This framework is designed to help you get easily and quickly started with test automation on any project. It is based on WebdriverIO and cucumber (cucumberJS to be exact). Integrating this module provides a ready-to-go environment to write and execute functional test scenarios. It includes:
- A template to generate your test automation project so that you don't start from a blank page
- The necessary packages pre-configured to be able to run your scenarios without requiring any other setup. The only requirement is to have a browser on the machine running the tests: either Chrome or Firefox.
- Guidelines and good practices to ensure great maintainability of test scenarios
- A decoupled architecture between scenarios and data sets to allow high execution scalability
- Some useful custom browser commands such as
fillInForm
to ease and accelerate test automation writing. See related JSDoc for more details.
This framework is suitable for big solutions that will be covered by an important number of scenarios. Note that it requires good development skills as well as good knowledge and understanding of JavaScript.
- Install npm and Node.js (latest available 8.X.X version)
- Install npx:
npm install -g npx
- Install Java JRE (version 8 or greater)
- Create a new folder <AUTOMATED_TESTS> in your project to host your automated tests.
- Create a new NPM project by executing
npm init
. More information about the different options here. - Install EAT package by running the following command from <AUTOMATED_TESTS>:
npm install --save etaf
. It creates anode_modules
directory containing all the dependencies needed to run the project. - From <AUTOMATED_TESTS>, run
npx etaf install
to generate the skeleton of your test project. If you want to generate the skeleton of your project with some working samples, run:npx etaf install --sample=true
Set the configuration of your proxy by editing the .npmrc
file in your home directory:
proxy=http://localhost:3128
https-proxy=http://localhost:3128
- Run
npx etaf run
to launch the tests as they would be played remotely. - Run
npx etaf run wdio.local.conf.js
to run the tests with local configuration. - Run
npx etaf run wdio.debug.conf.js
to run the tests with debug configuration (see Running Tests in Debug Mode section for mode details).
Note that the local and debug configurations have to be generated first (see Configuration section).
- The global configuration is set in the
wdio.conf.js
file, in the root folder of your project. - The local configuration is set in the
wdio.local.conf.js
. This local configuration can be reset by runningnpx etaf generate-local-conf
. - The debug configuration is set in the
wdio.debug.conf.js
. This debug configuration can be reset by runningnpx etaf generate-local-conf
.
To pass parameters to the command, add --
: npx etaf run --parameter1=value1
Add command line parameter --baseUrl="https://base.url"
or update the wdio configuration file accordingly.
Add command line parameter --locale="en"
or update the wdio configuration file accordingly.
Add command line parameter --tagExpression='@tag'
.
Tags can be combined:
--tagExpression='@tag1 or @tag2'
runs test tagged with@tag1
or@tag2
--tagExpression='@tag1 and @tag2'
runs test tagged with both@tag1
and@tag2
--tagExpression='not @tag1'
runs tests not tagged with@tag1
See Cucumber Tag Expressions documentation for more details.
A realm is a configuration file that defines some wdio properties specific to a realm. A realm can be seen as a market,
a brand, an environment (such as dev or staging), etc. or a combination of them. Realm files are stored in the
conf/realm
directory.
Usually realms define at least the following properties:
baseUrl
: website to testspecs
: list of features to run
Add command line parameter --realm="xxx"
. Where xxx
is the file name in conf/real
without the .js
extension.
For example:
- To run NRT tests from the catalog domain on mywebsite.com:
npx etaf run --baseUrl="https://mywebsite.com" --tagExpression='@nrt and @catalog'
- To run NRT tests on realm
us-dev
:npx etaf run --realm="us-dev" --tagExpression='@nrt'
For IntelliJ, follow instructions at Debug with Chrome Debugging Protocol.
At step #4, run npx etaf run wdio.debug.conf.js
- Run
npx etaf test-unit
to run unit tests - Run
npx etaf test-unit-with-coverage
to run unit tests with code coverage computation
Read detailed explanations in Framework.md.