-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
wdio.conf.js
198 lines (195 loc) · 7.62 KB
/
wdio.conf.js
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
exports.config = {
//
// ==================
// Specify Test Files
// ==================
// Define which test specs should run. The pattern is relative to the directory
// from which `wdio` was called. Notice that, if you are calling `wdio` from an
// NPM script (see https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/run-script) then the current working
// directory is where your package.json resides, so `wdio` will be called from there.
//
specs: [
'./test/specs/**/*.js'
],
// Patterns to exclude.
exclude: [
// 'path/to/excluded/files'
],
//
// ============
// Capabilities
// ============
// Define your capabilities here. WebdriverIO can run multiple capabilities at the same
// time. Depending on the number of capabilities, WebdriverIO launches several test
// sessions. Within your capabilities you can overwrite the spec and exclude options in
// order to group specific specs to a specific capability.
//
// First, you can define how many instances should be started at the same time. Let's
// say you have 3 different capabilities (Chrome, Firefox, and Safari) and you have
// set maxInstances to 1; wdio will spawn 3 processes. Therefore, if you have 10 spec
// files and you set maxInstances to 10, all spec files will get tested at the same time
// and 30 processes will get spawned. The property handles how many capabilities
// from the same test should run tests.
//
maxInstances: 10,
//
// If you have trouble getting all important capabilities together, check out the
// Sauce Labs platform configurator - a great tool to configure your capabilities:
// https://docs.saucelabs.com/reference/platforms-configurator
//
capabilities: [{
// maxInstances can get overwritten per capability. So if you have an in-house Selenium
// grid with only 5 firefox instances available you can make sure that not more than
// 5 instances get started at a time.
maxInstances: 1,
//
//browserName: 'firefox'
browserName: 'chrome'
}],
//
// ===================
// Test Configurations
// ===================
// Define all options that are relevant for the WebdriverIO instance here
//
// By default WebdriverIO commands are executed in a synchronous way using
// the wdio-sync package. If you still want to run your tests in an async way
// e.g. using promises you can set the sync option to false.
sync: true,
//
// Level of logging verbosity: silent | verbose | command | data | result | error
logLevel: 'command',
//
// Enables colors for log output.
coloredLogs: true,
//
// Saves a screenshot to a given path if a command fails.
screenshotPath: './errorShots/',
//
// Set a base URL in order to shorten url command calls. If your url parameter starts
// with "/", then the base url gets prepended.
baseUrl: 'https://accounts.craigslist.org',
//
// Default timeout for all waitFor* commands.
waitforTimeout: 10000,
//
// Default timeout in milliseconds for request
// if Selenium Grid doesn't send response
connectionRetryTimeout: 90000,
//
// Default request retries count
connectionRetryCount: 3,
//
// Initialize the browser instance with a WebdriverIO plugin. The object should have the
// plugin name as key and the desired plugin options as properties. Make sure you have
// the plugin installed before running any tests. The following plugins are currently
// available:
// WebdriverCSS: https://github.com/webdriverio/webdrivercss
// WebdriverRTC: https://github.com/webdriverio/webdriverrtc
// Browserevent: https://github.com/webdriverio/browserevent
// plugins: {
// webdrivercss: {
// screenshotRoot: 'my-shots',
// failedComparisonsRoot: 'diffs',
// misMatchTolerance: 0.05,
// screenWidth: [320,480,640,1024]
// },
// webdriverrtc: {},
// browserevent: {}
// },
//
// Test runner services
// Services take over a specific job you don't want to take care of. They enhance
// your test setup with almost no effort. Unlike plugins, they don't add new
// commands. Instead, they hook themselves up into the test process.
services: ['selenium-standalone'],
//
// Framework you want to run your specs with.
// The following are supported: Mocha, Jasmine, and Cucumber
// see also: http://webdriver.io/guide/testrunner/frameworks.html
//
// Make sure you have the wdio adapter package for the specific framework installed
// before running any tests.
framework: 'mocha',
//
// Test reporter for stdout.
// The only one supported by default is 'dot'
// see also: http://webdriver.io/guide/testrunner/reporters.html
reporters: ['dot','allure'],
//
// Options to be passed to Mocha.
// See the full list at http://mochajs.org/
mochaOpts: {
ui: 'tdd',
compilers: ['js:babel-register']
},
//
// =====
// Hooks
// =====
// WebdriverIO provides several hooks you can use to interfere with the test process in order to enhance
// it and to build services around it. You can either apply a single function or an array of
// methods to it. If one of them returns with a promise, WebdriverIO will wait until that promise got
// resolved to continue.
//
// Gets executed once before all workers get launched.
// onPrepare: function (config, capabilities) {
// global.host: 'localhost', // Use localhost as chrome driver server
// global.port: 9515
// },
// Gets executed before test execution begins. At this point you can access all global
// variables, such as `browser`. It is the perfect place to define custom commands.
before: function (capabilities, specs) {
var chai = require ('chai');
global.expect = chai.expect;
chai.Should();
chai.config.includeStack = true;
//global variables
global.globalPassword = 'Testpass135!';
global.globalEmail = '[email protected]';
},
//
// Hook that gets executed before the suite starts
// beforeSuite: function (suite) {
// },
//
// Hook that gets executed _before_ a hook within the suite starts (e.g. runs before calling
// beforeEach in Mocha)
// beforeHook: function () {
// },
//
// Hook that gets executed _after_ a hook within the suite starts (e.g. runs after calling
// afterEach in Mocha)
// afterHook: function () {
// },
//
// Function to be executed before a test (in Mocha/Jasmine) or a step (in Cucumber) starts.
// beforeTest: function (test) {
// },
//
// Runs before a WebdriverIO command gets executed.
// beforeCommand: function (commandName, args) {
// },
//
// Runs after a WebdriverIO command gets executed
// afterCommand: function (commandName, args, result, error) {
// },
//
// Function to be executed after a test (in Mocha/Jasmine) or a step (in Cucumber) starts.
// afterTest: function (test) {
// },
//
// Hook that gets executed after the suite has ended
// afterSuite: function (suite) {
// },
//
// Gets executed after all tests are done. You still have access to all global variables from
// the test.
// after: function (result, capabilities, specs) {
// },
//
// Gets executed after all workers got shut down and the process is about to exit. It is not
// possible to defer the end of the process using a promise.
// onComplete: function(exitCode) {
// }
}