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Test::Selenium::Remote::Driver(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::Selenium::Remote::Driver(3)

Test::Selenium::Remote::Driver

A subclass of Selenium::Remote::Driver. which provides useful testing functions.

This is an experimental addition to the Selenium::Remote::Driver distribution, and some interfaces may change.

This will create a new Test::Selenium::Remote::Driver object, which subclasses Selenium::Remote::Driver. This subclass provides useful testing functions. It is modeled on Test::WWW::Selenium.

Environment vars can be used to specify options to pass to Selenium::Remote::Driver. ENV vars are prefixed with "TWD_". ( After the old fork name, "Test::WebDriver" )

Set the Selenium server address with $TWD_HOST and $TWD_PORT.

Pick which browser is used using the $TWD_BROWSER, $TWD_VERSION, $TWD_PLATFORM, $TWD_JAVASCRIPT, $TWD_EXTRA_CAPABILITIES.

See Selenium::Remote::Driver for the meanings of these options.

Enable/disable debugging output, or view the status of verbosity.

Returns true if a Selenium server is running. The host and port parameters are optional, and default to "localhost:4444".

Environment vars "TWD_HOST" and "TWD_PORT" can also be used to determine the server to check.

As for Selenium::Remote::Driver, this class also supports adding an optional "error_handler" attribute during instantiation :

    my $test_driver = Test::Selenium::Remote::Driver->new(
        error_handler => sub { print $_[1]; croak 'goodbye'; }
    );

Additionally, you can set and/or clear it at any time on an already-instantiated driver:

    # later, change the error handler to something else
    $driver->error_handler( sub { print $_[1]; croak 'hello'; } );

    # stop handling errors manually and use the default S:R:D behavior
    # (we will croak about the exception)
    $driver->clear_error_handler;

Your error handler will receive two arguments, The first argument is the $driver object itself. Due to some specificities of this class, the second argument passed to the handler can be:

the error message from the Webdriver
This is the case when the error message is raised by a WebDriver failure
"Failed to find ..."
This message is raised when the Webdriver call is successful but the failure occurs on the test performed aftwerwards. This is the case for functions like "body_text_like", "body_text_unlike", "body_text_contains", "body_text_lacks", "content_like", "content_unlike", "content_contains", "content_lacks".

If you set your own handler, you should not rely that much on the message returned. You should also remember that you are entirely responsible for handling exceptions, which means that should the error handler be called, it means that the test you are doing has failed, so you should croak.

You should also call fail() in your handler, in case the function called raised a webdriver error, because, as exceptions are not caught anymore when you specify a handler, the function will not fail anymore, which translates to a 'ok' in your TAP output if you do not handle it properly.

The following testing methods are available. For more documentation, see the related test methods in Selenium::Remote::Driver (And feel free to submit a patch to flesh out the documentation for these here). Defaults for optional arguments should be the same as for their analogues in Selenium::Remote::Driver and Selenium::Remote::WebElement.

    alert_text_is
    alert_text_isnt
    alert_text_like
    alert_text_unlike

    current_window_handle_is
    current_window_handle_isnt
    current_window_handle_like
    current_window_handle_unlike

    window_handles_is
    window_handles_isnt
    window_handles_like
    window_handles_unlike

    window_size_is
    window_size_isnt
    window_size_like
    window_size_unlike

    window_position_is
    window_position_isnt
    window_position_like
    window_position_unlike

    current_url_is
    current_url_isnt
    current_url_like
    current_url_unlike

    title_is
    title_isnt
    title_like
    title_unlike


    active_element_is
    active_element_isnt
    active_element_like
    active_element_unlike

    # Basically the same as 'content_like()', but content_like() supports multiple regex's.
    page_source_is
    page_source_isnt
    page_source_like
    page_source_unlike

    send_keys_to_active_element_ok
    send_keys_to_alert_ok
    send_keys_to_prompt_ok
    send_modifier_ok

    accept_alert_ok
    dismiss_alert_ok

    move_mouse_to_location_ok # TODO
    move_to_ok # TODO

    get_ok
    go_back_ok
    go_forward_ok
    add_cookie_ok
    get_page_source_ok

    find_element_ok($search_target)
    find_element_ok($search_target)

    find_elements_ok
    find_child_element_ok
    find_child_elements_ok

    compare_elements_ok

    click_ok
    double_click_ok

   $twd->type_element_ok( $search_target [,$locator], $keys [, $desc ] );

Use "find_element" in Selenium::Remote::Driver to resolve the $search_target to a web element and an optional locator, and then type $keys into it, providing an optional test label.

    $twd->element_text_is($search_target[,$finder],$expected_text [,$desc]);

    $twd->element_value_is($search_target[,$finder],$expected_value [,$desc]);

    $twd->click_element_ok($search_target [,$finder ,$desc]);

Find an element and then click on it.

    $twd->clear_element_ok($search_target [,$finder ,$desc]);

Find an element and then clear on it.

    $twd->is_element_displayed_ok($search_target [,$finder ,$desc]);

Find an element and check to confirm that it is displayed. (visible)

    $twd->is_element_enabled_ok($search_target [,$finder ,$desc]);

Find an element and check to confirm that it is enabled.

   $twd->find_element_ok( $search_target [,$finder, $desc ] );

Returns true if $search_target is successfully found on the page. $search_target is passed to "find_element" in Selenium::Remote::Driver using a finder or the "default_finder" if none passed. See there for more details on the format for "find_element_ok()".

   $twd->find_no_element_ok( $search_target [,$finder, $desc ] );

Returns true if $search_target is not found on the page. $search_target is passed to "find_element" in Selenium::Remote::Driver using a finder or the "default_finder" if none passed. See there for more details on the format for "find_no_element_ok()".

   $twd->content_like( $regex [, $desc ] )
   $twd->content_like( [$regex_1, $regex_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the content of the page matches $regex. If an arrayref of regex's are provided, one 'test' is run for each regex against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Content is like "$regex"' will be provided if there is no description.

   $twd->content_unlike( $regex [, $desc ] )
   $twd->content_unlike( [$regex_1, $regex_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the content of the page does NOT match $regex . If an arrayref of regex's are provided, one 'test' is run for each regex against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Content is unlike "$regex"' will be provided if there is no description.

   $twd->body_text_like( $regex [, $desc ] )
   $twd->body_text_like( [$regex_1, $regex_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the text of the page (as returned by "get_body()") matches $regex. If an arrayref of regex's are provided, one 'test' is run for each regex against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Content is like "$regex"' will be provided if there is no description.

To also match the HTML see, "content_unlike()".

   $twd->body_text_unlike( $regex [, $desc ] )
   $twd->body_text_unlike( [$regex_1, $regex_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the text of the page (as returned by "get_body()") does NOT match $regex. If an arrayref of regex's are provided, one 'test' is run for each regex against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Text is unlike "$regex"' will be provided if there is no description.

To also match the HTML see, "content_unlike()".

   $twd->content_contains( $str [, $desc ] )
   $twd->content_contains( [$str_1, $str_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the content of the page contains $str. If an arrayref of strngs's are provided, one 'test' is run for each string against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Content contains "$str"' will be provided if there is no description.

   $twd->content_lacks( $str [, $desc ] )
   $twd->content_lacks( [$str_1, $str_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the content of the page does NOT contain $str . If an arrayref of strings are provided, one 'test' is run for each string against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Content lacks "$str"' will be provided if there is no description.

   $twd->body_text_contains( $str [, $desc ] )
   $twd->body_text_contains( [$str_1, $str_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the text of the page (as returned by "get_body()") contains $str. If an arrayref of strings are provided, one 'test' is run for each regex against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Text contains "$str"' will be provided if there is no description.

To also match the HTML see, "content_uncontains()".

   $twd->body_text_lacks( $str [, $desc ] )
   $twd->body_text_lacks( [$str_1, $str_2] [, $desc ] )

Tells if the text of the page (as returned by "get_body()") does NOT contain $str. If an arrayref of strings are provided, one 'test' is run for each regex against the content of the current page.

A default description of 'Text lacks "$str"' will be provided if there is no description.

To also match the HTML see, "content_lacks()".

This module was forked from Test::WebDriver 0.01.

For Best Practice - I recommend subclassing Test::Selenium::Remote::Driver for your application, and then refactoring common or app specific methods into MyApp::WebDriver so that your test files do not have much duplication. As your app changes, you can update MyApp::WebDriver rather than all the individual test files.

Created by: Luke Closs <lukec@cpan.org>, but inspired by Test::WWW::Selenium and its authors.

Test::WebDriver work was sponsored by Prime Radiant, Inc. Mark Stosberg <mark@stosberg.com> forked it as Test::Selenium::Remote::Driver and significantly expanded it.

Parts Copyright (c) 2012 Prime Radiant, Inc.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

2020-02-18 perl v5.32.1

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