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Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing

You're reading from   Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing Build data-driven test frameworks using Selenium WebDriver, AppiumDriver, Java, and TestNG

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788473576
Length 354 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Carl Cocchiaro Carl Cocchiaro
Author Profile Icon Carl Cocchiaro
Carl Cocchiaro
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Scalable Selenium Test Driver Class for Web and Mobile Applications FREE CHAPTER 2. Selenium Framework Utility Classes 3. Best Practices for Building Selenium Page Object Classes 4. Defining WebDriver and AppiumDriver Page Object Elements 5. Building a JSON Data Provider 6. Developing Data-Driven Test Classes 7. Encapsulating Data in Data-Driven Testing 8. Designing a Selenium Grid 9. Third-Party Tools and Plugins 10. Working Selenium WebDriver Framework Samples

Passing optional arguments and parameters to the driver

In many instances, users will want to change the default behavior of the browser before the test starts, or on the fly when creating a new driver during the test run. We previously covered setting default preferences and options in the setDriver method to keep the test environment static. Now, we can alter the default preferences using the varargs parameter in Java, as an optional parameter to the setDriver method. Here are the basics:

  • The varargs parameter to setDriver will be a Map<String, Object> type
  • Map can be passed into the driver when creating a new browser instance, or by setting a JVM argument of mapped preferences
  • JVM arguments used to pass in mapped preferences can be done in a TestNG XML file as a parameter, an IDE Run Configuration using a JVM arg, or as a -Dswitch to the command-line executable
  • Each browser type will need to process the map of Desired Capabilities, preferences, and options

varargs

The following example shows how to use the varargs parameter in the setDriver method, which is called optPreferences. This is the setDriver method so far, from what we have built:

@SafeVarargs
public final void setDriver(String browser,
String environment,
String platform,
Map<String, Object>... optPreferences)
throws Exception {

DesiredCapabilities caps = null;
String localHub = "http://127.0.0.1:4723/wd/hub";
String getPlatform = null;

switch (browser) {
case "firefox":
caps = DesiredCapabilities.firefox();
FirefoxProfile ffProfile = new FirefoxProfile();

ffProfile.setPreference("browser.autofocus",
true);
caps.setCapability(FirefoxDriver.PROFILE,
ffProfile);
caps.setCapability("marionette",
true);
System.setProperty("webdriver.gecko.driver",
"gecko_driver_windows_path/geckodriver.exe");

if ( optPreferences.length > 0 ) {
processFFProfile(ffProfile, optPreferences);
}

webDriver.set(new FirefoxDriver(caps));
break;
case "chrome":
caps = DesiredCapabilities.chrome();
ChromeOptions chOptions = new ChromeOptions();

Map<String, Object> chromePrefs =
new HashMap<String, Object>();
chromePrefs.put("credentials_enable_service",
false);
chOptions.setExperimentalOption("prefs",
chromePrefs);
chOptions.addArguments("--disable-plugins",
"--disable-extensions",
"--disable-popup-blocking");
caps.setCapability(ChromeOptions.CAPABILITY,
chOptions);
caps.setCapability("applicationCacheEnabled",
false);
System.setProperty("webdriver.chrome.driver",
"chrome_driver_windows_path/chromedriver.exe");

if ( optPreferences.length > 0 ) {
processCHOptions(chOptions, optPreferences);
}

webDriver.set(new ChromeDriver(caps));
break;
case "internet explorer":
caps = DesiredCapabilities.internetExplorer();

InternetExplorerOptions ieOpts =
new InternetExplorerOptions();

ieOpts.requireWindowFocus();
ieOpts.merge(caps);
caps.setCapability("requireWindowFocus",
true);
System.setProperty("webdriver.ie.driver",
"ie_driver_windows_path/IEDriverServer.exe");

if ( optPreferences.length > 0 ) {
processDesiredCaps(caps, optPreferences);
}

webDriver.set(new InternetExplorerDriver(caps));
break;
}

// etc...
}

The parameter for setDriver

The next example shows how to pass Map into the setDriver method using the varargs parameter:

// first, create a map for the key:value pairs to pass into the driver
Map<String, Object> preferences = new HashMap<String, Object>;

// then put the key:value pairs into the map
preferences.put("applicationCacheEnabled",false);
preferences.put("network.cookie.cookieBehavior", 0);

// then, pass the map into the setDriver method
CreateDriver.getInstance().setDriver("firefox",
"Windows 10",
"local",
preferences);

JVM argument – -Dswitch

Finally, the next example shows how to set the optional browser preferences as a JVM argument using the TestNG parameter attribute in the suite XML file:

// pass in the key:value pairs as a runtime argument
-Dbrowserprefs=applicationCacheEnabled:false,
network.cookie.cookieBehavior:0


// pass in the key:value pairs as a TestNG XML parameter
<test name="Selenium TestNG Test Suite">
<parameter name="browser" value="chrome" />
<parameter name="platform" value="Windows 10" />
<parameter name="browserPrefs" value="intl.accept_languages:fr" />

<classes>
<class name="com.myproject.MyTest" />
</classes>
</test>

// for convenience, create a setPreferences method
// to build the map to pass into the driver
public Map<String, Object> setPreferences() {
Map<String, Object> prefsMap = new HashMap<String, Object>();
List<String> allPrefs = Arrays.asList(
System.getProperty("browserPrefs").split(",", -1));

// extract the key/value pairs and pass to map...
for ( String getPref : allPrefs ) {
prefsMap.put(getPref.split(":")[0], getPref.split(":")[1]);
}

return prefsMap;
}

// set JVM arg, call this method on-the-fly, create new driver
if ( System.getProperty("browserPrefs") != null ) {
CreateDriver.getInstance().setDriver("firefox",
"Windows 10",
"local",
CreateDriver.getInstance().setBrowserPrefs()
);
}

Parameter processing methods

Once the optional preferences are passed into the setDriver method, the user then has to process those options. For instance, there may be DesiredCapabilities,  ChromeOptions, or FirefoxProfile preferences that need to be processed. First, for each driver-type instance, there needs to be a check to see if the options have been passed in, then if so, they have to be processed. Each type will be outlined as shown here:

/**
* Process Desired Capabilities method to override default browser
* or mobile driver behavior
*
* @param caps - the DesiredCapabilities object
* @param options - the key: value pair map
* @throws Exception
*/
private void processDesiredCaps(DesiredCapabilities caps,
Map<String,
Object>[] options
)
throws Exception {

for
( int i = 0; i < options.length; i++ ) {
Object[] keys = options[i].keySet().toArray();
Object[] values = options[i].values().toArray();

for
( int j = 0; j < keys.length; j++ ) {
if ( values[j] instanceof Integer ) {
caps.setCapability(keys[j].toString(),
(int) values[j]);
}
else if ( values[j] instanceof Boolean) {
caps.setCapability(keys[j].toString(),
(boolean) values[j]);
}
else if ( isStringInt(values[j].toString()) ) {
caps.setCapability(keys[j].toString(),

Integer.valueOf(values[j].toString()));
}
else if ( Boolean.parseBoolean(values[j].toString()) ) {
caps.setCapability(keys[j].toString(),

Boolean.valueOf(values[j].toString()));
}
else {
caps.setCapability(keys[j].toString(),
values[j].toString());
}
}
}
}

/**
* Process Firefox Profile Preferences method to override default
* browser driver behavior
*
* @param caps - the FirefoxProfile object
* @param options - the key: value pair map
* @throws Exception
*/
private void processFFProfile(FirefoxProfile profile, Map<String, Object>[] options) throws Exception {
for (int i = 0; i < options.length; i++) {
Object[] keys = options[i].keySet().toArray();
Object[] values = options[i].values().toArray();

// same as Desired Caps except the following difference
for (int j = 0; j < keys.length; j++) {
if (values[j] instanceof Integer) {
profile.setPreference(keys[j].toString(),
(int) values[j]);
}

// etc...
}
}
} /**
* Process Chrome Options method to override default browser
* driver behavior
*
* @param caps - the ChromeOptions object
* @param options - the key: value pair map
* @throws Exception
*/
private void processCHOptions(ChromeOptions chOptions, Map<String, Object>[] options) throws Exception {
for (int i = 0; i < options.length; i++) {
Object[] keys = options[i].keySet().toArray();
Object[] values = options[i].values().toArray();

// same as Desired Caps except the following difference

for (int j = 0; j < keys.length; j++) {
if (values[j] instanceof Integer) {
values[j] = (int) values[j];
chOptions.setExperimentalOption("prefs", options[i]);
}

// etc...
}
}
}
You have been reading a chapter from
Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing
Published in: Jan 2018
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781788473576
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