Mobly is a Python-based test framework that specializes in supporting test cases that require multiple devices, complex environments, or custom hardware setups.
Here are some example use cases:
- P2P data transfer between two devices
- Conference calls across three phones
- Wearable device interacting with a phone
- Internet-Of-Things devices interacting with each other
- Testing RF characteristics of devices with special equipment
- Testing LTE network by controlling phones, base stations, and eNBs
Mobly can support many different types of devices and equipment, and it's easy to plug your own device or custom equipment/service into Mobly.
Mobly comes with a set of libs to control common devices like Android devices.
While developed by Googlers, Mobly is not an official Google product.
Mobly requires python 3.6 or newer.
Mobly tests could run on the following platforms:
- Ubuntu 14.04+
- MacOS 10.6+
- Windows 7+
Platform | Build Status |
---|---|
Linux | |
Windows |
- adb (1.0.40+ recommended)
- python3.7+
- python-setuptools
To use Python3, use pip3
and python3
(or python3.x) accordingly.
You can install the released package from pip
pip install mobly
or download the source then run setup.py
to use the bleeding edge:
git clone https://github.com/google/mobly.git
cd mobly
python setup.py install
You may need sudo
for the above commands if your system has certain permission
restrictions.
-
Mobly 101 - Simple test examples to get you started with Mobly.
-
Mobly Instrumentation Runner Tutorial - How to use Mobly's Android instrumentation test runner to run Android instrumentation tests.
-
Mobly AndroidDevice Service - Create custom service to attach to Mobly's
AndroidDevice
controller.
The Mobly Snippet projects let users better control Android devices.
- Mobly Snippet Lib: used for triggering custom device-side code from host-side Mobly tests. You could use existing Android libraries like UI Automator and Espresso.
- Mobly Bundled Snippets: a set of Snippets to allow Mobly tests to control Android devices by exposing a simplified version of the public Android API suitable for testing.