SeleniumBase/examples/capabilities
Michael Mintz 3af0bdac34 Update examples 2021-01-25 14:40:13 -05:00
..
ReadMe.md Update examples 2021-01-25 14:40:13 -05:00
sample_cap_file_BS.py Update example desired capabilities 2019-12-31 17:37:27 -05:00
sample_cap_file_SL.py Update example desired capabilities 2019-12-31 17:37:27 -05:00

ReadMe.md

Using Desired Capabilities

You can specify browser desired capabilities for webdriver when running SeleniumBase tests on a remote SeleniumGrid server such as BrowserStack, Sauce Labs, or TestingBot.

Sample run commands may look like this when run from the SeleniumBase/examples/ folder: (The browser is now specified in the capabilities file.)

pytest my_first_test.py --browser=remote --server=USERNAME:KEY@hub.browserstack.com --port=80 --cap_file=capabilities/sample_cap_file_BS.py
pytest my_first_test.py --browser=remote --server=USERNAME:KEY@ondemand.saucelabs.com --port=80 --cap_file=capabilities/sample_cap_file_SL.py

(Parameters: --browser=remote, --server=SERVER, --port=PORT, and --cap_file=CAP_FILE.py)

Here's an example desired capabilities file for BrowserStack:

desired_cap = {
    'os': 'OS X',
    'os_version': 'High Sierra',
    'browser': 'Chrome',
    'browser_version': '77.0',
    'browserstack.local': 'false',
    'browserstack.selenium_version': '3.141.59'
}

Here's an example desired capabilities file for Sauce Labs:

capabilities = {
    'browserName': 'firefox',
    'browserVersion': '70.0',
    'platformName': 'macOS 10.13',
    'sauce:options': {
    }
}

(You'll notice that the browser is now being specified in the capabilities file, rather than with --browser=BROWSER)

You can generate specific desired capabilities using:

Parsing desired capabilities: SeleniumBase has a desired capabilities parser that can capture all lines from the specified file in the following formats: 'KEY': 'VALUE' 'KEY': True 'KEY': False caps['KEY'] = "VALUE" caps['KEY'] = True caps['KEY'] = False (Each pair must be on a separate line. You can interchange single and double quotes.)

You can also swap --browser=remote with an actual browser, eg --browser=chrome, which will combine the default SeleniumBase desired capabilities with those that were specified in the capabilities file when using --cap_file=FILE.py. Capabilities will override other parameters, so if you set the browser to one thing and the capabilities browser to another, SeleniumBase will use the capabilities browser as the browser.

You'll need default SeleniumBase capabilities for:

  • Using a proxy server (not the same as a Selenium Grid server)
  • Downloading files to a desired folder
  • Disabling some warnings on Chrome
  • Overriding a website's Content Security Policy on Chrome
  • Other possible reasons

You can also set browser desired capabilities from a command line string: Example:

pytest test_swag_labs.py --cap-string='{"browserName":"chrome","name":"test1"}' --server="127.0.0.1" --browser=remote

(Enclose cap-string in single quotes. Enclose parameter keys in double quotes.)

If you pass "*" into the "name" field of --cap-string, the name will become the test identifier. Example:

pytest test_swag_labs.py --cap-string='{"browserName":"chrome","name":"*"}' --server="127.0.0.1" --browser=chrome

Example name: "my_first_test.MyTestClass.test_basics"

Using a local Selenium Grid

If using a local Selenium Grid with SeleniumBase, start up the Grid Hub and nodes first:

seleniumbase grid-hub start
seleniumbase grid-node start

(The Selenium Server JAR file will be automatically downloaded for first-time Grid users. You'll also need Java installed to start up the Grid.)