path = require("path");
const { spawn, spawnSync } = require("child_process");
// keep track of the `tauri-driver` child process
let tauriDriver;
exports.config = {
specs: ["./test/specs/**/*.js"],
maxInstances: 1,
capabilities: [
{
maxInstances: 1,
"tauri:options": {
application: "../../target/release/hello-tauri-webdriver",
},
},
],
reporters: ["spec"],
framework: "mocha",
mochaOpts: {
ui: "bdd",
timeout: 60000,
},
// ensure the rust project is built since we expect this binary to exist for the webdriver sessions
onPrepare: () => spawnSync("cargo", ["build", "--release"]),
// ensure we are running `tauri-driver` before the session starts so that we can proxy the webdriver requests
beforeSession: () =>
(tauriDriver = spawn(
path.resolve(os.homedir(), ".cargo", "bin", "tauri-driver"),
[],
{ stdio: [null, process.stdout, process.stderr] }
)),
// clean up the `tauri-driver` process we spawned at the start of the session
afterSession: () => tauriDriver.kill(),
};
If you are interested in the properties on exports.config
object, then I suggest reading the documentation for it.
For non-WDIO specific items, there are comments explaining why we are running commands in onPrepare
, beforeSession
,
and afterSession
. We also have our specs set to "./test/specs/**/*.js"
, so let's create a spec now.
#
SpecA spec contains the code that is testing your actual application. The test runner will load these specs and automatically run them as it sees fit. Let's create our spec now in the directory we specified.
test/specs/example.e2e.js
:
// calculates the luma from a hex color `#abcdef`
function luma(hex) {
if (hex.startsWith("#")) {
hex = hex.substring(1);
}
const rgb = parseInt(hex, 16);
const r = (rgb >> 16) & 0xff;
const g = (rgb >> 8) & 0xff;
const b = (rgb >> 0) & 0xff;
return 0.2126 * r + 0.7152 * g + 0.0722 * b;
}
describe("Hello Tauri", () => {
it("should be cordial", async () => {
const header = await $("body > h1");
const text = await header.getText();
expect(text).toMatch(/^[hH]ello/);
});
it("should be excited", async () => {
const header = await $("body > h1");
const text = await header.getText();
expect(text).toMatch(/!$/);
});
it("should be easy on the eyes", async () => {
const body = await $("body");
const backgroundColor = await body.getCSSProperty("background-color");
expect(luma(backgroundColor.parsed.hex)).toBeLessThan(100);
});
});
The luma
function on top is just a helper function for one of our tests and is not related to the actual testing of
the application. If you are familiar with other testing frameworks, you may notice similar functions being exposed that
are used such as describe
, it
, and expect
. The other APIs, such as items like $
and the methods it exposes is
covered by the WebdriverIO API docs.
#
Running the Test SuiteNow that we are all set up with a config and a spec, let's run it!
- npm
- Yarn
npm test
yarn test
We should see output the following output:
➜ webdriverio git:(main) ✗ yarn test
yarn run v1.22.11
$ wdio run wdio.conf.js
Execution of 1 workers started at 2021-08-17T08:06:10.279Z
[0-0] RUNNING in undefined - /test/specs/example.e2e.js
[0-0] PASSED in undefined - /test/specs/example.e2e.js
"spec" Reporter:
------------------------------------------------------------------
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] Running: wry (v0.12.1) on linux
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] Session ID: 81e0107b-4d38-4eed-9b10-ee80ca47bb83
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0]
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] » /test/specs/example.e2e.js
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] Hello Tauri
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] ✓ should be cordial
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] ✓ should be excited
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] ✓ should be easy on the eyes
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0]
[wry 0.12.1 linux #0-0] 3 passing (244ms)
Spec Files: 1 passed, 1 total (100% completed) in 00:00:01
Done in 1.98s.
We see the Spec Reporter tell us that all 3 tests from the test/specs/example.e2e.js
file, along with the final report
Spec Files: 1 passed, 1 total (100% completed) in 00:00:01
.
Using the WebdriverIO test suite, we just easily enabled e2e testing for our Tauri application from just a few lines of configuration and a single command to run it! Even better, we didn't have to modify the application at all.