C# Framework to automate tests using Selenium WebDriver
Test Framework was designed in Objectivity to propose common way how people should create Selenium WebDriver tests.
Project API documentation can be found here: http://objectivitybss.github.io/Test.Automation
It provides following features:
- Possibility to use MSTest, NUnit or xUNIT framework
- Specflow ready
- Written entirely in C#
- Contains example projects how to use it
- Allows to use Chrome, Firefox or Internet Explorer
- Overrides browser profile preferences, installs browser extensions, more details here
- Extends Webdriver by additional methods like JavaScriptClick, WaitForAjax, WaitForAngular, etc., more details here
- Automatically waits when locating element for specified time and conditions, more details here
- Page Object Pattern
- More common locators, e.g:
"//*[@title='{0}' and @ms.title='{1}']"
, more details here - Several methods to interact with kendo controls, more details here
- Verify - asserts without stop tests, more details here
- Measures average and 90 Percentile action times, more details here
- DataDriven tests from Xml files for NUnit and MSTest with examples, more details here
- Possibility to take full desktop or browser screen shot, save page source, more details here
- Logging with NLog, more details here
- Files downloading (Firefox, Chrome), more details here
- Ready for parallel tests execution, more details here
- Possibility to send SQL or MDX queries
- Possibility of debugging framework installed from nuget package, more details here.
For all documentation, visit the Test.Automation Wiki.
Projects examples of using Test Framework :
- Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.Features for Specflow
- Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.MsTest for MsTest
- Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.NUnit for NUnit
- Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.xUnit for xUnit
- Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.PageObjects for Page Object Pattern
- Objectivity.Test.Automation.Common.Documentation.shfbproj for building API documentation
NUnit Example Test:
namespace Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.NUnit.Tests
{
using global::NUnit.Framework;
using Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.PageObjects.PageObjects.TheInternet;
[Parallelizable(ParallelScope.Fixtures)]
public class JavaScriptAlertsTestsNUnit : ProjectTestBase
{
[Test]
public void ClickJsAlertTest()
{
var internetPage = new InternetPage(this.DriverContext).OpenHomePage();
var jsAlertsPage = internetPage.GoToJavaScriptAlerts();
jsAlertsPage.OpenJsAlert();
jsAlertsPage.AcceptAlert();
Assert.AreEqual("You successfuly clicked an alert", jsAlertsPage.ResultText);
}
}
}
NUnit Example Page Object:
namespace Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.PageObjects.PageObjects.TheInternet
{
using System;
using System.Globalization;
using NLog;
using Objectivity.Test.Automation.Common;
using Objectivity.Test.Automation.Common.Extensions;
using Objectivity.Test.Automation.Common.Types;
using Objectivity.Test.Automation.Tests.PageObjects;
public class InternetPage : ProjectPageBase
{
private static readonly Logger Logger = LogManager.GetCurrentClassLogger();
/// <summary>
/// Locators for elements
/// </summary>
private readonly ElementLocator
linkLocator = new ElementLocator(Locator.CssSelector, "a[href='/{0}']");
public InternetPage(DriverContext driverContext) : base(driverContext)
{
}
public JavaScriptAlertsPage GoToJavaScriptAlerts()
{
this.Driver.GetElement(this.linkLocator.Format("javascript_alerts")).Click();
return new JavaScriptAlertsPage(this.DriverContext);
}
}
}
- See Getting started.
Checkout the code or get it from nuget.org