bauxite¶ ↑
Bauxite is a façade over Selenium intended for non-developers
The idea behind this project was to create a tool that allows non-developers to write web tests in a human-readable language. Another major requirement is to be able to easily extend the test language to create functional abstractions over technical details.
Take a look at the following Ruby excerpt from code.google.com/p/selenium/wiki/RubyBindings:
require "selenium-webdriver" driver = Selenium::WebDriver.for :firefox driver.navigate.to "http://google.com" element = driver.find_element(:name, 'q') element.send_keys "Hello WebDriver!" element.submit puts driver.title driver.quit
While developers might find that code expressive enough, non-developers might be a bit shocked.
The equivalent Bauxite test is easier on the eyes:
open "http://google.com" write "name=q" "Hello WebDriver!" click "gbqfb"
Installation¶ ↑
In a nutshell:
gem install bauxite
If you don't have Ruby 2.x yet, check the Installing Ruby section below.
Remember you should probably install Firefox (unless you want to use other
browsers or Selenium server by specifying the -p
switch to the
bauxite
executable).
Hello World¶ ↑
Paste the following text into hello.bxt
:
open "http://www.gnu.org/fun/jokes/helloworld.html"
Launch a terminal/command prompt and type:
bauxite hello.bxt
Command-line Interface¶ ↑
The bauxite
command-line program supports several
configuration options.
Refer to the RDoc documentation for more details.
The Bauxite Language¶ ↑
The Bauxite language is composed of two elements
Actions
and Selectors
: Actions are testing
operations such as “open this page”, “click this button”, “write this text
into that textbox”, etc. Selectors are ways of locating interesting
elements of a page such as a button, a textbox, a label, etc.
A typical Bauxite test is a plain text file that contains a series of Actions (one per line). Depending on the Action, a few action arguments might need to be specified as well. For example in:
open "http://google.com" write "name=q" "Hello WebDriver!" click "gbqfb"
open
, write
and click
are Actions: -
open
takes a single URL argument
("http://google.com"
) and opens that URL in the
browser. - write
takes two arguments, a Selector
(name=q
, more on this in a bit) and a text ("Hello
WebDriver!"
), and writes the text into the element specified by
the Selector. - click
takes a single Selector argument
(gbqfb
) and clicks the element specified by the Selector.
In general, Action arguments can be surrounded by optional double quote
characters ("
). If an argument contains a space
character, the quotes are mandatory (this is the case for the second
argument to write
in the example above).
Some Actions operate on page elements (e.g. write
,
click
, etc.). In order to locate these elements, Bauxite uses Selectors.
The trivial Selector is just a text that matches the last portion of the
id
attribute of the target element.
For example, in this HTML fragment:
<input type="submit" id="gbqfb" value="Search" />
If we want to click the “Search” button we can do the following:
click "gbqfb"
Bauxite supports several other Selectors such as
name=
in the example above. The name
Selector
finds elements whose name
attribute matches the text following
the =
sign.
For example, in this HTML fragment:
<input type="text" name="q" />
If we want to type the text “Hello WebDriver!” in textbox we can do the following:
write "name=q" "Hello WebDriver!"
This section presented a brief introduction into the basic Bauxite concepts. For more details and a list of every Action and Selector available, refer to the RDoc generated documentation in:
Installing Ruby¶ ↑
I won't cover all the details of installing Ruby on your system (Google knows best), but the following should probably work.
In GNU/Linux, you can install RVM, then Ruby:
curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable source ~/.rvm/scripts/rvm rvm install ruby-2.1.0
In Windows, you can install Ruby 2.x with RubyInstaller. After
everything is installed, launch the Start Command Prompt with
Ruby
option in your start menu.
Regadless of your OS, you should be able to install Bauxite with:
gem install bauxite
Implementation¶ ↑
Bauxite is both a command-line program and a library. You can use the program to run Bauxite tests directly from a terminal, or you can embed the library in your own application.
The command-line program is called bauxite
and has several
command-line options, refer to the RDoc
documentation for more details.
If you are looking to embed Bauxite in your
application take a look a the code in
lib/bauxite/application.rb
, that should give you a full
example of how to create a Bauxite Context and
execute some actions.
Extending Bauxite¶ ↑
Bauxite supports two types of extensions: functional extensions and coded plugins.
Functional extensions¶ ↑
Functional extensions are composite constructs created using existing Bauxite actions to convey functional meaning. For example, imagine a login form:
<!-- http://hostname/login.html --> <form> <input id="username" name="username" type="text" /> <input id="password" name="password" type="password" /> <input id="login" type="submit" value="Login"/> </form>
The Bauxite code to login into this site would be:
open "http://hostname/login.html" write "username" "jdoe" write "password" "hello world!" click "login"
If we were creating a suite of automated web tests for our hostname site, we'll probably need to login into the site several times. This would mean copy/pasting the four lines above into every test in our suite.
Of course we can do better. We can split Bauxite
tests into many files and include one test into another with the
load
action.
# my_test.bxt (by the way, this is a comment) load other_test_fragment.bxt ...
Back to our login example, first we can package the login part of our tests into a separate Bauxite file:
# login.bxt open "http://hostname/login.html" write "username" "jdoe" write "password" "hello world!" click "login"
Of course we would like to be able to login with different
username/password combinations, so we can replace the literals in
login.bxt
with variables:
# login.bxt open "http://hostname/login.html" write "username" "${username}" write "password" "${password}" click "login"
Now, we would like to assert that both username
and
password
variables are set before calling our test (just in
case someone forgets). We can do this with params
# login.bxt params username password open "http://hostname/login.html" write "username" "${username}" write "password" "${password}" click "login"
In our main test we can load login.bxt
and specify the
variables required using this code:
# main_test.bxt load "login.bxt" "username=jdoe" "password=hello world!" # additional actions go here
We could improve this even further by creating an alias
to
simplify the login process. To do this, lets create an new file called
alias.bxt
:
# alias.bxt alias "login" "load" "login.bxt" "username=${1}" "password=${2}"
Note that the alias
action supports positional arguments.
Now we can change our main test to use our alias:
# main_test.bxt load "alias.bxt" login "jdoe" "hello world!" # additional actions go here
That was a bit of work but the resulting test is purely functional (minus the load alias part, of course).
Coded plugins¶ ↑
Coded plugins are Ruby files that extend the Bauxite language by providing additional language elements. Coded plugins can be used to create Bauxite actions, selectors and loggers.
For example lets assume that throughout a web application input elements
were identified using a custom HTML attribute instead of id
.
For example:
<form> <input custom-attr="username" type="text" /> <input custom-attr="password" type="password" /> <input custom-attr="login" type="submit" value="Login"/> </form>
Using standard Bauxite language we could select these elements using:
# === my_test.bxt === # write "attr=custom-attr:username" "jdoe" write "attr=custom-attr:password" "hello world!" click "attr=custom-attr:login"
But we can improve the overall readability of our test by using a coded plugin:
# === plugins/custom_selector.rb === # class Bauxite::Selector def custom(value) attr "custom-attr:#{value}" end end
Now we can change our test to look like this:
# === my_test.bxt === # write "custom=username" "jdoe" write "custom=password" "hello world!" click "custom=login"
Finally, to execute Bauxite loading our plugin we can type:
bauxite -e plugins my_test.bxt