FluentLenium is a framework that helps you writing Selenium tests. FluentLenium provides you a fluent interface to the Selenium Web Driver. FluentLenium let you use the assertion framework you like, either jUnit assertions, Hamcrest or Fest-assert.
import org.junit.Test;
import static org.fest.assertions.Assertions.assertThat;
public class BingTest extends FluentTest {
@Test
public void title_of_bing_should_contain_search_query_name() {
goTo("https://www.bing.com");
fill("#sb_form_q").with("FluentLenium");
submit("#sb_form_go");
assertThat(title()).contains("FluentLenium");
}
}
To add FluentLenium to your project, just add the following dependency into your pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.fluentlenium</groupId>
<artifactId>fluentlenium</artifactId>
<version>0.5.4</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
This dependency includes the core of the framework and a fest-assert tool. If you don't need the fest-assert tool, you can grab only the core :
<dependency>
<groupId>org.fluentlenium</groupId>
<artifactId>fluentlenium-core</artifactId>
<version>0.5.4</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
##Static imports
If you need to do some filtering :
import static org.fluentlenium.core.filter.FilterConstructor.*;
The static assertions to use fest assert
import static org.fest.assertions.Assertions.assertThat;
import static org.fest.assertions.fluentlenium.FluentLeniumAssertions.assertThat;
You can use url()
, title()
or pageSource()
to get the url, the title or the page source of the current page.
You can use CSS1, CSS2 and CSS3 selector with the same restrictions as in Selenium.
If you want to find the list of elements which have
- the id "title" :
find("#title")
- the class name "small" :
find(".small")
- the tag name "input" :
find("input")
You are free to use most of the CSS3 syntax, wich means that
find("input[class=rightForm]")
will return the list of all input elements which have the class rightForm
But what if you want all the input that have a text equals to "Sam" ? You can use filters to allow that kind of search. For example :
find(".small", withName("foo"))
find(".small", withId("idOne"))
find(".small", withText("This field is mandatory."))
You can also chained filters :
find(".small", withName("foo"), withId("id1"))
will return all the elements matching the 3 criterias.
If you want others precisions that just the css selector, just use our filters features. For now, you have 6 differents filters :
contains
notContains
startsWith
notStartsWith
endsWith
notEndsWith
For each of them, you can choose to use a css selector :
find(".small", withName().notContains("name")
find(".small", withId().notStartsWith("id")
find(".small", withText().endsWith("Female"))
Or to be more precise, you can choose to use a regexp :
find(".small", withName().contains(regex("na?me[0-9]*"))
find(".small", withName().notStartsWith(regex("na?me[0-9]*"))
Contains, startsWith and endsWith with a regexp pattern are looking for a subsect of the pattern.
Of course, if you are a regexp jedi, that's not needed !
More will come soon to filter to create a complete search tool (containsWord, able to choose if you want to ignore case ...)
If you want the first elements that matchs your criteria, just use :
findFirst(myCssSelector)
or alternatively
find(myCssSelector).first()
If you want the element at the given position :
find(myCssSelector, 2)
Of course, you can use both position filter and custom filter :
find(myCssSelector, 2, withName("foo"))
You can also chained the find call :
find(myCssSelector).find("input")
will return all the web element input into the css selector tree.
You can add more indication :
find(myCssSelector, 2, withName("foo")).find("input", withName("bar"))
or
find(myCssSelector, 2, withName("foo")).findFirst("input", withName("bar"))
If you need to click, fill, submit or clean an element or a list of element, just go naturally for it.
fill("input").with("bar")
or find("input").text("bar")
will fill all the element with tag input with bar.
If you want for example exclude the checkbox, you can use the css filtering like fill("input:not([type='checkbox'])").with("tomato")
,
you can also use the filtering provided by FluentLenium fill("input", with("type", notContains("checkbox"))).with("tomato")
fill("input").with("myLogin","myPassword")
will fill the first elements of the input selection with myLogin, the second with myPassword.
If there are a third input, the last value (myPassword) will be repeat again and again.
Don't forget, only the visible field will be modified. It simulates your action in a browser !
click("#create-button")
It will click on all the visible fields returned by the search.
clear("#firstname")
It will clear all the visible fields returned by the search.
submit("#account")
It will submit all the visible fields returned by the search.
Because Selenium test can easily become a mess, Page Object Pattern when writing automated integration test. Page Pattern will inclosing all the plumbing, which make tests a lot easier to read and to maintain.
Try to construct your Page thinking that it is better if you offer services from your page rather that just the internals of the page. A Page Object can modelize the whole page or just a part of it.
To construct a Page, it have to extends org.fluentlenium.core.FluentPage.
In most of the cases, you have to defined the url of the page with overriding the getUrl
methods.
In that way, you can go in your test to that page with goTo(myPage)
To control that you are in the good page, not only the url [accessible in your test via the void url() method] can be needed.
Redefined the isAt
methods to list all the assertions you have to make in order to be sure that you are in the good pages.
For example, if I choose that the title will be sufficient to know if I'm in the page :
@Override
public void isAt() {
assertThat(title()).contains("Selenium");
}
Create you own methods to easily fill form, go to a next page or what else can be needed in your test.
For example :
public class LoginPage extends FluentPage {
public String getUrl() {
return "myCustomUrl";
}
public void isAt() {
assertThat(title()).isEqualTo("MyTitle");
}
public void fillAndSubmitForm(String... paramsOrdered) {
fill("input").with(paramsOrdered);
click("#create-button");
}
}
And the corresponding test :
public void checkLoginFailed() {
goTo(loginPage);
loginPage.fillAndSubmitLoginForm("login", "wrongPass");
loginPage.isAt();
}
Or if you have the Fest-assert module (just make a static import org.fest.assertions.fluentlenium.FluentLeniumAssertions.assertThat)
public void checkLoginFailed() {
goTo(loginPage);
loginPage.fillAndSubmitLoginForm("login","wrongPass");
assertThat(find(".error")).hasSize(1);
assertThat(loginPage).isAt();
}
###Page usage You can use the annotation @Page to define your page easily.
For example :
public class AnnotationInitialization extends FluentTest {
public WebDriver webDriver = new HtmlUnitDriver();
@Page
public TestPage page;
@Test
public void test_no_exception() {
goTo(page);
//put your assertions here
}
@Override
public WebDriver getDefaultDriver() {
return webDriver;
}
}
You can also used the factory createPage
public class BeforeInitialization extends FluentTest {
public WebDriver webDriver = new HtmlUnitDriver();
public TestPage page;
@Before
public void beforeTest() {
page = createPage(TestPage.class);
}
@Test
public void test_no_exception() {
page.go();
}
@Override
public WebDriver getDefaultDriver() {
return webDriver;
}
}
Into a page, all FluentWebElement are automatically searched by name or id. For example, if you declare a FluentWebElement named createButton
,
it will look into the page to a element where id
is createButton
or name is createButton
.
All elements are proxified which means that the search is really done when you try to access the element.
public class LoginPage extends FluentPage {
FluentWebElement createButton;
public String getUrl() {
return "myCustomUrl";
}
public void isAt() {
assertThat(title()).isEqualTo("MyTitle");
}
public void fillAndSubmitForm(String... paramsOrdered) {
fill("input").with(paramsOrdered);
createButton.click();
}
}
You can have multiple way to make your driver wait for the result of an asynchronous call. FluentLenium provides a rich and fluent API in order to help you to handle AJAX call. If you want to wait for at most 5 seconds until the number of element corresponding to the until criteria (here the class small) has the requested size.
await().atMost(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS).until(".small").hasSize(3);
Instead of hasSize, you can also use hasText("myTextValue")
, hasId("myId")
, hasName("myName")
.
The isPresent()
assertion is going to check if there is at most one element on the page corresponding to the filter.
If you need to be more precise, you can also use filter on the search :
await().atMost(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS).until(".small").withText("myText").hasSize(3);
You can use withText("myText")
but also with the same signature withName , withId("myId")
You can also use matcher :
await().atMost(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS).until(".small").withText().startsWith("start").isPresent();
Just use startsWith
, notStartsWith
, endsWith
, notEndsWith
, contains
, notContains
, equalTo
.
If you need to filter on a custom attribute name, this syntax will help :
await().atMost(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS).until(".small").with("myAttribute").startsWith("myValue").isPresent();
You can also chain filter in the asynchronous API :
await().atMost(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS).until(".small").with("myAttribute").startsWith("myValue").with("a second attribute").equalTo("my@ndValue").isPresent();
If you are more convenient to the JQuery syntax, maybe something like that will be more natural for you:
goTo("https://mywebpage/");
$("#firstName").text("toto");
$("#create-button").click();
assertThat(title()).isEqualTo("Hello toto");
Both syntax are equivalent. Both $
and find
methods are aliases.
If you need to execute some javascript, just call executeScript
with your script as parameter.
For example, if you have a javascript method called change and you want to call them just add this in your test :
executeScript("change();");
If you need to change your driver, just override the getDefaultDriver
in your test. You can use every driver
Just override getDefaultWait
in your test.
FluentLenium used jUnit by default. You can use test using jUnit assertions, but can of course use others frameworks, more fluent, as Fluent-assert or Hamcrest.
goTo("https://mywebpage/");
fill("#firstName").with("toto");
click("#create-button");
assertEqual("Hello toto",title());
goTo("https://mywebpage/");
fill("#firstName").with("toto");
click("#create-button");
assertThat(title()).isEqualTo("Hello toto");
goTo("https://mywebpage/");
fill("#firstName").with("toto");
click("#create-button");
assertThat(title(),equalTo("Hello toto"));