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Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment

You're reading from   Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment Reliable and faster software releases with automating builds, tests, and deployment

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787286610
Length 458 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sander Rossel Sander Rossel
Author Profile Icon Sander Rossel
Sander Rossel
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment Foundations FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting Up a CI Environment 3. Version Control with Git 4. Creating a Simple JavaScript App 5. Testing Your JavaScript 6. Automation with Gulp 7. Automation with Jenkins 8. A NodeJS and MongoDB Web App 9. A C# .NET Core and PostgreSQL Web App 10. Additional Jenkins Plugins 11. Jenkins Pipelines 12. Testing a Web API 13. Continuous Delivery 14. Continuous Deployment

Adding Selenium tests

Next, we are going to add Selenium tests to our application. You could, of course, use the JavaScript tests we wrote in the previous chapters. After all, Selenium tests your frontend and that has nothing to do with our C# backend. Our routing changed a bit so they will not work until we fix the URLs in the tests, but apart from the routing, everything should be as expected. However, Selenium has a C# implementation, so let's keep this project as much C# as possible and explore the Selenium C# API.

To make this work, we need yet another project. Strictly speaking, we do not need a new project and we could simply put our Selenium tests in our regular test project. However, your test project depends on your web-shop project and needs to access it in order to build. Your Selenium tests are going to need your web-shop project to run. And here is the problem...

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