Author: | Baiju Muthukadan |
---|---|
Email: | baiju.m.mail AT gmail.com |
Version: | 0.4.0 |
Note
This document has been submitted to Selenium project to be included in the official documentation. The format of this text is reStucturedText. I am looking forward to your feedback. Please send your feedback to: baiju.m.mail AT gmail.com or you can comment at the bottom of this gist.
Selenium Python bindings provide a convenient API to access Selenium WebDrivers like Firefox, Ie and Chrome. The current supported Python versions are Python 2.6 and Python 2.7. Python 3 is not yet supported. Selenium server is a Java program. Java Runtime Environment (JRE) 1.6 is recommended to run Selenium server. This article explain using Selenium 2 with WebDriver API. Selenium 1 API is not covered here.
You can download Selenium server 2.x from the download page of
selenium website. The file name
should be something like this:
selenium-server-standalone-2.x.x.jar
. You can always download the
latest 2.x version of Selenium server.
If Java Runtime Environment (JRE) is not installed in your system, you can download the JRE from the Oracle website. If you have root access in your system, you can also use your operating system instructions to install JRE.
You can download Python bindings for Selenium from the PyPI page for selenium package. It has a dependency on rdflib , version 3.1.x.
You can also use easy_install or pip to install the bindings:
easy_install selenium
or:
pip install selenium
You may consider using virtualenv to create isolated Python environments.
If you prefer to use Buildout to install all the dependencies from a GNU/Linux machine, you can use this configuration:
[buildout] file-server = http://fileserver.example.org parts = jre_download jre_install selenium_server_download selenium_py [jre_download] recipe = hexagonit.recipe.download url = ${buildout:file-server}/jre-6u26-linux-i586.bin download-only = true ignore-existing = true [jre_install] recipe = iw.recipe.cmd on_install = true on_update = true shell = bash cmds = chmod +x ${jre_download:location}/jre-6u26-linux-i586.bin cd ${buildout:directory};if [[ -e "jre1.6.0_26" ]]; then echo -n; else ${jre_download:location}/jre-6u26-linux-i586.bin; fi [selenium_server_download] recipe = hexagonit.recipe.download url = ${buildout:file-server}/selenium-server-standalone-2.1.0.jar download-only = true ignore-existing = true [selenium_py] recipe = z3c.recipe.scripts interpreter = python eggs = selenium
Windows Buildout users can use these parts for automating installation of Selenium server and creating a script to run it:
[buildout] file-server = http://fileserver.example.org parts = jre_download jre_install selenium_server_download selenium_py [jre_download] recipe = hexagonit.recipe.download url = ${pkgserver:fullurl}/zepackages/jre-6u26-windows-i586.zip destination = ${buildout:directory} ignore-existing = true [selenium_server_download] recipe = hexagonit.recipe.download url = ${pkgserver:fullurl}/zepackages/selenium-server-standalone-2.1.0.jar download-only = true ignore-existing = true [selenium_server_script] recipe = collective.recipe.template input = inline: set PATH=%PATH%;${firefox_download:destination}\firefox36 ${jre_download:destination}\jre6\bin\java.exe -jar ${selenium_server_download:location}\selenium-server-standalone-2.1.0.jar -timeout 180 -port 4444 -forcedBrowserModeRestOfLine firefoxchrome output = ${buildout:bin-directory}/selenium-server.bat [selenium_py] recipe = z3c.recipe.scripts interpreter = python eggs = selenium
The jre-6u26-windows-i586.zip is not available from Oracle site. So, you can install JRE once and zip it and then upload to your file server.
You should have Java Runtime Environment (JRE) in the system. If
java command is available in the PATH (environment variable), you
can start the Selenium server using the command command given below.
Replace 2.x.x with actual version of Selenium server you downloaded
from the site. If JRE is installed as a non-root user and/or if it is
not available in the PATH (environment variable), you can type the
relative/absolute path to the java command, for eg:-
./jre1.6.0_26/bin/java
:
java -jar selenium-server-standalone-2.x.x.jar
In GNU/Linux, you can use the script given below to run it as a
daemon. You will be required to change the location of java command
(JAVA
variable) and Selenium server jar file (SELENIUM
variable).
#! /bin/bash ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: selenium-server # Required-Start: $local_fs $remote_fs $network $named $time # Required-Stop: $local_fs $remote_fs $network $named $time # Should-Start: $syslog # Should-Stop: $syslog # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5 # Default-Stop: 0 1 6 # Short-Description: Starts selenium server for testing # Description: Selenium server for functional testing ### END INIT INFO . /lib/lsb/init-functions JAVA=java SELENIUM=/path/to/selenium-server-standalone-2.x.xjar BMODE=firefoxchrome PORT=4444 LOG=selenium.log PIDFILE=selenium.pid DISPLAY=:0.0 pidof_server() { if [ -e "$PIDFILE" ]; then if pidofproc java | tr ' ' '\n' | grep -w $(cat $PIDFILE); then return 0 fi fi return 1 } case $1 in start) DISPLAY=$DISPLAY $JAVA -jar $SELENIUM \ -timeout 180 -port $PORT -forcedBrowserModeRestOfLine $BMODE > $LOG & log_success_msg "Starting Selenium server!" "selenium-server" echo $! > $PIDFILE ;; stop) SELPID=`cat $PIDFILE` && kill $SELPID log_success_msg "Stopping Selenium server!" "selenium-server" ;; status) PID=$(pidof_server) || true if [ -n "$PID" ]; then echo "Selenium Server is running (pid $PID)." exit 0 else echo "Selenium Server is NOT running." exit 1 fi ;; *) echo "Usage: selenium-server.sh {start|stop|status}" exit 1 ;; esac
Buildout users can use collective.recipe.template recipe with above
text as the template. You will be required to change the location of
java command (JAVA
variable) and Selenium server jar file
(SELENIUM
variable). If you are using Buildout configuration
given in the previous section, you can change the variables like
this:
JAVA=${buildout:directory}/jre1.6.0_26/bin/java SELENIUM=${selenium_server_download:location}/selenium-server-standalone-2.1.0.jar
If you have installed Selenium server and Python bindings and able to run the server, you can start using it from Python like this.
from selenium import webdriver from selenium.webdriver.common.keys import Keys driver = webdriver.Firefox() driver.get("http://www.python.org") assert "Python" in driver.title elem = driver.find_element_by_name("q") elem.send_keys("selenium") elem.send_keys(Keys.RETURN) assert "Google" in driver.title driver.close()
The above script can be saved into a file (eg:- python_org_search.py), then it can be run like this:
python python_org_search.py
The python which you are running should have the selenium module installed.
The selenium.webdriver module provides all the WebDriver implementations. Currently supported WebDriver implementations are Firefox, Chrome, Ie and Remote. The Keys class provide keys in the keyboard like RETURN, F1, ALT etc.
from selenium import webdriver from selenium.webdriver.common.keys import Keys
Next, the instance of Firefox WebDriver is created.
driver = webdriver.Firefox()
The driver.get method will navigate to a page given by the URL. WebDriver will wait until the page has fully loaded (that is, the "onload" event has fired) before returning control to your test or script. It's worth noting that if your page uses a lot of AJAX on load then WebDriver may not know when it has completely loaded.:
driver.get("http://www.python.org")
The next line is an assertion to confirm that title has "Python" word in it:
assert "Python" in driver.title
WebDriver offers a number of ways to find elements. One of the approach is to use the find_element_by_* methods. Commonly used methods are find_element_by_id, find_element_by_name, find_element_by_xpath, find_element_by_link_text, find_element_by_partial_link_text, find_element_by_tag_name, find_element_by_class_name, find_element_by_css_selector:
elem = driver.find_element_by_name("q")
Next we are sending keys, this is similar to entering keys using your keyboard. Special keys can be send using Keys class imported from selenium.webdriver.common.keys:
elem.send_keys("selenium") elem.send_keys(Keys.RETURN)
After submission of the page, you should be reached in the Google site:
assert "Google" in driver.title
Finally, the browser window is closed. You can also call quit method instead of close. The quit will exit entire browser where as close will close one tab, but if it just one tab, by default most browser will exit entirely.:
driver.close()
Selenium will be used mostly for writing test cases. You can write test cases using Python’s unittest module. Here is the modified example which uses unittest module. This is a test for python.org search functionality:
import unittest from selenium import webdriver from selenium.webdriver.common.keys import Keys class PythonOrgSearch(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): self.driver = webdriver.Firefox() def test_search_in_python_org(self): driver = self.driver driver.get("http://www.python.org") self.assertIn("Python", driver.title) elem = driver.find_element_by_name("q") elem.send_keys("selenium") elem.send_keys(Keys.RETURN) self.assertIn("Google", driver.title) def tearDown(self): self.driver.close() if __name__ == "__main__": unittest.main()
You can run the above test case from a shell like this:
python test_python_org_search.py . ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 1 test in 15.566s OK
Initially, all the basic modules required are imported. The unittest module is a built-in Python based on Java's JUnit. This module provides the framework for organizing the test cases. The selenium.webdriver module provides all the WebDriver implementations. Currently supported WebDriver implementations are Firefox, Chrome, Ie and Remote. The Keys class provide keys in the keyboard like RETURN, F1, ALT etc.
import unittest from selenium import webdriver from selenium.webdriver.common.keys import Keys
The test case class is inherited from unittest.TestCase. Inheriting from TestCase class is the way to tell unittest module that, this is a test case:
class PythonOrgSearch(unittest.TestCase):
The setUp is part of initialization, this method will get called before every test function which you are going to write in this test case class. Here you are creating the instance of Firefox WebDriver.
def setUp(self): self.driver = webdriver.Firefox()
This is the test case method. The first line inside this method create a local reference to the driver object created in setUp method.
def test_search_in_python_org(self): driver = self.driver
The driver.get method will navigate to a page given by the URL. WebDriver will wait until the page has fully loaded (that is, the "onload" event has fired) before returning control to your test or script. It's worth noting that if your page uses a lot of AJAX on load then WebDriver may not know when it has completely loaded.:
driver.get("http://www.python.org")
The next line is an assertion to confirm that title has "Python" word in it:
self.assertIn("Python", driver.title)
WebDriver offers a number of ways to find elements. One of the approach is to use the find_element_by_* methods. Commonly used methods are find_element_by_id, find_element_by_name, find_element_by_xpath, find_element_by_link_text, find_element_by_partial_link_text, find_element_by_tag_name, find_element_by_class_name, find_element_by_css_selector:
elem = driver.find_element_by_name("q")
Next we are sending keys, this is similar to entering keys using your keyboard. Special keys can be send using Keys class imported from selenium.webdriver.common.keys:
elem.send_keys("selenium") elem.send_keys(Keys.RETURN)
After submission of the page, you should be reached in the Google site. You can confirm it by asserting "Google" in the title:
self.assertIn("Google", driver.title)
The tearDown method will get called after every test method. This is a place to do all cleanup actions. In the current method, the browser window is closed. You can also call quit method instead of close. The quit will exit all entire browser where as close will close one tab, but if it just one tab, by default most browser will exit entirely.:
def tearDown(self): self.driver.close()
Final lines are some boiler plate code to run the test suite:
if __name__ == "__main__": unittest.main()
Warning
This section is a copy-paste from Java docs, so it requires some modification.
The first thing you'll want to do with WebDriver is navigate to a page. The normal way to do this is by calling "get":
driver.get("http://www.google.com");
WebDriver will wait until the page has fully loaded (that is, the "onload" event has fired) before returning control to your test or script. It's worth noting that if your page uses a lot of AJAX on load then WebDriver may not know when it has completely loaded. If you need to ensure such pages are fully loaded then you can use "waits".
Just being able to go to places isn't terribly useful. What we'd really like to do is to interact with the pages, or, more specifically, the HTML elements within a page. First of all, we need to find one. WebDriver offers a number of ways to find elements. For example, given an element defined as:
<input type="text" name="passwd" id="passwd-id" />
you could find it using any of:
element = driver.find_element_by_id("passwd-id") element = driver.find_element_by_name("passwd") element = driver.find_element_by_xpath("//input[@id='passwd-id']")
You can also look for a link by its text, but be careful! The text
must be an exact match! You should also be careful when using XPATH
in WebDriver. If there's more than one element that matches the
query, then only the first will be returned. If nothing can be found,
a NoSuchElementException
will be raised.
WebDriver has an "Object-based" API; we represent all types of elements using the same interface. This means that although you may see a lot of possible methods you could invoke when you hit your IDE's auto-complete key combination, not all of them will make sense or be valid. Don't worry! WebDriver will attempt to do the Right Thing, and if you call a method that makes no sense ("setSelected()" on a "meta" tag, for example) an exception will be raised.
So, you've got an element. What can you do with it? First of all, you may want to enter some text into a text field:
element.send_keys("some text");
You can simulate pressing the arrow keys by using the "Keys" class:
element.send_keys(" and some", Keys.ARROW_DOWN);
It is possible to call send_keys on any element, which makes it possible to test keyboard shortcuts such as those used on GMail. A side-effect of this is that typing something into a text field won't automatically clear it. Instead, what you type will be appended to what's already there. You can easily clear the contents of a text field or textarea with clear method:
element.clear();
We've already seen how to enter text into a textarea or text field, but what about the other elements? You can "toggle" the state of checkboxes, and you can use "setSelected" to set something like an OPTION tag selected. Dealing with SELECT tags isn't too bad:
select = driver.find_element_by_xpath("//select")) all_options = select.find_elements_by_tag_name("option")) for option in all_options: print "Value is: %s" % option.getValue() #<- FIXME: API option.setSelected() #<- FIXME: API
This will find the first "SELECT" element on the page, and cycle through each of it's OPTIONs in turn, printing out their values, and selecting each in turn. As you can see, this isn't the most efficient way of dealing with SELECT elements . WebDriver's support classes include one called "Select", which provides useful methods for interacting with these.
select = driver.find_element_by_xpath("//select").select() #<- FIXME: API select.deselectAll() #<- FIXME: API select.selectByVisibleText("Edam") #<- FIXME: API
This will deselect all OPTIONs from the first SELECT on the page, and then select the OPTION with the displayed text of "Edam".
Once you've finished filling out the form, you probably want to submit it. One way to do this would be to find the "submit" button and click it:
# Assume the button has the ID "submit" :) driver.find_element_by_id("submit").click()
Alternatively, WebDriver has the convenience method "submit" on every
element. If you call this on an element within a form, WebDriver will
walk up the DOM until it finds the enclosing form and then calls
submit on that. If the element isn't in a form, then the
NoSuchElementException
will be raised:
element.submit();
You can use drag and drop, either moving an element by a certain amount, or on to another element:
element = driver.find_element_by_name("source") target = driver.find_element_by_name("target") from selenium.webdriver import ActionChains action_chains = ActionChains(driver) action_chains.drag_and_drop(element, target);
It's rare for a modern web application not to have any frames or to be constrained to a single window. WebDriver supports moving between named windows using the "switch_to_window" method:
driver.switch_to_window("windowName")
All calls to driver
will now be interpreted as being directed to
the particular window. But how do you know the window's name? Take a
look at the javascript or link that opened it:
<a href="somewhere.html" target="windowName">Click here to open a new window</a>
Alternatively, you can pass a "window handle" to the "switch_to_window()" method. Knowing this, it's possible to iterate over every open window like so:
for handle in driver.window_handles: driver.switch_to_window(handle);
You can also swing from frame to frame (or into iframes):
driver.switch_to_frame("frameName")
It's possible to access subframes by separating the path with a dot, and you can specify the frame by its index too. That is:
driver.switch_to_frame("frameName.0.child")
would go to the frame named "child" of the first subframe of the frame called "frameName". All frames are evaluated as if from *top*.
Selenium WebDriver has built-in support for handling popup dialog boxes. After you've triggerd and action that would open a popup, you can access the alert with the following:
alert = driver.switch_to_alert()
This will return the currently open alert object. With this object you can now accept, dismiss, read its contents or even type into a prompt. This interface works equally well on alerts, confirms, prompts. Refer to the API documentation for more information.
Earlier, we covered navigating to a page using the "get" command (
driver.get("http://www.example.com")
) As you've seen, WebDriver
has a number of smaller, task-focused interfaces, and navigation is a
useful task. To navigate to a page, you can use get method:
driver.get("http://www.example.com");
To move backwards and forwards in your browser's history:
driver.forward() driver.back()
Please be aware that this functionality depends entirely on the underlying driver. It's just possible that something unexpected may happen when you call these methods if you're used to the behaviour of one browser over another.
Before we leave these next steps, you may be interested in understanding how to use cookies. First of all, you need to be on the domain that the cookie will be valid for:
# Go to the correct domain driver.get("http://www.example.com") # Now set the cookie. This one's valid for the entire domain cookie = {"key": "value"}) driver.add_cookie(cookie) # And now output all the available cookies for the current URL all_cookies = driver.get_cookies() for cookie_name, cookie_value in all_cookies.items(): print "%s -> %s", cookie_name, cookie_value
This has been a high level walkthrough of WebDriver and some of its key capabilities. You may want to look at the Test Design Considerations chapter to get some ideas about how you can reduce the pain of maintaining your tests and how to make your code more modular.
This chapter cover all the interfaces of Selenium WebDriver.
module: selenium.common.exceptions
class WebDriverException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: Exception
class ErrorInResponseException(response, msg)
base: WebDriverException
An error has occurred on the server side.
This may happen when communicating with the firefox extension or the remote driver server.
class InvalidSwitchToTargetException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
The frame or window target to be switched doesn't exist.
class NoSuchFrameException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: InvalidSwitchToTargetException
The frame target to be switched doesn't exist.
class NoSuchWindowException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: InvalidSwitchToTargetException
The window target to be switched doesn't exist.
class NoSuchElementException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
The find_element_by_* methods can't find the element.
class NoSuchAttributeException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
class StaleElementReferenceException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
Indicates that a reference to an element is now "stale" --- the element no longer appears on the DOM of the page.
class InvalidElementStateException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
class ElementNotVisibleException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: InvalidElementStateException
Thrown to indicate that although an element is present on the DOM, it is not visible, and so is not able to be interacted with.
class ElementNotSelectableException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: InvalidElementStateException
class InvalidCookieDomainException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
Thrown when attempting to add a cookie under a different domain than the current URL.
class UnableToSetCookieException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
Thrown when a driver fails to set a cookie.
class RemoteDriverServerException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
base: WebDriverException
class TimeoutException(msg=None, screen=None, stacktrace=None)
Thrown when a command does not complete in enough time.
module: selenium.webdriver.common.action_chains
class ActionChains(driver)
driver: The WebDriver instance which performs user actions.
Generate user actions. All actions are stored in the ActionChains object. Call perform() to fire stored actions.
perform()
Performs all stored actions.
click(on_element=None)
Clicks an element.
on_element: The element to click. If None, clicks on current mouse position.
click_and_hold(on_element)
Holds down the left mouse button on an element.
on_element: The element to mouse down. If None, clicks on current mouse position.
context_click(on_element)
Performs a context-click (right click) on an element.
on_element: The element to context-click. If None, clicks on current mouse position.
double_click(on_element)
Double-clicks an element.
on_element: The element to double-click. If None, clicks on current mouse position.
drag_and_drop(source, target)
Holds down the left mouse button on the source element, then moves to the target element and releases the mouse button.
source: The element to mouse down.
target: The element to mouse up.
key_down(key, element=None)
Sends a key press only, without releasing it. Should only be used with modifier keys (Control, Alt and Shift).
key: The modifier key to send. Values are defined in Keys class.
element: The element to send keys. If None, sends a key to current focused element.
key_up(key, element=None)
Releases a modifier key.
key: The modifier key to send. Values are defined in Keys class.
element: The element to send keys. If None, sends a key to current focused element.
move_by_offset(xoffset, yoffset)
Moving the mouse to an offset from current mouse position.
xoffset: X offset to move to. yoffset: Y offset to move to.
move_to_element(to_element)
Moving the mouse to the middle of an element.
to_element: The element to move to.
move_to_element_with_offset(to_element, xoffset, yoffset)
Move the mouse by an offset of the specificed element. Offsets are relative to the top-left corner of the element.
to_element: The element to move to. xoffset: X offset to move to. yoffset: Y offset to move to.
release(on_element)
Releasing a held mouse button.
on_element: The element to mouse up.
end_keys(*keys_to_send)
Sends keys to current focused element.
keys_to_send: The keys to send.
end_keys_to_element(self, element, *keys_to_send):
Sends keys to an element.
element: The element to send keys. keys_to_send: The keys to send.
module: selenium.webdriver.common.alert
class Alert(driver)
text()
Gets the text of the Alert
dismiss()
Dismisses the alert available
accept()
Accepts the alert available
send_keys(keysToSend)
Send Keys to the Alert
keysToSend: Any character.
module: selenium.webdriver.common.keys
- class Keys()
- NULL = u'ue000'
- CANCEL = u'ue001' # ^break
- HELP = u'ue002'
- BACK_SPACE = u'ue003'
- TAB = u'ue004'
- CLEAR = u'ue005'
- RETURN = u'ue006'
- ENTER = u'ue007'
- SHIFT = u'ue008'
- LEFT_SHIFT = u'ue008' # alias
- CONTROL = u'ue009'
- LEFT_CONTROL = u'ue009' # alias
- ALT = u'ue00a'
- LEFT_ALT = u'ue00a' # alias
- PAUSE = u'ue00b'
- ESCAPE = u'ue00c'
- SPACE = u'ue00d'
- PAGE_UP = u'ue00e'
- PAGE_DOWN = u'ue00f'
- END = u'ue010'
- HOME = u'ue011'
- LEFT = u'ue012'
- ARROW_LEFT = u'ue012' # alias
- UP = u'ue013'
- ARROW_UP = u'ue013' # alias
- RIGHT = u'ue014'
- ARROW_RIGHT = u'ue014' # alias
- DOWN = u'ue015'
- ARROW_DOWN = u'ue015' # alias
- INSERT = u'ue016'
- DELETE = u'ue017'
- SEMICOLON = u'ue018'
- EQUALS = u'ue019'
- NUMPAD0 = u'ue01a' # numbe pad keys
- NUMPAD1 = u'ue01b'
- NUMPAD2 = u'ue01c'
- NUMPAD3 = u'ue01d'
- NUMPAD4 = u'ue01e'
- NUMPAD5 = u'ue01f'
- NUMPAD6 = u'ue020'
- NUMPAD7 = u'ue021'
- NUMPAD8 = u'ue022'
- NUMPAD9 = u'ue023'
- MULTIPLY = u'ue024'
- ADD = u'ue025'
- SEPARATOR = u'ue026'
- SUBTRACT = u'ue027'
- DECIMAL = u'ue028'
- DIVIDE = u'ue029'
- F1 = u'ue031' # function keys
- F2 = u'ue032'
- F3 = u'ue033'
- F4 = u'ue034'
- F5 = u'ue035'
- F6 = u'ue036'
- F7 = u'ue037'
- F8 = u'ue038'
- F9 = u'ue039'
- F10 = u'ue03a'
- F11 = u'ue03b'
- F12 = u'ue03c'
- META = u'ue03d'
- COMMAND = u'ue03d'
module: selenium.webdriver.firefox.webdriver
class WebDriver(firefox_profile=None, firefox_binary=None, timeout=30)
base: selenium.webdriver.remote.webdriver.WebDriver
save_screenshot(filename)
Gets the screenshot of the current window. Returns False if there is any IOError, else returns True. Use full paths in your filename.
module: selenium.webdriver.chrome.webdriver
Controls the ChromeDriver and allows you to drive the browser. You will need to download the ChromeDriver executable from: http://code.google.com/p/selenium/downloads/list
class WebDriver(executable_path="chromedriver", port=0)
base: selenium.webdriver.remote.webdriver.WebDriver
executable_path: path to the executable. If the default is used it assumes the executable is in the $PATH
port: port you would like the service to run, if left as 0, a free port will be found
save_screenshot(filename)
Gets the screenshot of the current window. Returns False if there is any IOError, else returns True. Use full paths in your filename.
module: selenium.webdriver.remote.webdriver
Controls a browser by sending commands to a remote server. This server is expected to be running the WebDriver wire protocol as defined here: http://code.google.com/p/selenium/wiki/JsonWireProtocol
- class WebDriver(command_executor='http://127.0.0.1:4444/wd/hub',
desired_capabilities=None, browser_profile=None)
Create a new driver that will issue commands using the wire protocol.
command_executor: Either a command.CommandExecutor object or a string that specifies the URL of a remote server to send commands to.
desired_capabilities: Dictionary holding predefined values for starting a browser
browser_profile: A selenium.webdriver.firefox.firefox_profile.FirefoxProfile object. Only used if Firefox is requested.
Other Attributes:
error_handler: errorhandler.ErrorHandler object used to verify that the server did not return an error.
session_id: The session ID to send with every command.
capabilities: A dictionary of capabilities of the underlying browser for this instance's session (This is set by passing desired_capabilities argument)
name
Returns the name of the underlying browser for this instance.
start_client():
Called before starting a new session. This method may be overridden to define custom startup behavior.
stop_client()
Called after executing a quit command. This method may be overridden to define custom shutdown behavior.
start_session(desired_capabilities, browser_profile=None)
Creates a new session with the desired capabilities.
desired_capabilities: A dictionry with following keys:
- browser_name: The name of the browser to request.
- version: Which browser version to request.
- platform: Which platform to request the browser on.
- javascript_enabled: Whether the new session should support JavaScript.
- browser_profile: A selenium.webdriver.firefox.firefox_profile.FirefoxProfile object. Only used if Firefox is requested.
create_web_element(element_id)
Creates a web element with the specified element_id.
execute(driver_command, params=None)
Sends a command to be executed by a command.CommandExecutor.
driver_command: The name of the command to execute as a string.
params: A dictionary of named parameters to send with the command.
Returns: The command's JSON response loaded into a dictionary object.
get(url)
Loads a web page in the current browser session.
title
Returns the title of the current page.
find_element_by_id(id_)
Finds an element by id.
id_: The id of the element to be found.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_id('foo')
find_elements_by_id(id_)
Finds multiple elements by id.
id_: The id of the elements to be found.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_id('foo')
find_element_by_xpath(xpath)
Finds an element by xpath.
xpath: The xpath locator of the element to find.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_xpath('//div/td[1]')
find_elements_by_xpath(xpath)
Finds multiple elements by xpath.
xpath: The xpath locator of the elements to be found.
Usage:
driver.find_elements_by_xpath("//div[contains(@class, 'foo')]")
find_element_by_link_text(link_text)
Finds an element by link text.
link_text: The text of the element to be found.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_link_text('Sign In')
find_elements_by_link_text(text)
Finds elements by link text.
link_text: The text of the elements to be found.
Usage:
driver.find_elements_by_link_text('Sign In')
find_element_by_partial_link_text(link_text)
Finds an element by a partial match of its link text.
link_text: The text of the element to partially match on.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_partial_link_text('Sign')
find_elements_by_partial_link_text(link_text)
Finds elements by a partial match of their link text.
link_text: The text of the element to partial match on.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_partial_link_text('Sign')
find_element_by_name(name)
Finds an element by name.
name: The name of the element to find.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_name('foo')
find_elements_by_name(name)
Finds elements by name.
name: The name of the elements to find.
Usage:
driver.find_elements_by_name('foo')
find_element_by_tag_name(name)
Finds an element by tag name.
name: The tag name of the element to find.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_tag_name('foo')
find_elements_by_tag_name(name)
Finds elements by tag name.
name: The tag name the use when finding elements.
Usage:
driver.find_elements_by_tag_name('foo')
find_element_by_class_name(name)
Finds an element by class name.
name: The class name of the element to find.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_class_name('foo')
find_elements_by_class_name(name)
Finds elements by class name.
name: The class name of the elements to find.
Usage:
driver.find_elements_by_class_name('foo')
find_element_by_css_selector(css_selector)
Finds an element by css selector.
css_selector: The css selector to use when finding elements.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_css_selector('#foo')
find_elements_by_css_selector(css_selector)
Finds elements by css selector.
css_selector: The css selector to use when finding elements.
Usage:
driver.find_element_by_css_selector('#foo')
execute_script(script, *args)
Synchronously Executes JavaScript in the current window/frame.
script: The JavaScript to execute.
*args: Any applicable arguments for your JavaScript.
Usage:
driver.execute_script('document.title')
execute_async_script(script, *args)
Asynchronously Executes JavaScript in the current window/frame.
script: The JavaScript to execute.
*args: Any applicable arguments for your JavaScript.
Usage:
driver.execute_async_script('document.title')
current_url
Usage:
driver.current_url
page_source
Usage:
driver.page_source
close()
Closes the current window.
Usage:
driver.close()
quit()
Quits the driver and closes every associated window.
Usage:
driver.quit()
current_window_handle
Usage:
driver.current_window_handle
window_handles
Returns the handles of all windows within the current session.
Usage:
driver.window_handles
switch_to_active_element()
Returns the element with focus, or BODY if nothing has focus.
Usage:
driver.switch_to_active_element()
switch_to_window(window_name)
Switches focus to the specified window.
window_name: The name of the window to switch to.
Usage:
driver.switch_to_window('main')
switch_to_frame(index_or_name)
Switches focus to the specified frame, by index or name.
index_or_name: The name of the window to switch to, or an integer representing the index to switch to.
Usage:
driver.switch_to_frame('frame_name') driver.switch_to_frame(1)
switch_to_default_content()
Switch focus to the default frame.
Usage:
driver.switch_to_default_content()
switch_to_alert()
Switches focus to an alert on the page.
Usage:
driver.switch_to_alert()
back()
Goes one step backward in the browser history.
Usage:
driver.back()
forward()
Goes one step forward in the browser history.
Usage:
driver.forward()
refresh()
Refreshes the current page.
Usage:
driver.refresh()
get_cookies()
Returns a set of dictionaries, corresponding to cookies visible in the current session.
Usage:
driver.get_cookies()
get_cookie(name)
Get a single cookie by name. Returns the cookie if found, None if not.
name: namd of the cookie
Usage:
driver.get_cookie('my_cookie')
delete_cookie(name)
Delete a particular cookie.
name: namd of the cookie
Usage:
driver.delete_cookie('my_cookie')
delete_all_cookies()
Delete all cookies in the scope of the session.
Usage:
driver.delete_all_cookies()
add_cookie(cookie_dict)
Adds a cookie to your current session.
cookie_dict: A dictionary object, with the desired cookie name as the key, and the value being the desired contents.
Usage:
driver.add_cookie({'foo': 'bar',})
implicitly_wait(time_to_wait)
Sets a sticky timeout to implicitly wait for an element to be found, or a command to complete. This method only needs to be called one time per session.
time_to_wait: Amount of time to wait
Usage:
driver.implicitly_wait(30)
set_script_timeout(time_to_wait)
Set the amount of time that the script should wait before throwing an error.
time_to_wait: The amount of time to wait
Usage:
driver.set_script_timeout(30)
desired_capabilities
returns the drivers current desired capabilities being used
get_screenshot_as_file(filename)
Gets the screenshot of the current window. Returns False if there is any IOError, else returns True. Use full paths in your filename.
filename: The full path you wish to save your screenshot to.
Usage:
driver.get_screenshot_as_file('/Screenshots/foo.png')
get_screenshot_as_base64()
Gets the screenshot of the current window as a base64 encoded string which is useful in embedded images in HTML.
Usage:
driver.get_screenshot_as_base64()
- Blog post explaining how to use headless X for running Selenium tests: http://coreygoldberg.blogspot.com/2011/06/python-headless-selenium-webdriver.html
- Jenkins plugin for headless Selenium tests: https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Xvnc+Plugin
Download the latest chromdriver from download page. Unzip the file:
unzip chromedriver_linux32_x.x.x.x.zip
You should see a chromedriver
executable. Now you can instance of
Chrome WebDriver like this:
driver = webdriver.Chrome(executable_path="/path/to/chromedriver")
The rest of the example should work as given in other other documentation.
Selenium Python bindings provides a simple API to automate all kinds of functional/acceptance tests using Selenium WebDriver. Though Python API you can access all functionalities in an intuitive way.