1. Introduction
Geb is a developer focused tool for automating the interaction between web browsers and web content. It uses the dynamic language features of Groovy to provide a powerful content definition DSL (for modelling content for reuse) and key concepts from jQuery to provide a powerful content inspection and traversal API (for finding and interacting with content).
Geb was born out of a desire to make browser automation (originally for web testing) easier and more productive. It aims to be a developer tool in that it allows and encourages the using of programming and language constructs instead of creating a restricted environment. It uses Groovy’s dynamism to remove the noise and boiler plate code in order to focus on what’s important — the content and interaction.
1.1. The browser automation technology
Geb builds on the WebDriver browser automation library, which means that Geb can work with any browser that WebDriver can. While Geb provides an extra layer of convenience and productivity, it is always possible to “drop down” to the WebDriver level to do something directly should you need to.
For more information see the manual section on using a driver implementation.
1.2. The Page Object pattern
The Page Object Pattern gives us a common sense way to model content in a reusable and maintainable way. From the WebDriver wiki page on the Page Object Pattern:
Within your web app’s UI there are areas that your tests interact with. A Page Object simply models these as objects within the test code. This reduces the amount of duplicated code and means that if the UI changes, the fix need only be applied in one place.
Furthermore (from the same document):
PageObjects can be thought of as facing in two directions simultaneously. Facing towards the developer of a test, they represent the services offered by a particular page. Facing away from the developer, they should be the only thing that has a deep knowledge of the structure of the HTML of a page (or part of a page) It’s simplest to think of the methods on a Page Object as offering the "services" that a page offers rather than exposing the details and mechanics of the page. As an example, think of the inbox of any web-based email system. Amongst the services that it offers are typically the ability to compose a new email, to choose to read a single email, and to list the subject lines of the emails in the inbox. How these are implemented shouldn’t matter to the test.
1.3. The jQuery-ish navigator API
The jQuery JavaScript library provides an excellent API for (among other things) selecting or targeting content on a page and traversing through and around content. Geb takes a lot of inspiration from this.
In Geb, content is selected through the $
function, which returns a Navigator
object.
A Navigator
object is in someways analogous to the jQuery
data type in jQuery in that it represents one or more targeted elements on the page.
Let’s see some examples:
$("div") (1)
$("div", 0) (2)
$("div", title: "section") (3)
$("div", 0, title: "section") (4)
$("div.main") (5)
$("div.main", 0) (6)
1 | Match all "div" elements on the page. |
2 | Match the first "div" element on the page. |
3 | Match all "div" elements with a title attribute value of "section" . |
4 | Match the first "div" element with a title attribute value of "section" . |
5 | Match all "div" elements who have the class "main" . |
6 | Match the first "div" element with the class "main" . |
These methods return Navigator
objects that can be used to further refine the content.
$("p", 0).parent() (1)
$("p").find("table", cellspacing: '0') (2)
1 | The parent of the first paragraph. |
2 | All tables with a cellspacing attribute value of 0 that are nested in a paragraph. |
This is just the beginning of what is possible with the Navigator API. See the chapter on the navigator for more details.
1.4. Full examples
Let’s have a look at a simple case of going to Geb’s home page and navigating to the latest version of this manual.
1.4.1. Inline scripting
Here’s an example of using Geb in an inline (i.e. no page objects or predefined content) scripting style…
import geb.Browser
Browser.drive {
go "http://gebish.org"
assert title == "Geb - Very Groovy Browser Automation" (1)
$("div.menu a.manuals").click() (2)
waitFor { !$("#manuals-menu").hasClass("animating") } (3)
$("#manuals-menu a")[0].click() (4)
assert title.startsWith("The Book Of Geb") (5)
}
1 | Check that we are at Geb’s homepage. |
2 | Click on the manual menu entry to open it. |
3 | Wait for the menu open animation to finish. |
4 | Click on the first link to a manual. |
5 | Check that we are at The Book of Geb. |
1.4.2. Scripting with Page Objects
This time let us define our content up front using the Page Object pattern…
import geb.Module
import geb.Page
class ManualsMenuModule extends Module { (1)
static content = { (2)
toggle { $("div.menu a.manuals") }
linksContainer { $("#manuals-menu") }
links { linksContainer.find("a") } (3)
}
void open() { (4)
toggle.click()
waitFor { !linksContainer.hasClass("animating") }
}
}
class GebHomePage extends Page {
static url = "http://gebish.org" (5)
static at = { title == "Geb - Very Groovy Browser Automation" } (6)
static content = {
manualsMenu { module(ManualsMenuModule) } (7)
}
}
class TheBookOfGebPage extends Page {
static at = { title.startsWith("The Book Of Geb") }
}
1 | Modules are reusable fragments that can be used across pages. Here we are using a module to model a dropdown menu. |
2 | Content DSL. |
3 | Content definitions can use other content definitions to define relative content elements. |
4 | Modules can contain methods that allow to hide document structure details or interaction complexity. |
5 | Pages can define their location, either absolute or relative to a base. |
6 | “at checkers” allow verifying that the browser is at the expected page. |
7 | Include the previously defined module. |
Now our script again, using the above defined content…
import geb.Browser
Browser.drive {
to GebHomePage (1)
manualsMenu.open()
manualsMenu.links[0].click()
at TheBookOfGebPage
}
1 | Go to the url defined by GebHomePage and also verify it’s “at checker”. |
1.4.3. Testing
Geb itself does not include any kind of testing or execution framework. Rather, it works with existing popular tools like Spock, JUnit, TestNg and Cucumber-JVM. While Geb works well with all of these test tools, we encourage the use of Spock as it’s a great match for Geb with its focus and style.
Here is our Geb homepage case again, this time using Geb’s Spock integration…
import geb.spock.GebSpec
class GebHomepageSpec extends GebSpec {
def "can access The Book of Geb via homepage"() {
given:
to GebHomePage
when:
manualsMenu.open()
manualsMenu.links[0].click()
then:
at TheBookOfGebPage
}
}
For more information on using Geb for web and functional testing, see the testing chapter.
1.5. Installation & usage
Geb itself is a available as a single geb-core
jar from the central Maven repository. To get up and running you simply need this jar, a WebDriver driver implementation and the selenium-support
jar.
Via @Grab
…
@Grapes([
@Grab("org.gebish:geb-core:3.4"),
@Grab("org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-firefox-driver:3.141.59"),
@Grab("org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-support:3.141.59")
])
import geb.Browser
Via Maven…
<dependency>
<groupId>org.gebish</groupId>
<artifactId>geb-core</artifactId>
<version>3.4</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.seleniumhq.selenium</groupId>
<artifactId>selenium-firefox-driver</artifactId>
<version>3.141.59</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.seleniumhq.selenium</groupId>
<artifactId>selenium-support</artifactId>
<version>3.141.59</version>
</dependency>
Via Gradle…
compile "org.gebish:geb-core:3.4"
compile "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-firefox-driver:3.141.59"
compile "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-support:3.141.59"
Alternatively, if using an integration such as geb-spock
or geb-junit4
you can depend on that instead of geb-core
. You can check out the listing of all artifacts in org.gebish
group to see what’s available.
Be sure to check the chapter on build integrations for information on using Geb with particular environments. |
Snapshot repository
If you fancy living on the bleeding edge then you can try out Geb’s snapshot artifacts located in the Maven repository at https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots.
2. The Browser
The entry point to Geb is the Browser
object.
A browser object marries a WebDriver
instance (which drives the actual web browser being automated) with the concept of a “current page”.
Browser objects are created with a Configuration
that specifies which driver implementation to use, the base URL to resolve relative links against and other bits of config.
The configuration mechanism allows you to externalise how Geb should operate, which means you can use the same suite of Geb code or tests with different browsers or site instances.
The chapter on configuration contains more details on how to manage the configuration parameters and what they are.
The default constructor of Browser
simply loads its settings from the config mechanism.
import geb.Browser
def browser = new Browser()
However, if you prefer to specify the driver implementation (or any other settable property on the Browser
) you can by using Groovy’s map constructor syntax.
import geb.Browser
import org.openqa.selenium.htmlunit.HtmlUnitDriver
def browser = new Browser(driver: new HtmlUnitDriver())
Which is the same as…
def browser = new Browser()
browser.driver = new HtmlUnitDriver()
Any property set this way will override any settings coming from the config mechanism.
The behaviour is undefined if a browser’s driver is changed after its first use, so you should avoid setting the driver this way and prefer the configuration mechanism. |
For drastically custom configuration requirements, you can create your own Configuration
object and construct the browser with it,
likely using the configuration loader.
import geb.Browser
import geb.ConfigurationLoader
def loader = new ConfigurationLoader("a-custom-environment")
def browser = new Browser(loader.conf)
Wherever possible, you should strive to use the no-arg constructor and manage Geb through the inbuilt configuration mechanism as it offers a great deal of flexibility and separates your configuration from your code.
Geb integrations typically remove the need to construct a browser object and do this for you, leaving you to just manage the configuration. |
2.1. The drive()
method
The Browser class features a static method, drive()
, that makes Geb scripting a little more convenient.
Browser.drive {
go "signup"
assert $("h1").text() == "Signup Page"
}
Which is equivalent to:
def browser = new Browser()
browser.go "signup"
assert browser.$("h1").text() == "Signup Page"
The drive()
method takes all of the arguments that the Browser
constructor takes (i.e. none, a Configuration
and/or property overrides) or an existing browser instance,
and a closure.
The closure is evaluated against created browser instance (i.e. the browser is made the delegate of the closure).
The net result is that all top level method calls and property accesses are implied to be against the browser.
The drive()
method always returns the browser object that was used, so if you need to quit the browser after the drive session you can do something like…
Browser.drive {
//…
}.quit()
For more on when/why you need to manually quit the browser, see the section on the driver. |
2.2. Making requests
2.2.1. The base URL
Browser instances maintain a baseUrl
property that is used to resolve all relative URLs.
This value can come from configuration or can be explicitly set on the browser.
Care must be taken with slashes when specifying both the base URL and the relative URL as trailing and leading slashes have significant meaning. The following table illustrates the resolution of different types of URLs.
Base | Navigating To | Result |
---|---|---|
http://myapp.com/ |
abc |
http://myapp.com/abc |
http://myapp.com |
abc |
http://myapp.comabc |
http://myapp.com |
/abc |
http://myapp.com/abc |
http://myapp.com/abc/ |
def |
http://myapp.com/abc/def |
http://myapp.com/abc |
def |
http://myapp.com/def |
http://myapp.com/abc/ |
/def |
http://myapp.com/def |
http://myapp.com/abc/def/ |
jkl |
http://myapp.com/abc/def/jkl |
http://myapp.com/abc/def |
jkl |
http://myapp.com/abc/jkl |
http://myapp.com/abc/def |
/jkl |
http://myapp.com/jkl |
It is usually most desirable to define your base urls with trailing slashes and not to use leading slashes on relative URLs.
2.2.2. Using pages
Page objects (discussed further shortly) can define a url that will be used when explicitly navigating to that page.
This is done with the to()
and via()
methods.
class SignupPage extends Page {
static url = "signup"
}
Browser.drive {
to SignupPage
assert $("h1").text() == "Signup Page"
assert page instanceof SignupPage
}
The to()
and via()
method makes a request to the resolved URL and sets the browser’s page instance to an instance of the given class. Most Geb scripts and tests start with a to()
or via()
call.
See the section on advanced page navigation for more information on how to use more complicated URL resolution for pages. |
2.2.3. Direct
You can also make a new request to a URL without setting or changing the page using the go()
methods.
import geb.Page
import geb.spock.GebSpec
class GoogleHomePage extends Page {
static url = "http://www.google.com"
}
class GoogleSpec extends GebSpec {
def "go method does NOT set the page"() {
given:
Page oldPage = page
when:
go "http://www.google.com"
then:
oldPage == page
currentUrl.contains "google"
}
def "to method does set the page and change the current url"() {
given:
Page oldPage = page
when:
to GoogleHomePage
then:
oldPage != page
currentUrl.contains "google"
}
}
The following examples use a baseUrl of “http://localhost/
”.
Browser.drive {
go() (1)
go "signup" (2)
go "signup", param1: "value1", param2: "value2" (3)
}
1 | Go to the base URL. |
2 | Go to a URL relative to base URL. |
3 | Go to a URL with request params i.e http://localhost/signup?param1=value1¶m2=value2 |
2.3. The Page
Browser instances hold a reference to a page. This page instance is retrievable via the page
property.
Initially, all browser instances have a page of type Page
which provides the basic navigation functions and is the superclass for all page objects.
However, the page property is rarely accessed directly. The browser object will forward any method calls or property read/writes that it can’t handle to the current page instance.
Browser.drive {
go "signup"
assert $("h1").text() == "Signup Page" (1)
assert page.$("h1").text() == "Signup Page" (1)
}
1 | These two calls are equivalent. |
The page is providing the $()
function, not the browser. This forwarding facilitates very concise code, void of unnecessary noise.
For more information on the |
When using the Page Object pattern, you create subclasses of Page
that define content via a powerful DSL that allows you to refer to content by meaningful names instead of
tag names or CSS expressions.
class SignupPage extends Page {
static url = "signup"
static content = {
heading { $("h1").text() }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to SignupPage
assert heading == "Signup Page"
}
Page objects are discussed in depth in the Pages chapter, which also explores the Content DSL.
Changing the page
We have already seen that that to()
methods change the browser’s page instance.
It is also possible to change the page instance without initiating a new request with the page()
methods.
The <T extends Page> T page(Class<T> pageType)
method allows you to change the page to a new instance of the given class.
The class must be Page
or a subclass thereof.
This method does not verify that the given page actually matches the content (at checking is discussed shortly).
The <T extends Page> T page(T pageInstance)
method allows you to change the page to the given instance.
Similarly to the method taking a page class it does not verify that the given page actually matches the content.
The Page page(Class<? extends Page>[] potentialPageTypes)
method allows you to specify a number of potential page types.
Each of the potential pages is instantiated and checked to see if it matches the content the browser is actually currently at by running each page’s at checker.
All of the page classes passed in must have an “at” checker defined otherwise an UndefinedAtCheckerException
will be thrown.
The Page page(Page[] potentialPageInstances)
method allows you to specify a number of potential page instances.
Each of the potential page instances is initialized and checked to see if it matches the content the browser is actually currently at by running each pages at checker.
All of the page instances passed in must have an “at” checker defined otherwise an UndefinedAtCheckerException
will be thrown.
These two methods taking arrays as arguments are not typically used explicitly but are used by the to()
method and content definitions that specify the page that the content navigates to when
clicked (see the section on the to
attribute of the Content DSL for more information about this).
However, should you need to manually change the page type, they are there.
2.4. At checking
Pages define an “at checker” that the browser uses for checking if it is pointing at a given page.
class SignupPage extends Page {
static url = "signup"
static at = {
$("h1").text() == "Signup Page"
}
}
Browser.drive {
to SignupPage
}
Not using explicit |
The to()
method that takes a single page type or instance verifies that the browser ends up at the given page.
If the request may initiate a redirect and take the browser to a different page you should use via()
method:
Browser.drive {
via SecurePage
at AccessDeniedPage
}
Browser objects have <T extends Page> T at(Class<T> pageType)
and <T extends Page> T at(T page)
methods that test whether or not the browser is currently at the page modeled by the given page
class or instance.
The at AccessDeniedPage
method call return a page instance if the “at checker” is fulfilled.
If on the other hand it is not then an AssertionError
will be thrown even if there are no explicit assertions in the “at checker” (the default, see the section on Implicit assertions for
details) or return null if implicit assertions are disabled.
It’s always a good idea to either use the to()
method which implicitly verifies the “at checker” or the via()
method followed by an at()
check whenever the page changes in order to fail fast.
Otherwise, subsequent steps may fail in harder to diagnose ways due to the content not matching what is expected and content look-ups returning strange results.
If you pass a page class or instance that doesn’t define an “at checker” to at()
you will get an UndefinedAtCheckerException
- “at checkers” are mandatory when doing explicit “at checks”.
By default this is not the case when implicit “at checks” are being performed, like when using to()
, but it’s configurable.
This behaviour is intended to make you aware that you probably want to define an “at checker” when explicitly verifying if you’re at a given page but not forcing you to do so when using implicit
“at checking”.
The at()
method will also update the browser’s page instance if the “at checker” is successful.
This means that you don’t have to manually set browser’s page to the new one after “at checking”.
Pages can also define content that declares what the browser’s page type should change to when that content is clicked.
After clicking on such content the declared page is automatically ”at checked” if it defines an “at checker” (see the content DSL reference for the to
parameter).
class LoginPage extends Page {
static url = "/login"
static content = {
loginButton(to: AdminPage) { $("input", type: "submit") }
username { $("input", name: "username") }
password { $("input", name: "password") }
}
}
class AdminPage extends Page {
static at = {
$("h1").text() == "Admin Page"
}
}
Browser.drive {
to LoginPage
username.value("admin")
password.value("p4sw0rd")
loginButton.click()
assert page instanceof AdminPage
}
2.5. Page change listening
This mechanism has been deprecated and will be removed in the next major version of Geb. Please use a |
It is possible to be notified when a browser’s page instance changes (note that this is not necessarily when the browser makes a request to a new URL) using the
PageChangeListener
interface.
As soon as a listener is registered, its pageWillChange()
method will be called with newPage
as the current page and oldPage
as null
.
Subsequently, each time the page changes oldPage
will be the page that the browser currently has, and newPage
will be the page that will soon be the browser’s page.
class RecordingPageChangeListener implements PageChangeListener {
Page oldPage
Page newPage
@Override
void pageWillChange(Browser browser, Page oldPage, Page newPage) {
this.oldPage = oldPage
this.newPage = newPage
}
}
class FirstPage extends Page {
}
class SecondPage extends Page {
}
def listener = new RecordingPageChangeListener()
def browser = new Browser()
browser.page(FirstPage)
browser.registerPageChangeListener(listener)
assert listener.oldPage == null
assert listener.newPage instanceof FirstPage
browser.page(SecondPage)
assert listener.oldPage instanceof FirstPage
assert listener.newPage instanceof SecondPage
You can remove a listener at any time…
browser.removePageChangeListener(listener)
The removePageChangeListener(PageChangeListener listener)
returns true
if listener
was registered and has now been
removed, otherwise it returns false
.
Listeners cannot be registered twice.
If an attempt is made to register a listener that is already registered (i.e. there is another listener that is equal to the listener being registered, based on their equals()
implementation)
then a PageChangeListenerAlreadyRegisteredException
will be raised.
2.6. Working with multiple tabs and windows
When you’re working with an application that opens new windows or tabs, for example when clicking on a link with a target attribute set, you can use withWindow()
and withNewWindow()
methods to
execute code in the context of other windows.
If you really need to know the name of the current window or all the names of open windows use Browser.getCurrentWindow()
and
Browser.getAvailableWindows()
methods but withWindow()
and withNewWindow()
are the preferred methods when it comes to dealing with multiple
windows.
2.6.1. Already opened windows
If you know the name of the window in context of which you want to execute the code you can use
withWindow(String windowName, Closure block)
.
Given that this HTML is rendered for the baseUrl
:
<a href="http://www.gebish.org" target="myWindow">Geb</a>
This code passes:
Browser.drive {
go()
$("a").click()
withWindow("myWindow") {
assert title == "Geb - Very Groovy Browser Automation"
}
}
If you don’t know the name of the window but you know something about the content of the window you can use the
withWindow(Closure specification, Closure block)
method.
The first closure passed should return true for the window, or windows, you want to use as context for execution of the second closure.
If there is no window for which the window specification closure returns |
So given:
<a href="http://www.gebish.org" target="_blank">Geb</a>
This code passes:
Browser.drive {
go()
$("a").click()
withWindow({ title == "Geb - Very Groovy Browser Automation" }) {
assert $(".slogan").text().startsWith("Very Groovy browser automation.")
}
}
If code of the closure passed as the last argument changes browser’s current page instance
(e.g. by using |
withWindow()
options
There are some additional options that can be passed to a withWindow()
call which make working
with already opened windows even simpler. The general syntax is:
withWindow(«window specification», «option name»: «option value», ...) {
«action executed within the context of the window»
}
close
Default value: false
If you pass any truthy value as the close
option then all matching windows will be closed after the execution of the closure passed as the last argument to a withWindow()
call.
page
Default value: null
If you pass a class or an instance of a class that extends Page
as page
option, then browser’s page will be set to that value before executing the closure passed as the last argument and will be
reverted to its original value afterwards. If the page class defines an “at checker” then it will be verified when the page is set on the browser.
2.6.2. Newly opened windows
If you wish to execute code in a window that is newly opened by some of your actions, use the
withNewWindow(Closure windowOpeningBlock, Closure block)
method.
Given that this HTML is rendered for the baseUrl
:
<a href="http://www.gebish.org" target="_blank">Geb</a>
The following will pass:
Browser.drive {
go()
withNewWindow({ $('a').click() }) {
assert title == 'Geb - Very Groovy Browser Automation'
}
}
If the first parameter opens none or more than one window, then |
If code of the closure passed as the last argument changes browser’s current page instance (e.g. by using |
withNewWindow()
options
There are several options that can be passed to a withNewWindow()
call which make working
with newly opened windows even simpler. The general syntax is:
withNewWindow({ «window opening action» }, «option name»: «option value», ...) {
«action executed within the context of the window»
}
close
Default value: true
If you pass any truthy value as close
option then the newly opened window will be closed after the execution of the closure passed as the last argument to the withNewWindow()
call.
page
Default value: null
If you pass a class or an instance of a class that extends Page
as page
option then browser’s page will be set to that value before executing the closure passed as the last argument and will be
reverted to its original value afterwards.
wait
Default value: null
You can specify wait
option if the action defined in the window opening closure passed as the first argument is asynchronous and you need to wait for the new window to be opened.
The possible values for the wait
option are consistent with the ones for wait
option of content definitions.
Given that the following HTML is rendered for the baseUrl
:
<a href="http://google.com" target="_blank" id="new-window-link">Google</a>
together with the following javascript:
function openNewWindow() {
setTimeout(function() {
document.getElementById('new-window-link').click();
}, 200);
}
then the following will pass:
Browser.drive {
go()
withNewWindow({ js.openNewWindow() }, wait: true) {
assert title == 'Google'
}
}
2.7. Pausing and debugging
It often proves useful to be able to pause the execution of code using Geb at some given point for debugging purposes. This can be achieved by either:
-
setting up a breakpoint in the IDE and running the JVM in debug mode
-
using Browser’s
pause()
method
While the former is more powerful in that it allows to inspect variable values in the JVM as well as use Geb’s classes and methods where the breakpoint was set, the latter might be easier and quicker to setup and just being able to open developer console in the browser and inspect DOM and javascript variables in there is often sufficient to resolve the issue being debugged.
If you wish to continue execution after a call to Be aware that if the browser is reloaded or navigated to a new url between calling |
2.8. Local and session storage
Local storage can be accessed using localStorage
property and session storage using sessionStorage
property of a Browser
instance.
Both of them can be used to read and write values to the underlying storage as if they were a map. Following is an example of setting and reading a value form local storage:
Browser.drive {
localStorage["username"] = "Alice"
assert localStorage["username"] == "Alice"
}
Both localStorage
and sessionStorage
properties are of geb.webstorage.WebStorage
type - please refer to its javadoc for information about other operations that are supported apart from reading and writing values.
Not all driver implementations support accessing web storage. When trying to access web storage when using a driver that doesn’t support it |
2.9. Quitting the browser
The browser object has quit()
and close()
methods (that simply delegate to the underlying driver).
See the section on driver management for more information on when and why you need to quit the browser.
3. The WebDriver implementation
A Browser
instance interacts with an actual browser via an instance of WebDriver
.
The browser’s driver can always be retrieved via the getDriver()
method.
One of the key design principles that WebDriver embraces is that tests/scripts should be written to the |
3.1. Explicit driver management
One option for specifying the driver implementation is to construct the driver instance and pass it to the Browser
to be used when it is constructed.
However, where possible prefer implicit driver management which is discussed later in this chapter.
Explicit lifecycle
When the driver is constructed by the user, the user is responsible for quitting the driver at the appropriate time.
This can be done via the methods on the WebDriver
instance (obtainable via getDriver()
) or by calling the delegating methods on the browser object.
3.2. Implicit driver management
If a driver is not given when a Browser
object is constructed, one will be created and managed implicitly by Geb by the configuration mechanism.
Implicit lifecycle
By default, Geb internally caches and reuses the first driver created, meaning that all subsequent browser instances created without an explicit driver will reuse the cached driver. This avoids the overhead of creating a new driver each time, which can be significant when working with a real browser.
This means that you may need to call the clearCookies()
or clearCookies(String… additionalUrls)
as well as clearWebStorage()
methods on the browser in order not to get strange results due to state carried on from previous executions.
Some of the integrations (e.g. Spock, JUnit) automatically clear the browser cookies and web storage for the current domain at appropriate times such as after each test. Consult the sections on cookie management and web storage management in tests for specifics. |
The shared driver will be closed and quited when the JVM shuts down.
A new driver can be forced at anytime by calling either of CachingDriverFactory.clearCache()
or CachingDriverFactory.clearCacheAndQuitDriver()
both of which are static
.
After calling any of these methods, the next request for a default driver will result in a new driver instance being created.
This caching behavior is configurable.
3.3. Driver quirks
This section details various quirks or issues that have been encountered with different driver implementations.
HTMLUnitDriver
Dealing with pages that use HTML refreshes
The default behaviour of the HTMLUnit driver is to immediately refresh the page as soon as it encounters a <meta http-equiv="refresh" content="5">
regardless of the specified time.
The solution is to use a refresh handler that handles the refresh asynchronously.
import com.gargoylesoftware.htmlunit.ThreadedRefreshHandler
Browser.drive {
driver.webClient.refreshHandler = new ThreadedRefreshHandler()
(1)
}
1 | From here on refresh meta tag value will be respected. |
See this mailing list thread for details.
Configuring logging
HTMLUnit can be very noisy, and it’s not clear how to make it not so noisy.
See this issue for some tips on how to tune its logging.
4. Interacting with content
Geb provides a concise and Groovy interface to the content and controls in your browser.
This is implemented through the Navigator
API which is a jQuery inspired mechanism for finding, filtering and interacting with DOM elements.
4.1. The $()
function
The $()
function is the access point to the browser’s page content.
It returns a Navigator
object that is roughly analogous to a jQuery object.
It is analogous in that it represents one or more elements on the page and can be used to refine the matched content or query the matched content.
When a $()
function is called that does not match any content, an “empty” navigator object is returned that represents no content.
Operations on “empty” navigators return null
or another “empty” navigator or other values that make sense (e.g. the size()
method returns 0
).
The signature of the $()
function is as follows…
$(«css selector», «index or range», «attribute / text matchers»)
The following is a concrete example…
$("h1", 2, class: "heading")
This would find the 3rd (elements are 0 indexed) h1
element whose class
attribute is exactly “heading
”.
All arguments are optional, meaning the following calls are all valid:
$("div p", 0)
$("div p", title: "something")
$(0)
$(title: "something")
There is an alias for the dollar function named “find” if a method named “$” is not to your taste. |
4.1.1. CSS Selectors
You can use any CSS selector that the underlying WebDriver
implementation supports…
$('div.some-class p:first-child[title^="someth"]')
4.1.2. Using WebDriver’s By
class selectors
For all signatures of $()
function that accept a css selector there is an equivalent signature where an instance of WebDriver’s By
class can be used instead of a String
.
Using CSS selectors is the idiomatic way of using Geb and should be preferred to using By
selectors.
It is always possible to select the same elements using a css selector as when using a certain By
selector apart from certain XPath selectors which is why this convenience mechanism is provided.
Following are some examples of using By
selectors…
$(By.id("some-id"))
$(By.className("some-class"))
$(By.xpath('//p[@class="xpath"]'))
4.1.3. Dynamic Navigators
By default when an instance of a Navigator
is created a constant reference to the elements matching the selector at that point in time is stored.
In many situations this is the desired behaviour as it limits the number of WebDriver commands executed to find elements but in the days of modern javascript frameworks and single page applications it might not be.
This is especially the case when dealing with apps which completely rerender parts of the DOM upon model change instead of updating it.
Quite often the fact that DOM elements backing a Navigator
have been removed from the DOM and redrawn can be worked around by creating a new instance of that Navigator
by obtaining it from its content definition.
Unfortunately this workaround is not available when an action performed as part of a method defined in a Geb module class causes the module base element to be re-rendered.
This is because the reference to the base Navigator
of a module is fixed at module creation time which in turn fixes the reference to the elements matching the selector used in the definition of that Navigator
.
When the part of the DOM which contains elements of that Navigator
is recreated, these references become stale causing any methods called on them to throw StaleElementReferenceException
and their staleness cannot be rectified from within the code of the module method in question.
The solution to this problem is to declare the base Navigator
to be dynamic which means that the list of the DOM elements underpinning that Navigator
will be refreshed every time a method accessing the elements is called on it.
Any method which returns a Navigator
and takes a map of attributes as one of the parameters (most of these methods are described in Finding & filtering and Traversing) can be used to create a dynamic Navigator
by simply passing a truthy value as the dynamic
attribute…
$("div", dynamic: true)
You should bear in mind that dynamic |
Let’s consider a simple Vue.js application which renders a list of items which can be reordered using the following template…
<div id="app">
<ul>
<li v-for="(berry,index) in berries" :key="`${berry}-${index}`">
<button v-if="index != 0" v-on:click="swapWithNext(index - 1)">⇑</button>
<button v-if="index != berries.length - 1" v-on:click="swapWithNext(index)">⇓</button>
<span>{{ berry }}</span>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
…and the following javascript code…
var app = new Vue({
el: '#app',
data: {
berries: [
'strawberry',
'raspberry',
'blueberry',
'cranberry'
]
},
methods: {
swapWithNext: function(index) {
this.berries.splice(index, 2, this.berries[index + 1], this.berries[index])
}
}
});
The important thing to note is that the li
elements re re-rendered when they are reordered.
Let’s model each item in the list using the following module…
class ListItem extends Module {
static content = {
textElement { $("span") }
upButton { $("button", text: "⇑") }
}
void moveUpBy(int count) {
count.times { upButton.click() }
}
@Override
String text() {
textElement.text()
}
}
Given the following content definition…
static content = {
item { text -> $("li", text: endsWith(text)).module(ListItem) }
}
The code below will fail with StaleElementReferenceException
…
item("blueberry").moveUpBy(2)
If we change the base navigator of the list element module to be dynamic as in the following page class…
class PageWithListHandlingRerenders extends Page {
static content = {
items { $("li").moduleList(ListItem) }
item { text -> $("li", text: endsWith(text), dynamic: true).module(ListItem) }
}
}
Then the following will pass…
to PageWithListHandlingRerenders
item("blueberry").moveUpBy(2)
assert items*.text() == ["blueberry", "strawberry", "raspberry", "cranberry"]
While using dynamic navigators might seem like a way to completely avoid |
4.1.4. Indexes and ranges
When matching, a single positive integer or integer range can be given to restrict by index.
Consider the following html…
<p>a</p>
<p>b</p>
<p>c</p>
We can use indexes to match content like so…
assert $("p", 0).text() == "a"
assert $("p", 2).text() == "c"
assert $("p", 0..1)*.text() == ["a", "b"]
assert $("p", 1..2)*.text() == ["b", "c"]
See below for an explanation of the text()
method and the use of the spread operator.
4.1.5. Attribute and text matching
Matches can be made on attributes and node text values via Groovy’s named parameter syntax.
The value text
is treated specially as a match against the node’s text.
All other values are matched against their corresponding attribute values.
Consider the following html…
<p attr1="a" attr2="b">p1</p>
<p attr1="a" attr2="c">p2</p>
We can use attribute matchers like so…
assert $("p", attr1: "a").size() == 2
assert $("p", attr2: "c").size() == 1
Attribute values are `and`ed together…
assert $("p", attr1: "a", attr2: "b").size() == 1
We can use text matchers like so…
assert $("p", text: "p1").size() == 1
You can mix attribute and text matchers…
assert $("p", text: "p1", attr1: "a").size() == 1
Using patterns
To match the entire value of an attribute or the text you use a String
value. It is also possible to use a Pattern
to do regexp matching…
assert $("p", text: ~/p./).size() == 2
Geb also ships with a bunch of shortcut pattern methods…
assert $("p", text: startsWith("p")).size() == 2
assert $("p", text: endsWith("2")).size() == 1
The following is the complete listing:
Case Sensitive | Case Insensitive | Description |
---|---|---|
|
|
Matches values that start with the given value |
|
|
Matches values that contain the given value anywhere |
|
|
Matches values that end with the given value |
|
|
Matches values that contain the given value surrounded by either whitespace or the beginning or end of the value |
|
|
Matches values that DO NOT start with the given value |
|
|
Matches values that DO NOT contain the given value anywhere |
|
|
Matches values that DO NOT end with the given value |
|
|
Matches values that DO NOT contain the given value surrounded by either whitespace or the beginning or end of the value |
All of these methods themselves can take a String
or a Pattern
…
assert $("p", text: contains(~/\d/)).size() == 2
You might be wondering how this magic works, i.e. where these methods come from and where they can be used.
They are methods that are available on |
4.1.6. Navigators are iterable
The navigator objects implement the Java Iterable
interface, which allows you to do lots of Groovy stuff like use the max()
function…
Consider the following html…
<p>1</p>
<p>2</p>
You can use the max()
function on Navigator
instances…
assert $("p").max { it.text() }.text() == "2"
This also means that navigator objects work with the Groovy spread operator…
assert $("p")*.text().max() == "2"
When treating a navigator as Iterable
, the iterated over content is always the exact matched elements (as opposed to including children).
4.1.7. Listening to Navigator events
It is possible to register a listener that gets notified every time certain Navigator events occur.
The best reference for events that can be listened to is the documentation for NavigatorEventListener
interface.
If you wish to only listen to a subset of navigator events then NavigatorEventListenerSupport
might come in handy as it comes with default, empty implementations of all methods of NavigatorEventListener
.
One of the use cases for utilising a navigator event listener would be to enhance reporting by writing a report every time a navigator is clicked, its value is changed, etc.
The below example shows how to register a navigator event listener as part of the config script which simply prints navigator tags after navigators are clicked…
import geb.Browser
import geb.navigator.Navigator
import geb.navigator.event.NavigatorEventListenerSupport
navigatorEventListener = new NavigatorEventListenerSupport() {
void afterClick(Browser browser, Navigator navigator) {
println "${navigator*.tag()} was clicked"
}
}
4.1.8. equals()
and hashCode()
It’s possible to check Navigator
instances for equality.
The rules are simple - two empty navigators are always equal and two non empty navigators are only equal if they contain the exact same elements in the same order.
Consider the following HTML…
<p class="a"></p>
<p class="b"></p>
Here are some examples of equal Navigator instances…
assert $("div") == $(".foo") (1)
assert $(".a") == $(".a") (2)
assert $(".a") == $("p").not(".b") (3)
assert $("p") == $("p") (4)
assert $("p") == $(".a").add(".b") (5)
1 | Two empty navigators |
2 | Two single element navigators containing the same element |
3 | Two single element navigators containing the same element created using different methods |
4 | Two multi element navigators containing the same elements |
5 | Two multi element navigators containing the same elements created using different methods |
And some that are not equal…
assert $("div") != $("p") (1)
assert $(".a") != $(".b") (2)
assert $(".a").add(".b") != $(".b").add(".a") (3)
1 | Empty and not empty navigators |
2 | Single element navigators containing different elements |
3 | Multi element navigators containing the same elements but in a different order |
4.2. Finding & filtering
Navigator objects have find()
and $()
methods for finding descendants, and filter()
and not()
methods for reducing the matched content.
Consider the following HTML…
<div class="a">
<p class="b">geb</p>
</div>
<div class="b">
<input type="text"/>
</div>
We can select p.b
by…
$("div").find(".b")
$("div").$(".b")
We can select div.b
by…
$("div").filter(".b")
or…
$(".b").not("p")
We can select the div
containing the p
with…
$("div").has("p")
Or select the div
containing the input
with a type attribute of "text" like so…
$("div").has("input", type: "text")
We can select the div
that does not contain the p
with…
$("div").hasNot("p")
Or select the div
that does not contain the input
with a type attribute of "text" like so…
$("div").hasNot("input", type: "text")
Or select the two div
that do not contain input
with a type attribute of "submit" like so…
$("div").hasNot("input", type: "submit")
The find()
and $()
methods support the exact same argument types as the $()
function.
The filter()
, not()
, has()
and hasNot()
methods have the same signatures - they accept: a selector string, a predicates map or both.
These methods return a new navigator object that represents the new content.
4.3. Composition
It is also possible to compose navigator objects from other navigator objects, for situations where you can’t express a content set in one query.
To do this, simply call the $()
function and pass in the navigators to compose.
Consider the following markup…
<p class="a">1</p>
<p class="b">2</p>
<p class="c">3</p>
You can then create a new navigator object that represents both the a
and b
paragraphs the following way:
assert $($("p.a"), $("p.b"))*.text() == ["1", "2"]
An alternative way is to use the add()
method of Navigator
that takes either a String
or a Webdriver’s By
selector:
assert $("p.a").add("p.b").add(By.className("c"))*.text() == ["1", "2", "3"]
Finally, you can compose navigator objects from content. So given a page content definition:
static content = {
pElement { pClass -> $('p', class: pClass) }
}
You can compose content elements into a navigator in the following way:
assert $(pElement("a"), pElement("b"))*.text() == ["1", "2"]
4.4. Traversing
Navigators also have methods for selecting content around the matched content.
Consider the following HTML…
<div class="a">
<div class="b">
<p class="c"></p>
<p class="d"></p>
<p class="e"></p>
</div>
<div class="f"></div>
</div>
You can select content around p.d
by…
assert $("p.d").previous() == $("p.c")
assert $("p.e").prevAll() == $("p.c").add("p.d")
assert $("p.d").next() == $("p.e")
assert $("p.c").nextAll() == $("p.d").add("p.e")
assert $("p.d").parent() == $("div.b")
assert $("p.c").siblings() == $("p.d").add("p.e")
assert $("div.a").children() == $("div.b").add("div.f")
Consider the following HTML…
<div class="a">
<p class="a"></p>
<p class="b"></p>
<p class="c"></p>
</div>
The following code will select p.b
& p.c
…
assert $("p").next() == $("p.b").add("p.c")
The previous()
, prevAll()
, next()
, nextAll()
, parent()
, parents()
, closest()
, siblings()
and children()
methods can also take CSS selectors and attribute matchers.
Using the same html, the following examples will select p.c
…
assert $("p").next(".c") == $("p.c").add("p.c")
assert $("p").next(class: "c") == $("p.c").add("p.c")
assert $("p").next("p", class: "c") == $("p.c").add("p.c")
Likewise, consider the following HTML…
<div class="a">
<div class="b">
<p></p>
</div>
</div>
The following examples will select div.b
…
assert $("p").parent(".b") == $("div.b")
assert $("p").parent(class: "b") == $("div.b")
assert $("p").parent("div", class: "b") == $("div.b")
The closest()
method is a special case in that it will select the first ancestor of the current elements that matches a selector.
There is no no-argument version of the closest()
method.
For example, these will select div.a
…
assert $("p").closest(".a") == $("div.a")
assert $("p").closest(class: "a") == $("div.a")
assert $("p").closest("div", class: "a") == $("div.a")
These methods do not take indexes as they automatically select the first matching content.
To select multiple elements you can use prevAll()
, nextAll()
and parents()
all of which have no-argument versions and versions that filter by a selector.
The nextUntil()
, prevUntil()
and parentsUntil()
methods return all nodes along the relevant axis until the first one that matches a selector or attributes.
Consider the following markup:
<div class="a"></div>
<div class="b"></div>
<div class="c"></div>
<div class="d"></div>
The following examples will select div.b
and div.c
:
assert $(".a").nextUntil(".d") == $("div.b").add("div.c")
assert $(".a").nextUntil(class: "d") == $("div.b").add("div.c")
assert $(".a").nextUntil("div", class: "d") == $("div.b").add("div.c")
4.5. Clicking
Navigator objects implement the click()
method, which will instruct the browser to click the sole element the navigator has matched.
If that method is called on a multi element Navigator
then a SingleElementNavigatorOnlyMethodException
is thrown.
There are also click(Class)
, click(Page)
and click(List)
methods that are analogous to the browser object’s
page(Class<? extends Page>)
, page(Page)
, and page(Class<? extends Page>[])
, page(Page[])
methods respectively.
This allow page changes to be specified at the same time as click actions.
For example…
$("a.login").click(LoginPage)
Would click the a.login
element, then effectively call browser.page(LoginPage)
and verify that the browser is at the expected page.
All of the page classes passed in when using the list variant have to have an “at” checker defined, otherwise an UndefinedAtCheckerException
will be thrown.
4.6. Determining visibility
Navigator
objects have a displayed
property that indicates whether the element is visible to the user or not.
The displayed
property of a navigator object that doesn’t match anything is always false
.
4.7. Focus
Geb comes with an easy way for finding the currently focused element in the form of focused()
method which returns a Navigator
.
It is also possible to verify if a given Navigator
object holds the currently focused element using its focused
property.
Navigator
objects that don’t match any elements will return false
as the value of focused
property and ones that match multiple elements will throw a SingleElementNavigatorOnlyMethodException
.
Given the following html…
<input type="text" name="description"></input>
focused()
method and Navigator’s focused
property can be used in the following way…
$(name: "description").click()
assert focused().attr("name") == "description"
assert $(name: "description").focused
4.8. Size and location
You can obtain the size and location of content on the page.
All units are in pixels.
The size is available via the height
and width
properties, while the location is available as the x
and y
properties which represent the distance from the top left of the page
(or parent frame) to the top left point of the content.
All of these properties operate on the sole matched element only and a SingleElementNavigatorOnlyMethodException
is thrown if they are accessed on a multi element Navigator
.
Consider the following html…
<div style="height: 20px; width: 40px; position: absolute; left: 20px; top: 10px"></div>
<div style="height: 40px; width: 100px; position: absolute; left: 30px; top: 150px"></div>
The following conditions are satisfied for it…
assert $("div", 0).height == 20
assert $("div", 0).width == 40
assert $("div", 0).x == 20
assert $("div", 0).y == 10
To obtain any of the properties for all matched elements, you can use the Groovy spread operator.
assert $("div")*.height == [20, 40]
assert $("div")*.width == [40, 100]
assert $("div")*.x == [20, 30]
assert $("div")*.y == [10, 150]
4.9. Accessing tag name, attributes, text and classes
The tag()
, text()
and classes()
methods as well as accessing attributes via the @
notation or attr()
method return the requested content on the sole matched element.
If these methods are called on a multi element Navigator
then a SingleElementNavigatorOnlyMethodException
is thrown.
The classes()
method returns a java.util.List
of class names sorted alphabetically.
Consider the following HTML…
<p title="a" class="a para">a</p>
<p title="b" class="b para">b</p>
<p title="c" class="c para">c</p>
The following assertions are valid…
assert $(".a").text() == "a"
assert $(".a").tag() == "p"
assert $(".a").@title == "a"
assert $(".a").classes() == ["a", "para"]
To obtain information about all matched content, you use the Groovy spread operator…
assert $("p")*.text() == ["a", "b", "c"]
assert $("p")*.tag() == ["p", "p", "p"]
assert $("p")*.@title == ["a", "b", "c"]
assert $("p")*.classes() == [["a", "para"], ["b", "para"], ["c", "para"]]
4.10. CSS properties
Css properties of a single element navigator can be accessed using the css()
method.
If that method is called on a multi element Navigator
then a SingleElementNavigatorOnlyMethodException
is thrown.
Consider the following HTML…
<div style="float: left">text</div>
You can obtain the value of float
css property in the following way…
assert $("div").css("float") == "left"
There are some limitations when it comes to retrieving css properties of |
4.11. Sending keystrokes
Given the following html…
<input type="text"/>
You can send keystrokes to the input (and any other content) via the leftShift operator, which is a shortcut for the sendKeys()
method of WebDriver.
$("input") << "foo"
assert $("input").value() == "foo"
How content responds to the keystrokes depends on what the content is.
Non characters (e.g. delete key, key chords, etc.)
It is possible to send non-textual characters to content by using the WebDriver Keys
enumeration…
import org.openqa.selenium.Keys
$("input") << Keys.chord(Keys.CONTROL, "c")
Here we are sending a “control-c” to an input.
See the documentation for Keys
enumeration for more information on the possible keys.
4.12. Accessing input values
The value of input
, select
and textarea
elements can be retrieved and set with the value
method.
Calling value()
with no arguments will return the String value of the sole element in the Navigator.
If that method is called on a multi element Navigator
then a SingleElementNavigatorOnlyMethodException
is thrown.
Calling value(value)
will set the current value of all elements in the Navigator.
The argument can be of any type and will be coerced to a String
if necessary.
The exceptions are that when setting a checkbox
value the method expects a boolean
(or an existing checkbox value or label) and when setting a multiple select
the method expects an array or
Collection
of values.
4.13. Form control shortcuts
Interacting with form controls (input
, select
etc.) is such a common task in web functional testing that Geb provides convenient shortcuts for common functions.
Geb supports the following shortcuts for dealing with form controls.
Consider the following HTML…
<form>
<input type="text" name="geb" value="testing" />
</form>
The value can be read and written via property notation…
assert $("form").geb == "testing"
$("form").geb = "goodness"
assert $("form").geb == "goodness"
These are literally shortcuts for…
assert $("form").find("input", name: "geb").value() == "testing"
$("form").find("input", name: "geb").value("goodness")
assert $("form").find("input", name: "geb").value() == "goodness"
There is also a shortcut for obtaining a navigator based on a control name…
assert $("form").geb() == $("form").find("input", name: "geb")
In the above and below examples with form controls we are using code like |
If your content definition (either a page or a module) describes content which is an input
, select
or textarea
, you can access and set its value the same way as described above for forms.
Given a page and module definitions for the above mentioned HTML:
class ShortcutModule extends Module {
static content = {
geb { $('form').geb() }
}
}
class ShortcutPage extends Page {
static content = {
geb { $('form').geb() }
shortcutModule { module ShortcutModule }
}
}
The following will pass:
page ShortcutPage
assert geb == "testing"
geb = "goodness"
assert geb == "goodness"
As well as:
page ShortcutPage
assert shortcutModule.geb == "testing"
shortcutModule.geb = "goodness"
assert shortcutModule.geb == "goodness"
4.14. Setting form control values
The following examples describe usage of form controls only using code like |
Trying to set a value on an element which is not one of |
4.14.1. Select
Select values are set by assigning the value or text of the required option. Assigned values are automatically coerced to String. For example…
<form>
<select name="artist">
<option value="1">Ima Robot</option>
<option value="2">Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros</option>
<option value="3">Alexander</option>
</select>
</form>
We can select options with…
$("form").artist = "1" (1)
$("form").artist = 2 (2)
$("form").artist = "Alexander" (3)
1 | First option selected by its value attribute. |
2 | Second option selected by its value attribute with argument coercion. |
3 | Third option selected by its text. |
If you attempt to set a select to a value that does not match the value or text of any options, an IllegalArgumentException
will be thrown.
4.14.2. Multiple select
If the select has the multiple
attribute it is set with a array or Collection
of values.
Any options not in the values are un-selected.
For example…
<form>
<select name="genres" multiple>
<option value="1">Alt folk</option>
<option value="2">Chiptunes</option>
<option value="3">Electroclash</option>
<option value="4">G-Funk</option>
<option value="5">Hair metal</option>
</select>
</form>
We can select options with…
$("form").genres = ["2", "3"] (1)
$("form").genres = [1, 4, 5] (2)
$("form").genres = ["Alt folk", "Hair metal"] (3)
$("form").genres = [] (4)
1 | Second and third options selected by their value attributes. |
2 | First, fourth and fifth options selected by their value attributes with argument coercion. |
3 | First and last options selected by their text. |
4 | All options un-selected. |
If the collection being assigned contains a value that does not match the value or text of any options, an IllegalArgumentException
will be thrown.
4.14.3. Checkbox
Checkboxes are generally checked/unchecked by setting their value to true
or false
.
Consider the following html…
<form>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="dog" />
</form>
You can set a single checkbox in the following manner…
$("form").pet = true
Calling value()
on a checked checkbox will return the value of its value
attribute, i.e:
<form>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="dog" checked/>
</form>
assert $("input", name: "pet").value() == "dog"
assert $("form").pet == "dog"
Calling value()
on an unchecked checkbox will return null
, i.e:
<form>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="dog"/>
</form>
assert $("input", name: 'pet').value() == null
assert $("form").pet == null
In general you should use {`}[Groovy Truth] when checking if a checkbox is checked:
<form>
<input type="checkbox" name="checkedByDefault" value="checkedByDefaulValue" checked/>
<input type="checkbox" name="uncheckedByDefault" value="uncheckedByDefaulValue"/>
</form>
assert $("form").checkedByDefault
assert !$("form").uncheckedByDefault
4.14.4. Multiple checkboxes
You can also check a checkbox by explicitly setting its value
or using its label. This is useful when you have a number of checkboxes with the same name, i.e.:
<form>
<label for="dog-checkbox">Canis familiaris</label>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="dog" id="dog-checkbox"/>
<label for="cat-checkbox">Felis catus</label>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="cat" id="cat-checkbox" />
<label for="lizard-checkbox">Lacerta</label>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="lizard" id="lizard-checkbox" />
</form>
You can select dog as your pet type as follows:
$("form").pet = "dog"
$("form").pet = "Canis familiaris"
If you wish to select multiple checkboxes instead of only one then you can use a collection as the value:
$("form").pet = ["dog", "lizard"]
$("form").pet = ["Canis familiaris", "Lacerta"]
When checking if a checkbox is checked and there are multiple checkboxes with the same name make sure that you use a navigator that holds only one of them before calling value()
on it:
<form>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="dog" checked/>
<input type="checkbox" name="pet" value="cat" />
</form>
assert $("input", name: "pet", value: "dog").value()
assert !$("input", name: "pet", value: "cat").value()
4.14.5. Radio
Radio values are set by assigning the value of the radio button that is to be selected or the label text associated with a radio button.
For example, with the following radio buttons…
<form>
<label for="site-current">Search this site</label>
<input type="radio" id="site-current" name="site" value="current">
<label>Search Google
<input type="radio" name="site" value="google">
</label>
</form>
We can select the radios by value…
$("form").site = "current"
assert $("form").site == "current"
$("form").site = "google"
assert $("form").site == "google"
Or by label text…
$("form").site = "Search this site"
assert $("form").site == "current"
$("form").site = "Search Google"
assert $("form").site == "google"
4.14.6. Text inputs and textareas
In the case of a text input
or a textarea
, the assigned value becomes the element’s value attribute.
<form>
<input type="text" name="language"/>
<input type="text" name="description"/>
</form>
$("form").language = "gro"
$("form").description = "Optionally statically typed dynamic lang"
assert $("form").language == "gro"
assert $("form").description == "Optionally statically typed dynamic lang"
It is also possible to append text by using the send keys shorthand…
$("form").language() << "ovy"
$("form").description() << "uage"
assert $("form").language == "groovy"
assert $("form").description == "Optionally statically typed dynamic language"
Which an also be used for non-character keys…
import org.openqa.selenium.Keys
$("form").language() << Keys.BACK_SPACE
assert $("form").language == "groov"
WebDriver has some issues with textareas and surrounding whitespace. Namely, some drivers implicitly trim whitespace from the beginning and end of the value. You can track this issue here. |
4.14.7. File upload
It’s currently not possible with WebDriver to simulate the process of a user clicking on a file upload control and choosing a file to upload via the normal file chooser. However, you can directly set the value of the upload control to the absolute path of a file on the system where the driver is running and on form submission that file will be uploaded. So if your html looks like…
<input type="file" name="csvFile"/>
And the uploadedFile
variable holds a File
instance pointing at the file you want to upload then this is how you can set the value of the upload control…
$("form").csvFile = uploadedFile.absolutePath
4.15. Complex interactions
WebDriver supports interactions that are more complex than simply clicking or typing into items, such as dragging.
You can use this API directly when using Geb or use the more Geb friendly interact
DSL.
4.15.1. Using the WebDriver Actions
API directly
A Geb navigator object is built on top of a collection of WebDriver WebElement objects.
It is possible to access the contained WebElement
instances via the following methods on navigator objects:
WebElement singleElement()
WebElement firstElement()
WebElement lastElement()
Collection<WebElement> allElements()
By using the methods of the WebDriver Actions
class with WebElement
instances, complex user gestures can be emulated.
First you will need to create an Actions
instance after obtaining the WebDriver driver:
def actions = new Actions(driver)
Next, use methods of Actions
to compose a series of UI actions, then call build()
to create a concrete Action
:
WebElement someItem = $("li.clicky").firstElement()
def shiftClick = actions.keyDown(Keys.SHIFT).click(someItem).keyUp(Keys.SHIFT).build()
Finally, call perform()
to actually trigger the desired mouse or keyboard behavior:
shiftClick.perform()
4.15.2. Using interact()
To avoid having to manage building and performing an Action
via the lifecycle of an Actions
instance as well as having to obtain WebElement
instances from Navigator
when emulating user
gestures, Geb adds the interact()
method.
When using that method, an Actions
instance is implicitly created, built into an Action
, and performed.
The delegate of the closure passed to interact()
is an instance of InteractDelegate
which declares the same methods as Actions
but takes Navigator
as arguments for methods of Actions
which take WebElement
.
This interact()
call performs the same work as the calls in the Using the WebDriver Actions
API directly section:
interact {
keyDown Keys.SHIFT
click $("li.clicky")
keyUp Keys.SHIFT
}
While usually not needed, it’s possible to directly access the Actions
instance backing the InteractDelegate
:
interact {
keyDown Keys.SHIFT
actions.click($("li.clicky").singleElement())
keyUp Keys.SHIFT
}
For the full list of available methods that can be used for emulating user gestures see the documentation for the InteractDelegate
class.
4.15.3. Interact examples
Calls to interact()
can be used to perform behaviors that are more complicated than clicking buttons and anchors or typing in input fields.
Drag and drop
clickAndHold()
, moveByOffset()
, and then release()
will drag and drop an element on the page.
interact {
clickAndHold($('#draggable'))
moveByOffset(150, 200)
release()
}
Drag-and-dropping can also be accomplished using the dragAndDropBy()
convenience method from the Actions API:
interact {
dragAndDropBy($("#draggable"), 150, 200)
}
In this particular example, the element will be clicked then dragged 150 pixels to the right and 200 pixels downward before being released.
Moving to arbitrary locations with the mouse is currently not supported by the HTMLUnit driver, but moving directly to elements is. |
Control-clicking
Control-clicking several elements, such as items in a list, is performed the same way as shift-clicking.
import org.openqa.selenium.Keys
interact {
keyDown(Keys.CONTROL)
click($("ul.multiselect li", text: "Order 1"))
click($("ul.multiselect li", text: "Order 2"))
click($("ul.multiselect li", text: "Order 3"))
keyUp(Keys.CONTROL)
}
5. Pages
Before reading this chapter, please make sure you have read the section on the |
5.1. The Page Object pattern
Browser.drive {
go "search"
$("input[name='q']").value "Chuck Norris"
$("input[value='Search']").click()
assert $("li", 0).text().contains("Chuck")
}
This is valid Geb code, and it works well for a one off script but there are two big issues with this approach. Imagine that you have many tests that involve searching and checking results. The implementation of how to search and how to find the results is going to have to be duplicated in every test, maybe many times per test. As soon as something as trivial as the name of the search field changes you have to update a lot of code. The Page Object Pattern allows us to apply the same principles of modularity, reuse and encapsulation that we use in other aspects of programming to avoid such issues in browser automation code.
Here is the same script, utilising page objects…
import geb.Page
class SearchPage extends Page {
static url = "search"
static at = { title == "Search engine" }
static content = {
searchField { $("input[name=q]") }
searchButton(to: ResultsPage) { $("input[value='Search']") }
}
void search(String searchTerm) {
searchField.value searchTerm
searchButton.click()
}
}
class ResultsPage extends Page {
static at = { title == "Results" }
static content = {
results { $("li") }
result { index -> results[index] }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to SearchPage
search "Chuck Norris"
assert result(0).text().contains("Chuck")
}
You have now encapsulated, in a reusable fashion, information about each page and how to interact with it. As anyone who has tried to knows, maintaining a large suite of functional web tests for a changing application can become an expensive and frustrating process. Geb’s support for the Page Object pattern addresses this problem.
5.2. The Page
superclass
All page objects must inherit from Page
.
5.3. The content DSL
Geb features a DSL for defining page content in a templated fashion, which allows very concise yet flexible page definitions.
Pages define a static
closure property called content
that describes the page content.
Consider the following HTML…
<div id="a">a</div>
We could define this content as so…
class PageWithDiv extends Page {
static content = {
theDiv { $('div', id: 'a') }
}
}
The structure to the content DSL is…
«name» { «definition» }
Where «definition»
is Groovy code that is evaluated against the instance of the page.
Here is how it could be used…
Browser.drive {
to PageWithDiv
assert theDiv.text() == "a"
}
So how is this working?
First, remember that the Browser
instance delegates any method calls or property accesses that it doesn’t know about to the current page instance.
So the above code is the same as…
Browser.drive {
to PageWithDiv
assert page.theDiv.text() == "a"
}
Secondly, defined content becomes available as properties and methods on instance of the page…
Browser.drive {
to PageWithDiv
// Following two lines are equivalent
assert theDiv.text() == "a"
assert theDiv().text() == "a"
}
The Content DSL actually defines content templates. This is best illustrated by example…
class TemplatedPageWithDiv extends Page {
static content = {
theDiv { id -> $('div', id: id) }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to TemplatedPageWithDiv
assert theDiv("a").text() == "a"
}
There are no restrictions on what arguments can be passed to content templates.
A content template can return anything.
Typically they will return a Navigator
object through the use of the $()
function, but it can be anything.
class PageWithStringContent extends Page {
static content = {
theDivText { $('div#a').text() }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to PageWithStringContent
assert theDivText == "a"
}
It’s important to realise that «definition»
code is evaluated against the page instance.
This allows code like the following…
class PageWithContentReuse extends Page {
static content = {
theDiv { $("div#a") }
theDivText { theDiv.text() }
}
}
And this is not restricted to other content…
class PageWithContentUsingAField extends Page {
static content = {
theDiv { $('div', id: divId) }
}
def divId = "a"
}
Or…
class PageWithContentUsingAMethod extends Page {
static content = {
theDiv { $('div', id: divId()) }
}
def divId() {
"a"
}
}
5.3.1. Template options
Template definitions can take different options. The syntax is…
«name»(«options map») { «definition» }
For example…
theDiv(cache: false, required: false) { $("div", id: "a") }
The following are the available options.
required
Default value: true
The required
option controls whether or not the content returned by the definition has to exist or not.
This is only relevant when the definition returns a Navigator
object (via the $()
function) or null
, it is ignored if the definition returns anything else.
If the required
option is set to true
and the returned content does not exist, a RequiredPageContentNotPresent
exception will be thrown.
Given a completely empty html document the following will pass…
class PageWithTemplatesUsingRequiredOption extends Page {
static content = {
requiredDiv { $("div", id: "b") }
notRequiredDiv(required: false) { $("div", id: "b") }
}
}
to PageWithTemplatesUsingRequiredOption
assert !notRequiredDiv
def thrown = false
try {
page.requiredDiv
} catch (RequiredPageContentNotPresent e) {
thrown = true
}
assert thrown
min
Default value: 1
The min
option allows to specify the minimum number of elements that the Navigator
object returned by the definition should contain.
If the number of elements returned is lower than the specified value then ContentCountOutOfBoundsException
will be thrown.
The value should be a non-negative integer.
This option cannot be used together with the times
option.
Given the following HTML…
<html>
<body>
<p>first paragraph</p>
<p>second paragraph</p>
<body>
</html>
Accessing the following content definition…
atLeastThreeElementNavigator(min: 3) { $('p') }
Will result in a ContentCountOutOfBoundsException
and the following exception message:
"Page content 'pages.PageWithTemplateUsingMinOption -> atLeastThreeElementNavigator: geb.navigator.DefaultNavigator' should return a navigator with at least 3 elements but has returned a navigator with 2 elements"
max
Default value: Integer.MAX_INT
The max
option allows to specify the maximum number of elements that the Navigator
object returned by the definition should contain.
If the number of elements returned is higher than the specified value then ContentCountOutOfBoundsException
will be thrown.
The value should be a non-negative integer.
This option cannot be used together with the times
option.
Given the following HTML…
<html>
<body>
<p>first paragraph</p>
<p>second paragraph</p>
<p>third paragraph</p>
<p>fourth paragraph</p>
<body>
</html>
Accessing the following content definition…
atMostThreeElementNavigator(max: 3) { $('p') }
Will result in a ContentCountOutOfBoundsException
and the following exception message:
"Page content 'pages.PageWithTemplateUsingMaxOption -> atMostThreeElementNavigator: geb.navigator.DefaultNavigator' should return a navigator with at most 3 elements but has returned a navigator with 4 elements"
times
Default value: null
A helper option allowing to specify both min
option and max
option in a single option.
If the number of elements returned is out of bounds specified then ContentCountOutOfBoundsException
will be thrown.
The value should be a non-negative integer (when the minimum and maximum number of elements are desired to be equal) or an integer range.
This option cannot be used together with min
and max
options.
Given the following HTML…
<html>
<body>
<p>first paragraph</p>
<p>second paragraph</p>
<p>third paragraph</p>
<p>fourth paragraph</p>
<body>
</html>
Accessing the following content definition…
twoToThreeElementNavigator(times: 2..3) { $('p') }
Will result in a ContentCountOutOfBoundsException
and the following exception message:
"Page content 'pages.PageWithTemplateUsingTimesOption -> twoToThreeElementNavigator: geb.navigator.DefaultNavigator' should return a navigator with at most 3 elements but has returned a navigator with 4 elements"
cache
Default value: false
The cache
option controls whether or not the definition is evaluated each time the content is requested (the content is cached for each unique set of parameters).
class PageWithTemplateUsingCacheOption extends Page {
static content = {
notCachedValue { value }
cachedValue(cache: true) { value }
}
def value = 1
}
to PageWithTemplateUsingCacheOption
assert notCachedValue == 1
assert cachedValue == 1
value = 2
assert notCachedValue == 2
assert cachedValue == 1
Caching is a performance optimisation and is disabled by default. You may want to enable if you notice that the a particular content definition is taking a long time to resolve.
to
Default value: null
The to
option allows the definition of which page the browser will be sent to if the content is clicked.
class PageWithTemplateUsingToOption extends Page {
static content = {
helpLink(to: HelpPage) { $("a", text: "Help") }
}
}
class HelpPage extends Page { }
to PageWithTemplateUsingToOption
helpLink.click()
assert page instanceof HelpPage
The to
value will be implicitly used as an argument to the content’s click()
method, effectively setting the new page type and verifying its at checker.
See the section on clicking content for how this changes the browser’s page object.
This option also supports all types that can be passed to any of the Browser.page()
method variants:
-
a page instance
-
a list of page classes
-
a list of page instances
When using lists variants (here shown with page classes)…
static content = {
loginButton(to: [LoginSuccessfulPage, LoginFailedPage]) { $("input.loginButton") }
}
Then, on click, the browser’s page is set to the first page in the list whose at checker passes.
This is equivalent to the page(Class<? extends Page>[])
and
page(Page[])
browser methods which are explained in the section on changing pages.
All of the page classes and classes of the page instances passed in when using any variant of the to
option have to have an “at” checker defined otherwise an UndefinedAtCheckerException
will be
thrown.
wait
Default value: false
Allowed values:
-
true
- wait for the content using the default wait configuration -
a string - wait for the content using the wait preset with this name from the configuration
-
a number - wait for the content for this many seconds, using the default retry interval from the configuration
-
a 2 element list of numbers - wait for the content using element 0 as the timeout seconds value, and element 1 as the retry interval seconds value
Any other value will be interpreted as false
.
The wait
option allows Geb to wait an amount of time for content to appear on the page, instead of throwing a RequiredPageContentNotPresent
exception if the content is not present when
requested.
class DynamicPageWithWaiting extends Page {
static content = {
dynamicallyAdded(wait: true) { $("p.dynamic") }
}
}
to DynamicPageWithWaiting
assert dynamicallyAdded.text() == "I'm here now"
This is equivalent to:
class DynamicPageWithoutWaiting extends Page {
static content = {
dynamicallyAdded { $("p.dynamic") }
}
}
to DynamicPageWithoutWaiting
assert waitFor { dynamicallyAdded }.text() == "I'm here now"
See the section on waiting for the semantics of the waitFor()
method, that is used here internally.
Like waitFor()
a WaitTimeoutException
will be thrown if the wait timeout expires.
It is also possible to use wait
when defining non-element content, such as a string or number.
Geb will wait until the content definition returns a value that conforms to the Groovy Truth.
class DynamicPageWithNonNavigatorWaitingContent extends Page {
static content = {
status { $("p.status") }
success(wait: true) { status.text().contains("Success") }
}
}
to DynamicPageWithNonNavigatorWaitingContent
assert success
In this case, we are inherently waiting for the status
content to be on the page and for it to contain the string “Success”.
If the status
element is not present when we request success
, the RequiredPageContentNotPresent
exception that would be thrown is swallowed and Geb will try again after the
retry interval has expired.
You can modify the behaviour of content with wait
option set to true if you use it together with required
option set to false. Given a content definition:
static content = {
dynamicallyAdded(wait: true, required: false) { $("p.dynamic") }
}
Then if wait timeout expires when retrieving dynamicallyAdded
, there will be no WaitTimeoutException
thrown, and the last closure evaluation value will be returned.
If there is an exception thrown during closure evaluation, it will be wrapped in an UnknownWaitForEvaluationResult
instance and returned.
Waiting content blocks are subject to “implicit assertions”. See the section on implicit assertions for more information.
waitCondition
Default value: null
The waitCondition
option allows to specify a closure with a condition which must be fulfilled for the value returned from a template to be considered available when waiting for content.
The closure passed in as waitCondition
option will be called in a waitFor()
loop with the value returned from content definition passed to it as the only argument.
If implicit assertions are enabled which is the default then each statement in the closure is implicitly asserted.
The closure should return a truthy value if the condition is to be met.
Consider the following example:
static content = {
dynamicallyShown(waitCondition: { it.displayed }) { $("p.dynamic") }
}
Accessing content named…
dynamicallyShown
…will essentially cause Geb to wait until the content is not only in the DOM but also displayed.
If the condition is not fulfilled before waiting timeout elapses then WaitTimeoutException
will be thrown.
The amount of waiting used when waitCondition
option is provided can be controlled using the wait
option but if it’s not specified then it defaults to true
which means that default waiting is applied.
toWait
Default value: false
Allowed values are the same as for the wait
option.
Can be used together with the to
option to specify that the page changing action performed when the content is clicked is asynchronous.
This essentially means that verification of page transition (“at checking”) should be wrapped in a waitFor()
call.
class PageWithTemplateUsingToWaitOption extends Page {
static content = {
asyncPageLoadButton(to: AsyncPage, toWait: true) { $("button#load-content") } (1)
}
}
class AsyncPage extends Page {
static at = { $("#async-content") }
}
1 | Page change is asynchronous, e.g. an ajax call is involved. |
to PageWithTemplateUsingToWaitOption
asyncPageLoadButton.click()
assert page instanceof AsyncPage
See the section on waiting for the semantics of the waitFor()
method, that is used here internally.
Like waitFor()
a WaitTimeoutException
will be thrown if the wait timeout expires.
page
Default value: null
The page
option allows the definition of a page the browser will be set to if the content describes a frame and is used in a withFrame()
call.
Given the following HTML…
<html>
<body>
<iframe id="frame-id" src="frame.html"></iframe>
<body>
</html>
…and the contents of frame.html…
<html>
<body>
<span>frame text</span>
</body>
</html>
…the following will pass…
class PageWithFrame extends Page {
static content = {
myFrame(page: FrameDescribingPage) { $('#frame-id') }
}
}
class FrameDescribingPage extends Page {
static content = {
frameContentsText { $('span').text() }
}
}
to PageWithFrame
withFrame(myFrame) {
assert frameContentsText == 'frame text'
}
5.3.2. Aliasing
If you wish to have the same content definitions available under different names you can create a content definition that specifies aliases
parameter:
class AliasingPage extends Page {
static content = {
someDiv { $("div#aliased") }
aliasedDiv(aliases: "someDiv")
}
}
to AliasingPage
assert someDiv.@id == aliasedDiv.@id
Remember that the aliased content has to be defined before the aliasing content, otherwise you will get a InvalidPageContent
exception.
5.3.3. Accessing content names
Should you need to access names of the content defined using the DSL at runtime you can use the contentName
property of a page instance:
class ContentNamesPage extends Page {
static content = {
footer { $("#footer") }
paragraphText { $("p").text() }
}
}
to ContentNamesPage
assert contentNames == ['footer', 'paragraphText'] as Set
5.4. “At” verification
Each page can define a way to check whether the underlying browser is at the page that the page class actually represents.
This is done via a static
at
closure…
class PageWithAtChecker extends Page {
static at = { $("h1").text() == "Example" }
}
This closure can either return a false
value or throw an AssertionError
(via the assert
method).
The verifyAt()
method call will either:
-
return
true
if the “at” checker passes -
if implicit assertions are enabled and the “at” checker fails it will throw an
AssertionError
-
return
false
if implicit assertions are not enabled and the “at” checker fails
“At checkers” should be kept simple - they should only verify that the expected page is rendered and not deal with any page specific logic. They should only allow to check that the browser is, for example, at the order summary page and not at the product details or, even worse, the not found page.
They should not, on the other hand, verify anything related to the logic associated with the page checked, like for example the structure of it or some predicate that should always be fulfiled.
Such checks are better suited for a test than an “at checker”.
That’s because “at checkers” are evaluated multiple times, quite often implicitly, like when using A good rule of thumb is to keep “at checkers” of your pages fairly similar - they should all access pretty much the same information, like page title or text of the heading and only differ in the values they expect. |
Considering the example above you could use it like this…
class PageLeadingToPageWithAtChecker extends Page {
static content = {
link { $("a#to-page-with-at-checker") }
}
}
to PageLeadingToPageWithAtChecker
link.click()
page PageWithAtChecker
verifyAt()
The verifyAt()
method is used by the Browser.at()
method that takes a page class or instance.
It behaves the same as verifyAt()
if the “at” checker fails and returns a page instance if the checker succeeds (which is useful if you wish to write strongly typed code with Geb)…
to PageLeadingToPageWithAtChecker
link.click()
at PageWithAtChecker
There is no need to perform “at” verification after navigating to a page using |
At checkers are subject to “implicit assertions”. See the section on implicit assertions for more information.
If you don’t wish to get an exception when “at” checking fails there are methods that return false
in that case: Page#verifyAtSafely()
and
Browser#isAt(Class<? extends Page>)
.
As mentioned previously, when a content template defines a to
option of more than one page the page’s verifyAt()
method is used to determine which one of the pages to use.
In this situation, any AssertionError
thrown by “at” checkers are suppressed.
The “at” checker is evaluated against the page instance, and can access defined content or any other variables or methods…
class PageWithAtCheckerUsingContent extends Page {
static at = { heading == "Example" }
static content = {
heading { $("h1").text() }
}
}
If a page does not have an “at” checker, the verifyAt()
and at()
methods will throw an UndefinedAtCheckerException
.
The same will happen if any of the pages in the list used as to
content template option doesn’t define an “at” checker.
It can sometimes prove useful to wrap “at” verification in waitFor()
calls by default - some drivers are known to return control after URL change before the page is fully loaded in some
circumstances or before one might consider it to be loaded. This behaviour can be required using atCheckWaiting
configuration entry.
Unexpected pages
A list of unexpected pages can be provided via unexpectedPages
configuration entry.
Note that this feature does not operate on HTTP response codes as these are not exposed by WebDriver thus Geb does not have access to them. To use this feature your application has to render custom error pages that can be modeled as page classes and detected by an “at” checker. |
If configured, the classes from the list specified as unexpectedPages
configuration entry will be checked for first when “at” checking is performed for any page, and an UnexpectedPageException
with an appropriate message will be raised if any of them is encountered.
Given that your application renders a custom error page when a page is not found with a text like "Sorry but we could not find that page", you can model that page with the following class:
class PageNotFoundPage extends Page {
static at = { $("#error-message").text() == "Sorry but we could not find that page" }
}
Then register that page in configuration:
unexpectedPages = [PageNotFoundPage]
When checking if the browser is at a page while the “at” checker for PageNotFoundPage
is fulfilled, an UnexpectedPageException
will be raised.
try {
at ExpectedPage
assert false //should not get here
} catch (UnexpectedPageException e) {
assert e.message.startsWith("An unexpected page ${PageNotFoundPage.name} was encountered")
}
Unexpected pages will be checked for whenever “at” checking is performed, even implicitly like when using to
content template option or passing one or many page classes to Navigator.click()
method.
It is possible to explicitly check if the browser is at an unexpected page.
Following will pass without throwing an UnexpectedPageException
if “at” checking for PageNotFoundPage
succeeds:
at PageNotFoundPage
It is also possible to enrich the message of UnexpectedPageException
thrown when an unexpected page is encountered.
This can be achieved by implementing geb.UnexpectedPage
for the unexpected page:
class PageNotFoundPageWithCustomMessage extends Page implements UnexpectedPage {
static at = { $("#error-message").text() == "Sorry but we could not find that page" }
@Override
String getUnexpectedPageMessage() {
"Additional UnexpectedPageException message text"
}
}
try {
at ExpectedPage
assert false //should not get here
} catch (UnexpectedPageException e) {
assert e.message.contains("Additional UnexpectedPageException message text")
}
The global |
5.5. Page URLs
Pages can define URLs via the static
url
property.
class PageWithUrl extends Page {
static url = "example"
}
The url is used when using the browser to()
method.
to PageWithUrl
assert currentUrl.endsWith("example")
See the section on the base url for notes about URLs and slashes.
5.5.1. URL fragments
Pages can also define URL fragment identifiers (the part after a #
character at the end of an url) via the static
fragment
property.
The value assigned can be either a String
which will be used as is or a Map
which will be translated into an application/x-www-form-urlencoded
String
.
The latter is particularly useful when dealing with single page applications that store state in the fragment identifier by form encoding it.
There is no need to escape any of the strings used for url fragments as all the necessary escaping is performed by Geb. |
Consider the following page which defines an url fragment in such single page application scenario:
class PageWithFragment extends Page {
static fragment = [firstKey: "firstValue", secondKey: "secondValue"]
}
The fragment is then used when using the browser to()
method.
to PageWithFragment
assert currentUrl.endsWith("#firstKey=firstValue&secondKey=secondValue")
You can also use fragments which are dynamic - you can learn how in URL fragments subsection of Advanced page navigation chapter.
5.5.2. Page level atCheckWaiting
configuration
At checkers for a specific page can be configured to be implicitly wrapped with waitFor()
calls.
This can be set with the static
atCheckWaiting
property.
class PageWithAtCheckWaiting extends Page {
static atCheckWaiting = true
}
The possible values for the atCheckWaiting
option are the same as for the wait
content template option.
The atCheckWaiting
value configured at page level takes priority over the global value specified in the configuration.
5.6. Advanced page navigation
Page classes can customise how they generate URLs when used in conjunction with the browser to()
method.
Consider the following example…
class PageObjectsPage extends Page {
static url = "pages"
}
Browser.drive(baseUrl: "https://gebish.org/") {
to PageObjectsPage
assert currentUrl == "https://gebish.org/pages"
}
The to()
method can also take arguments…
class ManualsPage extends Page {
static url = "manual"
}
Browser.drive(baseUrl: "https://gebish.org/") {
to ManualsPage, "0.9.3", "index.html"
assert currentUrl == "https://gebish.org/manual/0.9.3/index.html"
}
Any arguments passed to the to()
method after the page class are converted to a URL path by calling toString()
on each argument and joining them with “/
”.
However, this is extensible.
You can specify how a set of arguments is converted to a URL path to be added to the page URL.
This is done by overriding the convertToPath()
method.
The Page
implementation of this method looks like this…
String convertToPath(Object[] args) {
args ? '/' + args*.toString().join('/') : ""
}
You can either overwrite this catchall method to control path conversion for all invocations or provide an overloaded version for a specific type signature. Consider the following…
class Manual {
String version
}
class ManualsPage extends Page {
static url = "manual"
String convertToPath(Manual manual) {
"/${manual.version}/index.html"
}
}
def someManualVersion = new Manual(version: "0.9.3")
Browser.drive(baseUrl: "https://gebish.org/") {
to ManualsPage, someManualVersion
assert currentUrl == "https://gebish.org/manual/0.9.3/index.html"
}
5.6.1. Named params
Any type of argument can be used with the to()
method, except named parameters (i.e. a Map
).
Named parameters are always interpreted as query parameters and they are never sent
Using the classes from the above example…
def someManualVersion = new Manual(version: "0.9.3")
Browser.drive(baseUrl: "https://gebish.org/") {
to ManualsPage, someManualVersion, flag: true
assert currentUrl == "https://gebish.org/manual/0.9.3/index.html?flag=true"
}
5.6.2. URL fragments
An instance of UrlFragment
can be passed as an argument which follows a page class or instance when calling to()
in order to dynamically control the fragment identifier part of the url.
The UrlFragment
class comes with two static factory methods: one for creating a fragment from an explicit String
and one for creating a fragment from a Map
which is then form encoded.
The following shows a usage example utilising the classes from the examples above…
Browser.drive(baseUrl: "https://gebish.org/") {
to ManualsPage, UrlFragment.of("advanced-page-navigation"), "0.9.3", "index.html"
assert currentUrl == "https://gebish.org/manual/0.9.3/index.html#advanced-page-navigation"
}
If you are using parameterized pages and you wish the fragment to be determined dynamically, e.g. based on page properties then you can override the getPageFragment()
method:
class ParameterizedManualsPage extends Page {
String version
String section
@Override
String convertToPath(Object[] args) {
"manual/$version/index.html"
}
@Override
UrlFragment getPageFragment() {
UrlFragment.of(section)
}
}
Browser.drive(baseUrl: "https://gebish.org/") {
to new ParameterizedManualsPage(version: "0.9.3", section: "advanced-page-navigation")
assert currentUrl == "https://gebish.org/manual/0.9.3/index.html#advanced-page-navigation"
}
5.7. Parametrized pages
Browser
methods like to()
, via()
, at()
and page()
accept not only page classes but page instances as well.
This is useful for example when parameterizing pages to use property values in “at” checkers:
class BooksPage extends Page {
static content = {
book { bookTitle -> $("a", text: bookTitle) }
}
}
class BookPage extends Page {
static at = { forBook == bookTitle }
static content = {
bookTitle { $("h1").text() }
}
String forBook
}
Browser.drive {
to BooksPage
book("The Book of Geb").click()
at(new BookPage(forBook: "The Book of Geb"))
}
Manually instantiated pages have to be initialized before they can be used.
Initialization is performed as part of the |
5.8. Inheritance
Pages can be arranged in an inheritance hierarchy. The content definitions are merged…
class BasePage extends Page {
static content = {
heading { $("h1") }
}
}
class SpecializedPage extends BasePage {
static content = {
footer { $("div.footer") }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to SpecializedPage
assert heading.text() == "Specialized page"
assert footer.text() == "This is the footer"
}
If a subclass defines a content template with the same name as a content template defined in a superclass, the subclass version replaces the version from the superclass.
5.9. Lifecycle hooks
Page classes can optionally implement methods that are called when the page is set as the browser’s current page and when it is swapped out for another page. This can be used to transfer state between pages.
5.9.1. onLoad(Page previousPage)
The onLoad()
method is called with previous page object instance when the page becomes the new page object for a browser.
class FirstPage extends Page {
}
class SecondPage extends Page {
String previousPageName
void onLoad(Page previousPage) {
previousPageName = previousPage.class.simpleName
}
}
Browser.drive {
to FirstPage
to SecondPage
assert page.previousPageName == "FirstPage"
}
5.9.2. onUnload(Page newPage)
The onUnload()
method is called with next page object instance when the page is being replaced as the page object for the browser.
class FirstPage extends Page {
String newPageName
void onUnload(Page newPage) {
newPageName = newPage.class.simpleName
}
}
class SecondPage extends Page {
}
Browser.drive {
def firstPage = to FirstPage
to SecondPage
assert firstPage.newPageName == "SecondPage"
}
5.9.3. Listening to Page events
It is possible to register a listener that gets notified every time certain events around switching and at checking pages occur.
The best reference for events that can be listened to is the documentation for PageEventListener
interface.
If you wish to only listen to a subset of page events then PageEventListenerSupport
might come in handy as it comes with default, empty implementations of all methods of PageEventListener
.
One of the use cases for utilising a page event listener would be to enhance reporting by writing a report every time an at checker fails.
The below example shows how to register a page event listener as part of the config script which simply prints page title and current url when an at checker fails…
import geb.Browser
import geb.Page
import geb.PageEventListenerSupport
pageEventListener = new PageEventListenerSupport() {
void onAtCheckFailure(Browser browser, Page page) {
println "At check failed for page titled '${browser.title}' at url ${browser.currentUrl}"
}
}
5.10. Dealing with frames
Frames might seem a thing of the past, but if you’re accessing or testing some legacy application with Geb, you might still need to deal with them.
Thankfully, Geb makes working with them groovier thanks to the withFrame()
method which is available on Browser
, Page
and Module
instances.
5.10.1. Executing code in the context of a frame
There are multiple flavours of the withFrame()
method, but for all of them the last closure parameter is executed in the context of a frame specified by the first parameter.
The value returned by the closure parameter is returned from the method and after the execution the page is restored to what it was before the call.
The various withFrame()
methods are as follows:
-
withFrame(String, Closure)
-String
parameter contains the name or id of a frame element -
withFrame(int, Closure)
-int
parameter contains the index of the frame element, that is, if a page has three frames, the first frame would be at index0
, the second at index1
and the third at index2
-
withFrame(Navigator, Closure)
-Navigator
parameter should contain a frame element -
withFrame(SimplePageContent, Closure)
-SimplePageContent
, which is a type returned by content templates, should contain a frame element
Given the following HTML…
<html>
<body>
<iframe name="header" src="frame.html"></iframe>
<iframe id="footer" src="frame.html"></iframe>
<iframe id="inline" src="frame.html"></iframe>
<span>main</span>
<body>
</html>
…the code for frame.html…
<html>
<body>
<span>frame text</span>
</body>
</html>
…and a page class…
class PageWithFrames extends Page {
static content = {
footerFrame { $('#footer') }
}
}
…then this code will pass…
to PageWithFrames
withFrame('header') { assert $('span').text() == 'frame text' }
withFrame('footer') { assert $('span').text() == 'frame text' }
withFrame(0) { assert $('span').text() == 'frame text' }
withFrame($('#footer')) { assert $('span').text() == 'frame text' }
withFrame(footerFrame) { assert $('span').text() == 'frame text' }
assert $('span').text() == 'main'
If a frame cannot be found for a given first argument of the withFrame()
call, then NoSuchFrameException
is thrown.
5.10.2. Switching pages and frames at once
All of the aforementioned withFrame()
variants also accept an optional second argument (a page class or a page instance) which allows to switch page for the execution of the closure passed as
the last parameter. If the page used specifies an “at” checker it will be verified after switching the context to the frame.
Given the html and page class from the previous example the following is an example usage with a page class:
class PageDescribingFrame extends Page {
static content = {
text { $("span").text() }
}
}
to PageWithFrames
withFrame('header', PageDescribingFrame) {
assert page instanceof PageDescribingFrame
assert text == "frame text"
}
assert page instanceof PageWithFrames
And this is how an example usage with a page instance looks like:
class ParameterizedPageDescribingFrame extends Page {
static at = { text == expectedFrameText }
static content = {
text { $("span").text() }
}
String expectedFrameText
}
to PageWithFrames
withFrame('header', new ParameterizedPageDescribingFrame(expectedFrameText: "frame text")) {
assert page instanceof ParameterizedPageDescribingFrame
}
assert page instanceof PageWithFrames
It is also possible to specify a page to switch to for a page content that describes a frame.
6. Modules
Modules are re-usable definitions of content that can be used across multiple pages. They are useful for modelling things like UI widgets that are used across multiple pages, or even for defining more complex UI elements in a page.
They are defined in a manner similar to pages, but extend Module
…
class FormModule extends Module {
static content = {
button { $("input", type: "button") }
}
}
Pages can “include” modules using the following syntax…
class ModulePage extends Page {
static content = {
form { module FormModule }
}
}
The module
method returns an instance of a module class which can then be used in the following way…
Browser.drive {
to ModulePage
form.button.click()
}
Modules can also be parameterised…
class ParameterizedModule extends Module {
static content = {
button {
$("form", id: formId).find("input", type: "button")
}
}
String formId
}
Where the parameters are passed to constructor of the module…
class ParameterizedModulePage extends Page {
static content = {
form { id -> module(new ParameterizedModule(formId: id)) }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to ParameterizedModulePage
form("personal-data").button.click()
}
Modules can also include other modules…
class OuterModule extends Module {
static content = {
form { module FormModule }
}
}
class OuterModulePage extends Page {
static content = {
outerModule { module OuterModule }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to OuterModulePage
outerModule.form.button.click()
}
6.1. Base and context
Modules can be localised to a specific section of the page that they are used in, or they can specify an absolute context as part of their definition. There are two ways that a modules base/context can be defined.
Module can be based on a Navigator
instance…
class FormModule extends Module {
static content = {
button { $("input", type: "button") }
}
}
class PageDefiningModuleWithBase extends Page {
static content = {
form { $("form").module(FormModule) }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to PageDefiningModuleWithBase
form.button.click()
}
It can also be done outside of a content definition…
Browser.drive {
go "/"
$("form").module(FormModule).button.click()
}
We can define a Navigator
context when including the module using the above syntax.
This now means that calls to all Navigator
(e.g. $()
) method calls that occur within the module are against the given context (in this case, the form
element).
However, module classes can also define their own base…
class FormModuleWithBase extends FormModule {
static base = { $("form") }
}
class PageUsingModuleWithBase extends Page {
static content = {
form { module FormModuleWithBase }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to PageUsingModuleWithBase
form.button.click()
}
Basing a module on a Navigator
and defining a base in a module can be combined. Consider the following HTML…
<html>
<div class="a">
<form>
<input name="thing" value="a"/>
</form>
</div>
<div class="b">
<form>
<input name="thing" value="b"/>
</form>
</div>
</html>
And the following content definitions…
class ThingModule extends Module {
static base = { $("form") }
static content = {
thingValue { thing().value() }
}
}
class ThingsPage extends Page {
static content = {
formA { $("div.a").module(ThingModule) }
formB { $("div.b").module(ThingModule) }
}
}
Then they can be used in the following way…
Browser.drive {
to ThingsPage
assert formA.thingValue == "a"
assert formB.thingValue == "b"
}
If the module declares a base, it is always calculated relative to the Navigator
used in the initialization statement.
If the initialization statement does not use a Navigator
, the module’s base is calculated relative to the document root.
6.2. Module
is-a Navigator
Modules always have a base navigator associated with them (if you don’t specify a base for a module at all then it will be assigned the root element of the document as the base) so it is natural to
think of them as navigators.
Keeping in mind that Module
implements Navigator
and considering the following HTML…
<html>
<form method="post" action="login">
<input name="login" type="text"></input>
<input name="password" type="password"></input>
<input type="submit" value="Login"></input>
</from>
</html>
As well as these content definitions…
class LoginFormModule extends Module {
static base = { $("form") }
}
class LoginPage extends Page {
static content = {
form { module LoginFormModule }
}
}
The following will pass…
Browser.drive {
to LoginPage
assert form.@method == "post"
assert form.displayed
}
It’s also possible to use Navigator
methods inside of a module implementation…
class LoginFormModule extends Module {
String getAction() {
getAttribute("action")
}
}
Browser.drive {
to LoginPage
assert form.action == "login"
}
6.3. Reusing modules across pages
As previously stated, modules can be used to model page fragments that are reused across multiple pages. For example, many different types of pages in your application may show information about the user’s shopping cart. You could handle this with modules…
class CartInfoModule extends Module {
static content = {
section { $("div.cart-info") }
itemCount { section.find("span.item-count").text().toInteger() }
totalCost { section.find("span.total-cost").text().toBigDecimal() }
}
}
class HomePage extends Page {
static content = {
cartInfo { module CartInfoModule }
}
}
class OtherPage extends Page {
static content = {
cartInfo { module CartInfoModule }
}
}
Modules work well for this.
6.4. Using modules for repeating content
Other than content that is repeated on different pages (like the shopping cart mentioned above), pages also can have content that is repeated on the page itself.
On a checkout page, the contents of the shopping cart could be summarized with the product name, the quantity and price for each product contained.
For this kind of page, a list of modules can be collected using the moduleList()
methods of Navigator
.
Consider the following HTML for our cart contents:
<html>
<table>
<tr>
<th>Product</th><th>Quantity</th><th>Price</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>The Book Of Geb</td><td>1</td><td>5.99</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Geb Single-User License</td><td>1</td><td>99.99</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Geb Multi-User License</td><td>1</td><td>199.99</td>
</tr>
</table>
</html>
We can model one line of the table like this:
class CartRow extends Module {
static content = {
cell { $("td", it) }
productName { cell(0).text() }
quantity { cell(1).text().toInteger() }
price { cell(2).text().toBigDecimal() }
}
}
And define a list of CartRows in our Page:
class CheckoutPage extends Page {
static content = {
cartItems {
$("table tr").tail().moduleList(CartRow) // tailing to skip the header row
}
}
}
Because the return value of cartItems
is a list of CartRow instances, we can use any of the usual collection methods:
assert cartItems.every { it.price > 0.0 }
We can also access the cart items using subscript operator together with an index or a range of indexes:
assert cartItems[0].productName == "The Book Of Geb"
assert cartItems[1..2]*.productName == ["Geb Single-User License", "Geb Multi-User License"]
Keep in mind that you can use parametrized module instances to create lists of modules for repeating content:
class ParameterizedCartRow extends Module {
static content = {
cell { $("td", it) }
productName { cell(nameIndex).text() }
quantity { cell(quantityIndex).text().toInteger() }
price { cell(priceIndex).text().toBigDecimal() }
}
def nameIndex
def quantityIndex
def priceIndex
}
class CheckoutPageWithParametrizedCart extends Page {
static content = {
cartItems {
$("table tr").tail().moduleList {
new ParameterizedCartRow(nameIndex: 0, quantityIndex: 1, priceIndex: 2)
}
}
}
}
You might be wondering why the |
6.5. The content DSL
The Content DSL used for modules is exactly the same as the one used for pages, so all of the same options and techniques can be used.
6.6. Inheritance
Modules can use inheritance in the same way that pages can. That is, their content definitions are merged with any content redefined in the subclass taking precedence of the superclass.
6.7. Form control modules
If you are using Geb in a strongly typed manner you might consider using the provided modules modelling form controls instead of
manipulating them directly using the Navigator
API.
This will result in longer content definitions but using them will be easier because you won’t have to remember what is the meaning of value()
calls for different types of controls.
This is for example the case when manipulating checkboxes for which checking and unchecking is achieved by passing booleans to value()
when interacting with them via Navigator
API.
All of these modules (apart from |
6.7.1. FormElement
FormElement
is a base class for all modules modelling form controls (apart from RadioButtons
) and provides shortcut property methods for checking if a control is disabled or read
only.
You will usually call these methods on the module classes for specific control types and rarely use this module directly.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input disabled="disabled" name="disabled"/>
<input readonly="readonly" name="readonly"/>
</body>
</html>
Following is an example of using the shortcut property methods provided…
assert $(name: "disabled").module(FormElement).disabled
assert !$(name: "disabled").module(FormElement).enabled
assert $(name: "readonly").module(FormElement).readOnly
assert !$(name: "readonly").module(FormElement).editable
6.7.2. Checkbox
The Checkbox
module provides utility methods for checking and unchecking checkboxes as well as property methods for retrieving their state.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="checkbox" name="flag"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def checkbox = $(name: "flag").module(Checkbox)
assert !checkbox.checked
assert checkbox.unchecked
checkbox.check()
assert checkbox.checked
checkbox.uncheck()
assert checkbox.unchecked
6.7.3. Select
The Select
module provides property methods for selecting options as well as retrieving selected option’s value and text of a single choice select element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<select name="artist">
<option value="1">Ima Robot</option>
<option value="2">Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros</option>
<option value="3">Alexander</option>
</select>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def select = $(name: "artist").module(Select)
select.selected = "2"
assert select.selected == "2"
assert select.selectedText == "Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros"
select.selected = "Alexander"
assert select.selected == "3"
assert select.selectedText == "Alexander"
6.7.4. MultipleSelect
The MultipleSelect
module provides property methods for selecting options as well as retrieving selected option’s value and text of a multiple choice select element.
These methods take and return lists of strings.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<select name="genres" multiple>
<option value="1">Alt folk</option>
<option value="2">Chiptunes</option>
<option value="3">Electroclash</option>
<option value="4">G-Funk</option>
<option value="5">Hair metal</option>
</select>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def multipleSelect = $(name: "genres").module(MultipleSelect)
multipleSelect.selected = ["2", "3"]
assert multipleSelect.selected == ["2", "3"]
assert multipleSelect.selectedText == ["Chiptunes", "Electroclash"]
multipleSelect.selected = ["G-Funk", "Hair metal"]
assert multipleSelect.selected == ["4", "5"]
assert multipleSelect.selectedText == ["G-Funk", "Hair metal"]
6.7.5. TextInput
The TextInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving text of an input text element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="text" name="language"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "language").module(TextInput)
input.text = "Groovy"
assert input.text == "Groovy"
6.7.6. Textarea
The Textarea
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving text of a textarea element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<textarea name="language"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def textarea = $(name: "language").module(Textarea)
textarea.text = "Groovy"
assert textarea.text == "Groovy"
6.7.7. FileInput
The FileInput
module provides a setter for the file location of a file input element.
The method takes a File
instance.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="file" name="csv"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def csvFile = new File("data.csv")
def input = $(name: "csv").module(FileInput)
input.file = csvFile
6.7.8. RadioButtons
The RadioButtons
module provides property methods for checking radio buttons as well as retrieving selected button’s value and text of the label associated with it.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<label for="site-current">Search this site</label>
<input type="radio" id="site-current" name="site" value="current">
<label for="site-google">Search Google
<input type="radio" id="site-google" name="site" value="google">
</label>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def radios = $(name: "site").module(RadioButtons)
radios.checked = "current"
assert radios.checked == "current"
assert radios.checkedLabel == "Search this site"
radios.checked = "Search Google"
assert radios.checked == "google"
assert radios.checkedLabel == "Search Google"
6.7.9. SearchInput
The SearchInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving text of a search input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="search" name="language"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "language").module(SearchInput)
input.text = "Groovy"
assert input.text == "Groovy"
6.7.10. DateInput
The DateInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving date of a date input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="date" name="release"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "release").module(DateInput)
input.date = "2017-11-25"
assert input.date == LocalDate.of(2017, 11, 25)
input.date = LocalDate.of(2017, 11, 26)
assert input.date == LocalDate.parse("2017-11-26")
6.7.11. DateTimeLocalInput
The DateTimeLocalInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving date and time of a datetime-local input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="datetime-local" name="next-meeting"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "next-meeting").module(DateTimeLocalInput)
input.dateTime = "2018-12-09T20:16"
assert input.dateTime == LocalDateTime.of(2018, 12, 9, 20, 16)
input.dateTime = LocalDateTime.of(2018, 12, 31, 0, 0)
assert input.dateTime == LocalDateTime.parse("2018-12-31T00:00")
6.7.12. TimeInput
The TimeInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving time of a time input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="time" name="start" min="09:00:00" max="17:00:00" step="300" />
</body>
</html>
It can be used either with a java.time.LocalTime
object…
def input = $(name: "start").module(TimeInput)
input.time = LocalTime.of(14, 5)
assert input.time == LocalTime.of(14, 5)
…or with a string…
input.time = "15:15"
assert input.time == LocalTime.of(15, 15)
6.7.13. MonthInput
The MonthInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving the month of a month input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="month" name="employment-start"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used either with a java.time.YearMonth
object…
def input = $(name: "employment-start").module(MonthInput)
input.month = YearMonth.of(2018, 12)
assert input.month == YearMonth.of(2018, 12)
…or with a string…
input.month = "2019-01"
assert input.month == YearMonth.of(2019, 1)
6.7.14. WeekInput
The WeekInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving the week of a week input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="week" name="delivery-week" min="2018-W01" max="2019-W01" step="1" />
</body>
</html>
It can be used either with a org.threeten.extra.YearWeek
object…
def input = $(name: "delivery-week").module(WeekInput)
input.week = YearWeek.of(2018, 5)
assert input.week == YearWeek.of(2018, 5)
…or with a string…
input.week = "2018-W52"
assert input.week == YearWeek.of(2018, 52)
6.7.15. EmailInput
The EmailInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving text of an email input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="email" name="address"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "address").module(EmailInput)
input.text = "joe@example.com"
assert input.text == "joe@example.com"
6.7.16. TelInput
The TelInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving text of a tel input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="tel" name="number"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "number").module(TelInput)
input.text = "(541) 754-3010"
assert input.text == "(541) 754-3010"
6.7.17. NumberInput
The NumberInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving the current number value of a number input element. It also provides methods to retrieve the values of its min
, max
and step
attributes.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="number" name="amount" min="-2.5" max="2.5" step="0.5"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "amount").module(NumberInput)
input.number = 1.5
assert input.number == 1.5
assert input.min == -2.5
assert input.max == 2.5
assert input.step == 0.5
6.7.18. RangeInput
The RangeInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving the current number value of a number input element. It also provides methods to retrieve the values of its min
, max
and step
attributes.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="range" name="volume" min="0" max="10" step="0.1"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "volume").module(RangeInput)
input.number = 3.5
assert input.number == 3.5
assert input.min == 0
assert input.max == 10
assert input.step == 0.1
6.7.19. UrlInput
The UrlInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving text of a url input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="url" name="homepage"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "homepage").module(UrlInput)
input.text = "http://gebish.org"
assert input.text == "http://gebish.org"
6.7.20. PasswordInput
The PasswordInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving text of a password input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="password" name="secret"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used this way…
def input = $(name: "secret").module(PasswordInput)
input.text = "s3cr3t"
assert input.text == "s3cr3t"
6.7.21. ColorInput
The ColorInput
module provides property methods for setting and retrieving the color of a color input element.
Given the html…
<html>
<body>
<input type="color" name="favorite"/>
</body>
</html>
It can be used either with a org.openqa.selenium.support.Color
object…
def input = $(name: "favorite").module(ColorInput)
input.color = new Color(0, 255, 0, 1)
assert input.color == new Color(0, 255, 0, 1)
assert input.value() == "#00ff00"
…or with a hex string…
input.color = "#ff0000"
assert input.value() == "#ff0000"
assert input.color == new Color(255, 0, 0, 1)
6.8. Unwrapping modules returned from the content
DSL
For the sake of better error reporting, current implementation wraps any module declared within content
block into
geb.content.TemplateDerivedPageContent
instance.
Given a page defined as follows:
class ModuleUnwrappingPage extends Page {
static content = {
theModule { module(UnwrappedModule) }
}
}
And a custom module:
class UnwrappedModule extends Module {
static content = {
theContent { $(".the-content") }
}
}
A module assignment to a variable of its declared type will fail with GroovyCastException
:
Browser.drive {
to ModuleUnwrappingPage
UnwrappedModule foo = theModule (1)
}
1 | GroovyCastException is thrown |
An invocation of a method which takes a module as argument with its declared type will fail with MissingMethodException
:
String getContentText(UnwrappedModule module) {
module.theContent.text()
}
Browser.drive {
to ModuleUnwrappingPage
getContentText(theModule) (1)
}
1 | MissingMethodException is thrown |
As you may like or need to use strong typing for modules there is a way to do that. Module can be cast to its declared type with the Groovy as
operator:
Browser.drive {
to ModuleUnwrappingPage
UnwrappedModule unwrapped = theModule as UnwrappedModule
getContentText(theModule as UnwrappedModule)
}
Bear in mind that casting of a module to its declared type means the module gets unwrapped. By doing so the convenient error messages for such module are gone. |
What’s the trade-off? Calling toString()
on any content element, including module, gives a meaningful path like:
modules.ModuleUnwrappingPage -> theModule: modules.UnwrappedModule -> theContent: geb.navigator.DefaultNavigator
Such paths can be seen in error messages and this is exactly what you are going to give away for unwrapped modules.
7. Configuration
Geb provides a configuration mechanism that allows you to control various aspects of Geb in a flexible way.
At the heart of this is the Configuration
object, which the Browser
and other objects query at runtime.
There are three general mechanisms for influencing configuration; system properties, config script and the build adapter.
7.1. Mechanisms
7.1.1. The config script
Geb attempts to load a ConfigSlurper
script named GebConfig.groovy
from the default package (in other words, in the root of a directory that is on the classpath).
If it is not found, Geb will try to load a ConfigSlurper
class named GebConfig
from the default package - this is useful if you run tests that use Geb from an IDE because you won’t have
to specify GebConfig.groovy
as a resource, Geb will simply fall back to the compiled version of the script.
If both script and class are not found Geb will continue using all defaults.
First, the script is looked for with the executing thread’s context class loader and if it is not found, then it is looked for with the class loader that loaded Geb. This covers 99% of scenarios out of the box perfectly well without any intervention. If however you do need to configure the context class loader to load the config script, you must make sure that it is either the same as the class loader that loaded Geb or a child of it. If the script is not found by both of those class loaders the procedure will be repeated but this time the class will be searched for - first using executing thread’s context class loader and then using the class loader that loaded Geb.
Environment sensitivity
The Groovy ConfigSlurper
mechanism has built in support for environment sensitive configuration, and Geb leverages this by using the geb.env
system property to determine the environment
to use.
An effective use of this mechanism is to configure different drivers based on the designated Geb “environment” (concrete details on how to do this further down).
How you set the environment system property is going to be dependent on the build system you are using. For example, when using Gradle you could control the Geb environment by specifying it in the configuration of the test task running your tests…
test {
systemProperty 'geb.env', 'windows'
}
Other build environments will allow you to do this in different ways.
7.1.2. System properties
Some config options can be specified by system properties. In general, config options specified by system properties will override values set in the config script. See the config options below for which options are controllable via system properties.
7.1.3. Build adapter
The build adapter mechanism exists to allow Geb to integrate with development/build environments that logically dictate config options.
This mechanism works by loading the name of the class (fully qualified) by the system property geb.build.adapter
that must implement the BuildAdapter
interface.
Currently, the build adapter can only influence the base URL to use, and the location of the reports directory.
If the geb.build.adapter
system property is not explicitly set, it defaults to `SystemPropertiesBuildAdapter.
As you can probably deduce, this default implementation uses system properties to specify values, so is usable in most circumstances.
See the linked API doc for the details of the specific system properties it looks for.
While the default build adapter uses system properties, it should not be considered to be the same as system property configuration due to values in the config script taking precedence over the build adapter which is not true for system properties. |
7.2. Config options
7.2.1. Driver implementation
The driver to use is specified by the config key driver
, or the system property geb.driver
.
Factory closure
In the config script it can be a closure that when invoked with no arguments returns an instance of WebDriver
…
import org.openqa.selenium.firefox.FirefoxDriver
driver = { new FirefoxDriver() }
This is the preferred mechanism, as it allows the most control over the drivers creation and configuration.
You can use the ConfigSlurper
mechanism’s environment sensitivity to configure different drivers per environment…
import org.openqa.selenium.htmlunit.HtmlUnitDriver
import org.openqa.selenium.remote.DesiredCapabilities
import org.openqa.selenium.remote.RemoteWebDriver
// default is to use htmlunit
driver = { new HtmlUnitDriver() }
environments {
// when system property 'geb.env' is set to 'remote' use a remote Firefox driver
remote {
driver = {
def remoteWebDriverServerUrl = new URL("http://example.com/webdriverserver")
new RemoteWebDriver(remoteWebDriverServerUrl, DesiredCapabilities.firefox())
}
}
}
WebDriver has the ability to drive browsers on a remote host, which is what we are using above.
For more information consult the WebDriver documentation on |
Driver class name
The name of the driver class to use (it will be constructed with no arguments) can be specified as a string with the key driver
in the config script or via the geb.driver
system property
(the class must implement the WebDriver
interface).
driver = "org.openqa.selenium.firefox.FirefoxDriver"
Or it can be one of the following short names: ie
, htmlunit
, firefox
, chrome
or edge
. These will be implicitly expanded to their fully qualified class names…
driver = "firefox"
The following table gives the possible short names that can be used:
Short Name | Driver |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If no explicit driver is specified then Geb will look for the following drivers on the classpath in the order they are listed in the above table.
If none of these classes can be found, a UnableToLoadAnyDriversException
will be thrown.
7.2.2. Navigator factory
It is possible to specify your own implementation of NavigatorFactory
via configuration.
This is useful if you want to extend the Navigator
class to provide your own behaviour extensions.
Rather than inject your own NavigatorFactory
, it is simpler to inject a custom InnerNavigatorFactory
which is a much simpler interface.
To do this, you can specify a closure for the config key innerNavigatorFactory
…
import geb.Browser
import org.openqa.selenium.WebElement
innerNavigatorFactory = { Browser browser, Iterable<WebElement> elements ->
new MyCustomNavigator(browser, elements)
}
This is a rather advanced use case. If you need to do this, check out the source code or get in touch via the mailing list if you need help.
While not as crosscutting as using a custom navigator factory it’s also possible to decorate navigators with additional methods by creating modules based on them.
The benefit of the latter is that if you are strongly typing your Geb code then your IDE will be aware of the added methods while when using a custom |
7.2.3. Driver caching
Geb’s ability to cache a driver and re-use it for the lifetime of the JVM (i.e. the implicit driver lifecycle) can be disabled by setting the cacheDriver
config option
to false
.
However, if you do this you become responsible for quitting every driver that is created at the appropriate time.
The default caching behavior is to cache the driver globally across the JVM.
If you are using Geb in multiple threads this may not be what you want, as neither Geb Browser
objects nor WebDriver at the core is thread safe.
To remedy this, you can instruct Geb to cache the driver instance per thread by setting the config option cacheDriverPerThread
to true
.
Also, by default Geb will register a shutdown hook to quit any cached browsers when the JVM exits.
You can disable this by setting te config property quitCachedDriverOnShutdown
to false
.
7.2.4. Base URL
The base URL to be used can be specified by setting the baseUrl
config property (with a String
) value or via the build adapter (the default implementation of which looks at the
geb.build.baseUrl
system property).
Any value set in the config script will take precedence over the value provided by the build adapter.
7.2.5. Template options default values
Default values for some of the content DSL template options are configurable:
templateOptions {
cache = true
wait = true
toWait = true
waitCondition = { it.displayed }
required = false
min = 0
max = 1
}
7.2.6. Waiting
The waitFor()
methods available on browser, page and module objects can be affected by configuration (this is also true for implicitly waiting content).
It is possible to specify default values for the timeout and retry interval, and to define presets of these values to be referred to by name.
Defaults
Defaults can be specified via:
waiting {
timeout = 10
retryInterval = 0.5
}
Both values are optional and in seconds. If unspecified, the values of 5
for timeout
and 0.1
for retryInterval
.
Presets
Presets can be specified via:
waiting {
presets {
slow {
timeout = 20
retryInterval = 1
}
quick {
timeout = 1
}
}
}
Here we have defined two presets, slow
and quick
.
Notice that the quick
preset does not specify a retryInterval
value; defaults will be substituted in for any missing values (i.e. giving the quick
preset the default retryInterval
value of
0.1
).
Failure causes
When waiting fails because the condition throws an exception be it an assertion failure or any other exception then that exception is set as the cause of WaitTimeoutException
thrown by Geb.
This usually provides fairly good diagnostics of what went wrong.
Unfortunately some runtimes, namely Maven Surefire Plugin, don’t print full exception stacktraces and exclude the cause from them.
To make diagnostics easier in such situations it’s possible to configure Geb to include string representation of the cause as part of WaitTimeoutException
message:
waiting {
includeCauseInMessage = true
}
7.2.7. Waiting in “at” checkers
At checkers can be configured to be implicitly wrapped with waitFor()
calls. This can be set with:
atCheckWaiting = true
The possible values for the atCheckWaiting
property are consistent with the ones for wait
option of content template definitions.
This global setting can also be overridden on a per page class basis.
7.2.8. Requiring “at” checkers for implicit “at” checks
When explicitly “at” checking a page, that is passing it to Browser’s `at()
method, which does not define an “at” checker an UndefinedAtCheckerException
is thrown.
That is not the case by default when implicit “at checks” are being performed, like when using Browser’s to()
method.
This behaviour can be changed to also throw UndefinedAtCheckerException
when implicit “at checks” are being performed and the page does not define an “at” checker by setting requirePageAtCheckers
config property to a "truthy" value:
requirePageAtCheckers = true
7.2.9. Waiting for base navigator
Sometimes Firefox driver times out when trying to find the root HTML element of the page. This manifests itself in an error similar to:
org.openqa.selenium.NoSuchElementException: Unable to locate element: {"method":"tag name","selector":"html"} Command duration or timeout: 576 milliseconds For documentation on this error, please visit: http://seleniumhq.org/exceptions/no_such_element.html
You can prevent this error from happening by configuring a wait timeout to use when the driver is locating the root HTML element, using:
baseNavigatorWaiting = true
The possible values for the baseNavigatorWaiting
option are consistent with the ones for wait
option of content template definitions.
7.2.10. Unexpected pages
The unexpectedPages
configuration property allows to specify a list of unexpected Page
classes that will be checked for when “at” checks are performed.
Given that PageNotFoundPage
and InternalServerErrorPage
have been defined you can use the following to configure them as unexpected pages:
unexpectedPages = [PageNotFoundPage, InternalServerErrorPage]
See this section for more information on unexpected pages.
7.2.11. Default values for withWindow()
options
Default values for some of the options for withWindow()
calls are configurable:
withWindow.close = true
7.2.12. Default values for withNewWindow()
options
Default values for some of the options for withNewWindow()
calls are configurable:
withNewWindow {
close = false
wait = true
}
7.2.13. Reporter
The reporter is the object responsible for snapshotting the state of the browser (see the Reporting chapter for details).
All reporters are implementations of the Reporter
interface.
If no reporter is explicitly defined, a composite reporter will be created from a ScreenshotReporter
(takes a PNG screenshot) and PageSourceReporter
(dumps the current DOM state as HTML).
This is a sensible default, but should you wish to use a custom reporter you can assign it to the reporter
config key.
reporter = new CustomReporter()
7.2.14. Reports directory
The reports dir configuration is used by to control where the browser should write reports (see the Reporting chapter for details).
In the config script, you can set the path to the directory to use for reports via the reportsDir
key…
reportsDir = "target/geb-reports"
The value is interpreted as a path, and if not absolute will be relative to the JVM’s working directory. |
The reports dir can also be specified by the build adapter (the default implementation of which looks at the geb.build.reportsDir
system property).
Any value set in the config script will take precedence over the value provided by the build adapter.
It is also possible to set the reportsDir
config item to a file.
reportsDir = new File("target/geb-reports")
By default this value is not set. The browser’s report()
method requires a value for this config item so if you are using the reporting features
you must set a reports dir.
7.2.15. Report test failures only
By default Geb will take a report at the end of each failed test method.
The reportOnTestFailureOnly
setting can be set to false
if you wish for reports to be taken after each test even if a failure does not occur.
reportOnTestFailureOnly = false
7.2.16. Reporting listener
It is possible to specify a listener that will be notified when reports are taken. See the section on listening to reporting for details.
7.2.17. Navigator events listener
It is possible to specify a listener that will be notified on certain navigator events. See the section on listening to navigator events for details.
7.2.18. Page events listener
It is possible to specify a listener that will be notified on certain page events. See the section on listening to page events for details.
7.2.19. Auto clearing cookies
Certain integrations will automatically clear the driver’s cookies for the current domain, which is usually necessary when using an implicit driver.
This configuration flag, which is true
by default, can be disabled by setting the autoClearCookies
value in the config to false
.
autoClearCookies = false
7.2.20. Auto clearing web storage
Certain integrations will automatically clear the driver’s web storage, that is both local and session storage, which is usually necessary when using an implicit driver.
This configuration flag, which is false
by default, can be enabled by setting the autoClearWebStorage
value in the config to true
.
autoClearWebStorage = true
7.3. Runtime overrides
The Configuration object also has setters for all of the config properties it exposes, allowing you to override config properties at runtime in particular circumstances if you need to.
For example, you may have one Spock spec that requires the autoClearCookies
property to be disabled. You could disable it for just this spec by doing something like…
import geb.spock.GebReportingSpec
class FunctionalSpec extends GebReportingSpec {
def setup() {
browser.config.autoClearCookies = false
}
}
8. Implicit assertions
As of Geb 0.7.0, certain parts of Geb utilise “implicit assertions”. This sole goal of this feature is to provide more informative error messages. Put simply, it means that for a given block of code, all expressions are automatically turned into assertions. So the following code:
1 == 1
Becomes…
assert 1 == 1
If you’ve used the Spock Framework you will be well familiar with the concept of implicit assertions from Spock’s |
In Geb, waiting expressions and at expressions automatically use implicit assertions. Take the following page object…
class ImplicitAssertionsExamplePage extends Page {
static at = { title == "Implicit Assertions!" }
def waitForHeading() {
waitFor { $("h1") }
}
}
This automatically becomes…
class ImplicitAssertionsExamplePage extends Page {
static at = { assert title == "Implicit Assertions!" }
def waitForHeading() {
waitFor { assert $("h1") }
}
}
Because of this, Geb is able to provide much better error messages when the expression fails due to Groovy’s power assertions.
A special form of assert
is used by Geb that returns the value of the expression, whereas a regular assert
returns null
.
This means that given…
static content = {
headingText(wait: true) { $("h1").text() }
}
Accessing headingText
here will wait for there to be a h1
and for it to have some text (because an empty string is false
in Groovy), which will then be returned.
This means that even when implicit assertions are used, the value is still returned and it is usable.
8.1. At verification
Let’s take the “at checker” case.
If you’re unfamiliar with Geb’s “at checking”, please read this section. |
Consider the following small Geb script…
to ImplicitAssertionsExamplePage
At checking works by verifying that the page’s “at check” returns a trueish value.
If it does, the at()
method returns true
. If not, the at()
method will return false
.
However, due to implicit assertions, the “at check” will never return false
.
Instead, the at checker will throw an AssertionError
.
Because the page’s “at check” is turned into an assertion, you’ll see the following in the stacktrace:
Assertion failed: title == "Implicit Assertions!" | | | false 'Something else'
As you can see, this is much more informative than the at()
method simply returning false
.
At verification with additional assertions
Apart from regular at()
methods taking a single argument there are also at()
methods taking an additional closure argument.
These methods were introduced primarily for better IDE support but to be useful they utilise implicit assertions.
Because every statement of the closure passed as the last argument to at()
is implicitly asserted they can be used in an expressive way in then:
and expect:
blocks of Spock specifications and provide better error messages when the implicit assertions fail.
You might be familiar with Spock’s Specification.with(Object, Closure<?>)
method which has very similar characteristics and aim.
So given the following code…
at(ImplicitAssertionsExamplePage) {
headingText.empty
}
…you might see an error similar to…
Assertion failed:
headingText.empty
| |
| false
'This is a heading'
…when the condition in the closure is not fulfilled.
8.2. Waiting
Another place where implicit assertions are utilised is for waiting.
If you’re unfamiliar with Geb’s “waiting” support, please read this section. |
Consider the following Geb script:
waitFor { title == "Page Title" }
The waitFor
method verifies that the given clause returns a trueish value within a certain timeframe.
Because of implicit assertions, when this fails you’ll see the following in the stacktrace:
Assertion failed: title == "Page Title" | | | false 'Something else'
The failed assertion is carried as the cause of the geb.waiting.WaitTimeoutException
and gives you an informative message as to why the waiting failed.
Waiting content
The same implicit assertion semantics apply to content definitions that are waiting.
If you’re unfamiliar with Geb’s “waiting content” support, please read this section. |
Any content definitions that declare a wait
parameter have implicit assertions added to each expression just like waitFor()
method calls.
Additionally, any content definitions that declare a waitCondition
parameter will also have implicit assertions added to each expression of the closure passed as that parameter.
Reloading page when waiting
The same implicit assertion semantics apply to usages of refreshWaitFor()
method
If you’re unfamiliar with Geb’s “Reloading page when waiting” support, please read this section. |
Any calls to refreshWaitFor()
method have implicit assertions added to each expression in the bloc passed to it just like for waitFor()
method calls.
Selectively disabling implicit assertions
It is sometimes desirable not apply implicit assertions to all expressions in the closure passed to waitFor()
or refreshWaitFor()
.
One example might be calling methods which should fail the condition if they throw but should not fail the condition when they return a falsey value.
To disable implicit assertions in a particular waitFor()
or refreshWaitFor()
call simply pass false
as the implicitAssertions
named parameter:
waitFor(implicitAssertions: false) {
falseReturningMethod()
true
}
8.3. How it works
The “implicit assertions” feature is implemented as a Groovy compile time transformation, which literally turns all expressions in a candidate block of code into assertions.
This transform is packaged as a separate JAR named geb-implicit-assertions
.
This JAR needs to be on the compilation classpath of your Geb test/pages/modules (and any other code that you want to use implicit assertions) in order for this feature to work.
If you are obtaining Geb via a dependency management system, this is typically not something you need to be concerned about as it will happen automatically.
Geb is distributed via the Maven Central repository in Apache Maven format (i.e. via POM files).
The main Geb module, geb-core
depends on the geb-implicit-assertions
module as a compile
dependency.
If your dependency management system inherits transitive compile dependencies (i.e. also makes compile dependencies of first class compile dependencies first class compile dependencies) then you
will automatically have the geb-implicit-assertions
module as a compile dependency and everything will work fine (Maven, Gradle and most configurations of Ivy do this).
If your dependency management system does not do this, or if you are manually managing the geb-core
dependency, be sure to include the geb-implicit-assertions
dependency as a compile dependency.
9. Javascript, AJAX and dynamic pages
This section discusses how to deal with some of the challenges in testing and/or automating modern web applications.
9.1. The "js" object
The browser instance exposes a “js
” object that provides support for working with JavaScript over and above what WebDriver provides.
It’s important to understand how WebDriver does handle JavaScript, which is through a driver’s implementation of
JavascriptExecutor.executeScript()
method.
Before reading further, it’s strongly recommended to read the description of |
You can execute JavaScript like you would with straight WebDriver using the driver instance via the browser…
assert browser.driver.executeScript("return arguments[0];", 1) == 1
This is a bit long winded, and as you would expect Geb uses the dynamism of Groovy to make life easier.
The |
9.1.1. Accessing variables
Any global JavaScript variables inside the browser can be read as properties of the js
object.
Given the following page…
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
var aVariable = 1;
</script>
</head>
</html>
We could access the JavaScript variable “aVariable
” with…
Browser.drive {
go "/"
assert js.aVariable == 1
}
Or if we wanted to map it to page content…
Browser.drive {
to JsVariablePage
assert aVar == 1
}
We can even access nested variables…
assert js."document.title" == "Book of Geb"
9.1.2. Calling methods
Any global JavaScript functions can be called as methods on the js
object.
Given the following page…
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
function addThem(a,b) {
return a + b;
}
</script>
</head>
</html>
We can call the addThem()
function with…
Browser.drive {
go "/"
assert js.addThem(1, 2) == 3
}
This also works from pages and modules.
To call nested methods, given the following page…
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
functionContainer = {
addThem: function(a,b) {
return a + b;
}
}
</script>
</head>
</html>
We use the same syntax as for properties…
Browser.drive {
Browser.drive {
go "/"
assert js."functionContainer.addThem"(1, 2) == 3
}
}
9.1.3. Executing arbitrary code
The js
object also has an exec()
method that can be used to run snippets of JavaScript.
It is identical to the JavascriptExecutor.executeScript()
method, except that it takes its arguments in the other order…
assert js.exec(1, 2, "return arguments[0] + arguments[1];") == 3
You might be wondering why the order has been changed (i.e. the arguments go before the script). It makes writing multiline JavaScript more convenient…
js.exec 1, 2, """
someJsMethod(1, 2);
// lots of javascript
return true;
"""
9.2. Waiting
Geb provides some convenient methods for waiting for a certain condition to be true. This is useful for testing pages using AJAX, timers or effects.
The waitFor
methods are provided by the WaitingSupport
mixin which delegates to the Wait
class (see the documentation of the waitFor()
method of this class for the precise
semantics of waiting).
These methods take various parameters that determine how long to wait for the given closure to return a true object according to the {`}[Groovy Truth], and how long to wait in between invoking the
closure again.
waitFor {} (1)
waitFor(10) {} (2)
waitFor(10, 0.5) {} (3)
waitFor("quick") {} (4)
1 | Use default configuration. |
2 | Wait for up to 10 seconds, using the default retry interval. |
3 | Wait for up to 10 seconds, waiting half a second in between retries. See the section on wait configuration for how to change the default values and define presets. |
4 | Use the preset “quick” as the wait settings |
It is also possible to declare that content should be implicitly waited on, see the |
9.2.1. Examples
Here is an example showing one way of using waitFor()
to deal with the situation where clicking a button invokes an AJAX request that creates a new div
on its completion.
class DynamicPage extends Page {
static content = {
theButton { $("input", value: "Make Request") }
theResultDiv { $("div#result") }
}
def makeRequest() {
theButton.click()
waitFor { theResultDiv.present }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to DynamicPage
makeRequest()
assert theResultDiv.text() == "The Result"
}
Recall that the return
keyword is optional in Groovy, so in the example above the $("div#result").present
statement acts as the return value for the closure and is used as the basis on
whether the closure passed or not.
This means that you must ensure that the last statement inside the closure returns a value that is true
according to the {`}[Groovy Truth] (if you’re unfamiliar with the Groovy Truth do read that
page).
Because the browser delegates method calls to the page object, the above could have been written as…
Browser.drive {
go "/"
$("input", value: "Make Request").click()
waitFor { $("div#result") }
assert $("div#result").text() == "The Result"
}
Not using explicit |
The closures given to the waitFor()
method(s) do not need to be single statement.
waitFor {
def result = $("div#result")
result.text() == "The Result"
}
That will work fine.
If you wish to test multiple conditions as separate statement inside a waitFor
closure, you can just put them in separate lines.
waitFor {
def result = $("div")
result.@id == "result"
result.text() == "The Result"
}
9.2.2. Custom message
If you wish to add a custom message to WaitTimeoutException
that is being thrown when waitFor
call times out you can do so by providing a message parameter to the waitFor
call:
waitFor(message: "My custom message") { $("div#result") }
9.3. Reloading the page when waiting
Apart from the generic waiting support Geb also comes with a convenience method which reloads the page each time before the block passed to it is evaluated.
The method is available on Page
class and is called refreshWaitFor()
and it is the same as the waitFor()
method with regards to everything else than the page reloading behaviour.
This means that you can pass the same arguments to it as to waitFor()
, the block passed to it is implicitly asserted and it supports custom messages.
The following example shows waiting for a static timestamp of when the page was rendered to be at least three hundred milliseconds after the test has started:
class PageWithTimestamp extends Page {
static content = {
timestamp { OffsetDateTime.parse($().text()) }
}
}
def startTimestamp = OffsetDateTime.now()
to PageWithTimestamp
refreshWaitFor {
timestamp > startTimestamp.plus(300, MILLIS)
}
assert timestamp > startTimestamp.plus(300, MILLIS)
9.4. Controlling network conditions
When driving modern, single page, highly asynchronous web applications timing issues frequently appear and are the bane of browser automation leading to flakey tests. Correctly waiting for asynchronous events to complete becomes essential. Quite often the asynchronicity is hard to spot if the asynchronous events occur relatively fast and is only exposed when running in a slower execution or networking environment.
This section introduces a feature which depends on a Chrome specific, custom WebDriver command.
Calling the methods mentioned in the next paraghraph will only work when driving a local Chrome browser and will throw an exception for all other browsers, including a remote Chrome browser driven via an instance of |
Thankfully Chrome driver supports controlling network conditions via it’s custom setNetworkConditions
command which allows to control the network conditions of the browser.
Geb provides setNetworkLatency()
and resetNetworkLatency()
methods on the Browser
class which allow to introduce network latency to the browser being driven.
Adding latency in the region of couple of hundred milliseconds will usually expose network related timing issues.
Temporarily adding network latency during test development allows to shake off timing issues and is useful when debugging such issues which might occur in one environment like the CI server but do not in another like developer machines.
This is how setNetworkLatency()
method be used:
def networkLatency = Duration.ofMillis(500)
browser.networkLatency = networkLatency
There are various types of asynchronous events occuring in a browser and AJAX calls which are network related are only one example. Animations would be another example of asynchronicity in web applications and the methods mentioned above will have no influence on timining issues introduced by animations or any other asynchronous events. |
9.5. Alert and confirm dialogs
WebDriver currently does not handle the alert() and confirm() dialog windows.
However, we can fake it through some JavaScript magic as discussed on the WebDriver issue for this.
Geb implements a workaround based on this solution for you.
Note that this feature relies on making changes to the browser’s window
DOM object so may not work on all browsers on all platforms.
At the time when WebDriver adds support for this functionality the underlying implementation of the following methods will change to use that which will presumably be more robust.
Geb adds this functionality through the AlertAndConfirmSupport
class that is mixed into Page
and Module
.
The Geb methods prevent the browser from actually displaying the dialog, which is a good thing. This prevents the browser blocking while the dialog is displayed and causing your test to hang indefinitely.
Unexpected |
9.5.1. alert()
There are three methods that deal with alert()
dialogs:
def withAlert(Closure actions)
def withAlert(Map params, Closure actions)
void withNoAlert(Closure actions)
The first method, withAlert()
, is used to verify actions that will produce an alert dialog.
This method returns the alert message.
Given the following HTML…
<input type="button" name="showAlert" onclick="alert('Bang!');" />
The withAlert()
method is used like so…
assert withAlert { $("input", name: "showAlert").click() } == "Bang!"
If an alert dialog is not raised by the given “actions” closure, an AssertionError
will be thrown.
The withAlert()
method also accepts a wait option.
It is useful if the code in your “actions” closure is raising a dialog in an asynchronous manner and can be used like that:
assert withAlert(wait: true) { $("input", name: "showAlert").click() } == "Bang!"
The possible values for the wait
option are consistent with the ones for wait
option of content definitions.
The second method, withNoAlert()
, is used to verify actions that will not produce an alert()
dialog.
If an alert dialog is raised by the given “actions” closure, an AssertionError
will be thrown.
Given the following HTML…
<input type="button" name="dontShowAlert" />
The withNoAlert()
method is used like so…
withNoAlert { $("input", name: "dontShowAlert").click() }
It’s a good idea to use |
A side effect of the way that this is implemented is that we aren’t able to definitively handle actions that cause the browser’s actual page to change (e.g. clicking a link in the closure given to
withAlert()
/withNoAlert()
).
We can detect that the browser page did change, but we can’t know if alert()
did or did not get called before the page change.
If a page change was detected the withAlert()
method will return a literal true
(whereas it would normally return the alert message), while the withNoAlert()
will succeed.
9.5.2. confirm()
There are five methods that deal with confirm()
dialogs:
def withConfirm(boolean ok, Closure actions)
def withConfirm(Closure actions)
def withConfirm(Map params, Closure actions)
def withConfirm(Map params, boolean ok, Closure actions)
void withNoConfirm(Closure actions)
The first method, withConfirm()
(and its ‘ok
’ defaulted relative), is used to verify actions that will produce a confirm dialog.
This method returns the confirmation message.
The ok
parameter controls whether the “OK” or “Cancel” button should be clicked.
Given the following HTML…
<input type="button" name="showConfirm" onclick="confirm('Do you like Geb?');" />
The withConfirm()
method is used like so…
assert withConfirm(true) { $("input", name: "showConfirm").click() } == "Do you like Geb?"
If a confirmation dialog is not raised by the given “actions” closure, an AssertionError
will be thrown.
The withConfirm()
method also accepts a wait option just like the withAlert()
method. See the description of withAlert()
to learn about the possible values and usage.
The other method, withNoConfirm()
, is used to verify actions that will not produce a confirm dialog.
If a confirmation dialog is raised by the given “actions” closure, an AssertionError
will be thrown.
Given the following HTML…
<input type="button" name="dontShowConfirm" />
The withNoConfirm()
method is used like so…
withNoConfirm { $("input", name: "dontShowConfirm").click() }
It’s a good idea to use |
A side effect of the way that this is implemented is that we aren’t able to definitively handle actions that cause the browser’s actual page to change (e.g. clicking a link in the closure given to
withConfirm()
/withNoConfirm()
).
We can detect that the browser page did change, but we can’t know if confirm()
did or did not get called before the page change.
If a page change was detected, the withConfirm()
method will return a literal true
(whereas it would normally return the alert message), while the withNoConfirm()
will succeed.
9.5.3. prompt()
Geb does not provide any support for prompt()
due to its infrequent and generally discouraged use.
9.6. jQuery integration
Geb has special support for jQuery. Navigator objects have a special adapter that makes calling jQuery methods against the underlying DOM elements simple. This is best explained by example.
The jQuery integration only works when the pages you are working with include jQuery, Geb does not install it in the page for you. The minimum supported version of jQuery is 1.4. |
Consider the following page:
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript" src="/js/jquery-2.1.4.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
$("#a").mouseover(function() {
$("#b").show();
});
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="a"></div>
<div id="b" style="display:none;"><a href="http://www.gebish.org">Geb!</a></div>
</body>
</html>
We want to click the Geb link, but can’t because it’s hidden (WebDriver does not let you interact with hidden elements). The div containing the link (div “a”) is only displayed when the mouse moves over div “a”.
The jQuery library provides convenient methods for triggering browser events. We can use this to simulate the mouse being moved over the div “a”.
In straight jQuery JavaScript we would do…
jQuery("div#a").mouseover();
Which we could invoke via Geb easy enough…
js.exec 'jQuery("div#a").mouseover()'
That will work, but can be inconvenient as it duplicates content definitions in our Geb pages.
Geb’s jQuery integration allows you to use your defined content in Geb with jQuery.
Here is how we could call the mouseover
jQuery function on an element from Geb…
$("div#a").jquery.mouseover()
To be clear, that is Groovy (not JavaScript code). It can be used with pages…
class JQueryPage extends Page {
static content = {
divA { $("#a") }
divB { $("#b") }
}
}
to JQueryPage
divA.jquery.mouseover()
assert divB.displayed
The jquery
property of a navigator is conceptually equivalent to a jQuery object for all of the navigator’s matched page elements.
The methods can also take arguments…
$("#a").jquery.trigger('mouseover')
The same set of restricted types as allowed by WebDriver’s JavascriptExecutor.executeScript()
method are permitted here.
The return value of methods called on the jquery
property depends on what the corresponding jQuery method returns.
A jQuery object will be converted to a Navigator representing the same set of elements, other values such as objects, strings and numbers are returned as per WebDriver’s
JavascriptExecutor.executeScript()
method.
Why?
This functionality was developed to make triggering mouse related events easier.
Some applications are very sensitive to mouse events, and triggering these events in an automated environment is a challenge.
jQuery provides a good API for faking these events, which makes for a good solution.
An alternative is using the interact() method
.
10. Direct downloading
Geb features an API that can be used to make direct HTTP requests from the application that is executing the Geb scripts or tests. This facilitates fine grained requests and downloading content such as PDF, CSVs, images etc. into your scripts or tests to then do something with.
The direct download API works by using java.net.HttpURLConnection
to directly connect to a URL from the application executing Geb, bypassing WebDriver.
The Direct Download API is provided by the DownloadSupport
class, which is mixed in to pages and modules (which means you can just call these instance methods directly from anywhere where you
would want to, e.g. drive blocks, in tests/specs, methods on page objects, methods on modules).
Consult the DownloadSupport
API reference for the various download*()
methods that are available.
10.1. Downloading example
For example, let’s say you are using Geb to exercise a web application that generates PDF documents. The WebDriver API can only deal with HTML documents. You want to hit the PDF download link and also do some tests on the downloaded PDF. The direct download API is there to fill this need.
class LoginPage extends Page {
static content = {
loginButton(to: PageWithPdfLink) { $("input", name: "login") }
}
void login(String user, String pass) {
username = user
password = pass
loginButton.click()
}
}
class PageWithPdfLink extends Page {
static content = {
pdfLink { $("a#pdf-download-link") }
}
}
Browser.drive {
to LoginPage
login("me", "secret")
def pdfBytes = downloadBytes(pdfLink.@href)
}
Simple enough, but consider what is happening behind the scenes.
Our application required us to log in, which implies some kind of session state.
Geb is using HttpURLConnection
to get the content and before doing so the cookies from the real browser are being transferred onto the connection allowing it to reuse
the same session.
The PDF download link href may also be relative, and Geb handles this by resolving the link passed to the download function against the browser’s current page URL.
10.2. Fine grained request
The Direct Download API can also be used for making fine grained requests which can be useful for testing edge cases or abnormal behavior.
All of the download*()
methods take an optional closure that can configure the HttpURLConnection
that will be used to make the request (after the Cookie
header has
been set).
For example, we could test what happens when we send application/json
in the Accept
header.
Browser.drive {
go "/"
def jsonBytes = downloadBytes { HttpURLConnection connection ->
connection.setRequestProperty("Accept", "application/json")
}
}
Before doing something like the above, it’s worth considering whether doing such testing via Geb (a browser automation tool) is the right thing to do.
You may find that it’s more appropriate to directly use |
10.3. Dealing with untrusted certificates
When facing web applications using untrusted (e.g. self-signed) SSL certificates, you will likely get exceptions when trying to use Geb’s download API. By overriding the behavior of the request you can get around this kind of problem. Using the following code will allow running requests against a server which uses a certificate from the given keystore:
import geb.download.helper.SelfSignedCertificateHelper
def text = downloadText { HttpURLConnection connection ->
if (connection instanceof HttpsURLConnection) {
def keystore = getClass().getResource('/keystore.jks')
def helper = new SelfSignedCertificateHelper(keystore, 'password')
helper.acceptCertificatesFor(connection as HttpsURLConnection)
}
}
10.4. Default configuration
In the configuration, the default behaviour of the HttpURLConnection
object can be specified by providing a closure as the defaultDownloadConfig
property.
The below example configures all requests executed using direct downloading support to carry a User-Agent
header.
defaultDownloadConfig = { HttpURLConnection connection ->
connection.setRequestProperty("User-Agent", "Geb")
}
This config closure will be run first, so anything set here can be overridden using the fine grained request configuration shown above.
10.5. Proxy configuration
As previously mentioned, the direct download API uses java.net.HttpURLConnection
for performing http requests.
This means that it can be configured to use a proxy in the exact same way as java.net.HttpURLConnection
, that is by setting http.proxyHost
and http.proxyPort
system properties
10.6. Errors
Any I/O type errors that occur during a download operation (e.g. HTTP 500 responses) will result in a DownloadException
being thrown that wraps the
original exception and provides access to the HttpURLConnection
used to make the request.
11. Scripts and binding
Geb supports being used in scripting environments via both the Browser.drive()
method, and by using the geb.binding.BindingUpdater
class that populates and updates a
groovy.lang.Binding
that can be used with scripts.
This is also the same mechanism that can be used with Cucumber-JVM.
11.1. Setup
To use the binding support, you simply create a BindingUpdater
object with a Binding
and Browser
…
import geb.Browser
import geb.binding.BindingUpdater
def binding = new Binding()
def browser = new Browser()
def updater = new BindingUpdater(binding, browser)
updater.initialize() (1)
def script = getClass().getResource(resourcePath).text
def result = new GroovyShell(binding).evaluate(script) (2)
updater.remove() (3)
1 | Populate and start updating the browser. |
2 | Run a script from a resource loaded from the classpath. |
3 | Remove Geb bits from the binding and stop updating it. |
11.2. The binding environment
11.2.1. Browser methods and properties
The BindingUpdater
installs shortcuts into the binding for most of the Browser
public methods.
The following is an example script that will work if BindingUpdater
is initialized on its binding…
go "some/page"
at(SomePage)
waitFor { $("p#status").text() == "ready" }
js.someJavaScriptFunction()
downloadText($("a.textFile").@href)
In a managed binding, all of the methods/properties that you can usually call in the Browser.drive()
method are available.
This includes the $()
method.
The following methods are available:
-
$()
-
go()
-
to()
-
via()
-
at()
-
waitFor()
-
withAlert()
-
withNoAlert()
-
withConfirm()
-
withNoConfirm()
-
download()
-
downloadStream()
-
downloadText()
-
downloadBytes()
-
downloadContent()
-
report()
-
reportGroup()
-
cleanReportGroupDir()
The JavaScript interface property js
is also available. The Browser
object itself is available as the browser
property.
11.2.2. The current page
The binding updater also updates the page
property of the binding to be the browser’s current page…
import geb.Page
class InitialPage extends Page {
static content = {
button(to: NextPage) { $("input.do-stuff") }
}
}
class NextPage extends Page {
}
to InitialPage
assert page instanceof InitialPage
page.button.click()
assert page instanceof NextPage
12. Reporting
Geb includes a simple reporting mechanism which can be used to snapshot the state of the browser at any point in time.
Reporters are implementations of the Reporter
interface.
Geb ships with three implementations that actually write reports: PageSourceReporter
, ScreenshotReporter
and FramesSourceReporter
as well as two ancillary implementations: CompositeReporter
and MultiWindowReporter
.
There are three bits of configuration that pertain to reporting: the reporter implementation, the reports directory and whether to
only report test failures or not. If no reporter is explicitly defined, a composite reporter will be created from a ScreenshotReporter
(takes a PNG screenshot) and PageSourceReporter
(dumps the current
DOM state as HTML).
You take a report by calling the report(String label)
method on the browser object.
Browser.drive {
go "http://google.com"
report "google home page"
}
The |
Assuming that we configured a reportsDir
of “reports/geb
”, after running this script we will find two files in this directory:
-
google home page.html
- A HTML dump of the page source -
google home page.png
- A screenshot of the browser as a PNG file (if the driver implementation supports this)
To avoid issues with reserved characters in filenames, Geb replaces any character in the report name that is not an alphanumeric, a space or a hyphen with an underscore. |
12.1. Reporting on contents of frames
If you wish to configure the reporting to also write reports which contain the source content of page frames you can do so the following way:
import geb.report.*
reporter = new CompositeReporter(new PageSourceReporter(), new ScreenshotReporter(), new FramesSourceReporter())
12.2. Reporting on multiple windows
By default, reports are only taken for the window which is set to be the current browser window at the time of taking a report.
It’s also possible to take reports for each of the opened windows by configuring the reporting to use MultiWindowReporter
:
import geb.report.*
reporter = new MultiWindowReporter(new CompositeReporter(new PageSourceReporter(), new ScreenshotReporter()))
12.3. The report group
The configuration mechanism allows you to specify the base reportsDir
which is where reports are written to by default.
It is also possible to change the report group to a relative path inside this directory.
Browser.drive {
reportGroup "google"
go "http://google.com"
report "home page"
reportGroup "geb"
go "http://gebish.org"
report "home page"
}
We have now created the following files inside the reportsDir
…
-
google/home page.html
-
google/home page.png
-
gebish/home page.html
-
gebish/home page.png
The browser will create the directory for the report group as needed.
By default, the report group is not set which means that reports are written to the base of the reportsDir
.
To go back to this after setting a report group, simply call reportGroup(null)
.
It is common for test integrations to manage the report group for you, setting it to the name of the test class. |
12.4. Listening to reporting
It is possible to register a listener on the reporter that gets notified when a report is taken.
This was added to make it possible to write something to stdout when a report is taken, which is how the
Jenkins JUnit Attachments Plugin makes it possible to associate arbitrary files to test execution.
Reporting listeners are of type ReportingListener
can be specified as part of the config…
import geb.report.*
reportingListener = new ReportingListener() {
void onReport(Reporter reporter, ReportState reportState, List<File> reportFiles) {
reportFiles.each {
println "[[ATTACHMENT|$it.absolutePath]]"
}
}
}
12.5. Cleaning
Geb does not automatically clean the reports dir for you. It does however provide a method that you can call to do this.
Browser.drive {
cleanReportGroupDir()
go "http://google.com"
report "home page"
}
The cleanReportGroupDir()
method will remove whatever the reports group dir is set to at the time.
If it cannot do this it will throw an exception.
The Spock, JUnit and TestNG test integrations do automatically clean the reports dir for you, see the section in the testing chapter on these integrations. |
13. Testing
Geb provides first class support for functional web testing via integration with popular testing frameworks such as Spock, JUnit, TestNg and Cucumber-JVM.
13.1. Spock, JUnit & TestNG
The Spock, JUnit and TestNG integrations work fundamentally the same way.
They provide subclasses that setup a Browser
instance that all method calls and property accesses/references resolve against via Groovy’s methodMissing
and propertyMissing
mechanism.
Recall that the browser instance also forwards any method calls or property accesses/references that it can’t handle to its current page object, which helps to remove a lot of noise from the test. |
Consider the following Spock spec…
import geb.spock.GebSpec
class FunctionalSpec extends GebSpec {
def "go to login"() {
when:
go "/login"
then:
title == "Login Screen"
}
}
Which is equivalent to…
import geb.spock.GebSpec
class FunctionalSpec extends GebSpec {
def "verbosely go to login"() {
when:
browser.go "/login"
then:
browser.page.title == "Login Screen"
}
}
13.1.1. Configuration
The browser instance is created by the testing integrations. The configuration mechanism allows you to control aspects such as the driver implementation and base URL.
13.1.2. Reporting
The Spock, JUnit and TestNG integrations also ship a superclass (the name of the class for each integration module is provided below) that automatically takes reports with the label “failure” if a test fails. They also set the report group to the name of the test class (substituting “.” with “/”).
The report(String label)
browser method is replaced with a specialised version.
This method works the same as the browser method, but adds counters and the current test method name as prefixes to the given label.
package my.tests
import geb.spock.GebReportingSpec
class LoginSpec extends GebReportingSpec {
def "login"() {
when:
go "/login"
username = "me"
report "login screen" (1)
login().click()
then:
title == "Logged in!"
}
}
1 | Take a report of the login screen. |
Assuming a configured reportsDir
of reports/geb
and the default reporters (i.e. ScreenshotReporter
and PageSourceReporter
), we would find the following files:
-
reports/geb/my/tests/LoginSpec/001-001-login-login screen.html
-
reports/geb/my/tests/LoginSpec/001-001-login-login screen.png
If the assertion on the title fails then the following files would be generated as well:
-
reports/geb/my/tests/LoginSpec/001-002-login-failure.html
-
reports/geb/my/tests/LoginSpec/001-002-login-failure.png
The report file name format is:
«test method number»-«report number in test method»-«test method name»-«label».«extension»
Reporting is an extremely useful feature and can help you diagnose test failures much easier. Wherever possible, favour the use of the auto-reporting base classes.
13.1.3. Cookie management
The Spock, JUnit and TestNG integrations will automatically clear the browser’s cookies for the current domain at the end of each test method.
For JUnit 4 it happens in an @After
method in geb.junit4.GebTest
and for TestNG it happens in an @AfterMethod
method
in geb.testng.GebTestTrait
.
The geb.spock.GebSpec
class will clear the cookies in the cleanup()
method unless the spec is @Stepwise
, in which case they are cleared in cleanupSpec()
(meaning that all feature methods in a
stepwise spec share the same browser state).
This auto-clearing of cookies can be disabled via configuration.
If you need to clear cookies in multiple domains you will need to manually track the urls and call clearCookies(String… additionalUrls)
.
13.1.4. Web storage management
The Spock, JUnit and TestNG integrations can be configured to automatically clear the browser’s web storage, that is both local and session storage, for the current domain at the end of each test method.
For JUnit 4 it happens in an @After
method in geb.junit4.GebTest
and for TestNG it happens in an @AfterMethod
method
in geb.testng.GebTestTrait
.
The geb.spock.GebSpec
class will clear the web storage in the cleanup()
method unless the spec is @Stepwise
, in which case it is cleared in cleanupSpec()
(meaning that all feature methods in a
stepwise spec share the same browser state).
13.1.5. Restarting the browser mid-test
Should you ever wish to restart the browser mid-test you have to be aware that there are two layers of caching of the driver instance within Geb’s testing support.
Firstly the lazy initialised Browser
instance stored as a field in base classes providing support for various test frameworks holds a reference to a WebDriver
instance - you will therefore need to call resetBrowser()
method from the base class to clear that field.
Secondly, Geb caches WebDriver
instances by default as described in the section about implicit driver lifecycle. To clear the cache and quit the browser you will need to call CachingDriverFactory.clearCacheAndQuitDriver()
.
Therefore, you can use the following code within a test to restart the browser:
resetBrowser()
CachingDriverFactory.clearCacheAndQuitDriver()
13.1.6. JAR and class names
The following table illustrates the specific JARs and class names for various test frameworks that Geb integrates with.
Framework | JAR | Base Class / Trait | Reporting Base Class / Trait |
---|---|---|---|
Spock |
|||
JUnit 4 |
|||
TestNG |
13.1.7. Example projects
The following projects can be used as starting references:
13.2. Cucumber (Cucumber-JVM)
It is possible to both:
-
Write your own Cucumber-JVM steps that manipulate Geb
-
Use a library of pre-built steps that drives Geb to do many common tasks
13.2.1. Writing your own steps
Use Geb’s binding management features to bind a browser in before / after hooks, often in a file named env.groovy
:
def bindingUpdater
Before() { scenario ->
bindingUpdater = new BindingUpdater(binding, new Browser())
bindingUpdater.initialize()
}
After() { scenario ->
bindingUpdater.remove()
}
Then normal Geb commands and objects are available in your Cucumber steps:
import static cucumber.api.groovy.EN.*
Given(~/I am on the DuckDuckGo search page/) { ->
to DuckDuckGoHomePage
waitFor { at(DuckDuckGoHomePage) }
}
When(~/I search for "(.*)"/) { String query ->
page.search.value(query)
page.searchButton.click()
}
Then(~/I can see some results/) { ->
assert at(DuckDuckGoResultsPage)
}
Then(~/the first link should be "(.*)"/) { String text ->
waitFor { page.results }
assert page.resultLink(0).text()?.contains(text)
}
13.2.2. Using pre-built steps
The geb-cucumber project has a set of pre-built cucumber steps that drive Geb. So for example a feature with steps similar to the above would look like:
When I go to the duck duck go home page And I enter "cucumber-jvm github" into the search field And I click the search button Then the results table 1st row link matches /cucumber\/cucumber-jvm · GitHub.*/
See geb-cucumber for more examples.
geb-cucumber also does Geb binding automatically, so if it is picked up you don’t need to do it yourself as above.
13.2.3. Example project
The following project has examples of both writing your own steps and using geb-cucumber:
14. Cloud browser testing
When you want to perform web testing on multiple browsers and operating systems, it can be quite complicated to maintain machines for each of the target environments.
There are a few companies that provide "remote web browsers as a service", making it easy to do this sort of matrix testing without having to maintain the multiple browser installations yourself.
Geb provides easy integration with three such services, SauceLabs, BrowserStack and LambdaTest.
This integration includes two parts: assistance with creating a driver in GebConfig.groovy
and a Gradle plugin.
14.1. Creating a driver
For all three SauceLabs, BrowserStack and LambdaTest, a special driver factory is provided that, given a browser specification as well as an username and access key, creates an instance of RemoteWebDriver
configured
to use a browser in the cloud.
Examples of typical usage in GebConfig.groovy
are included below.
They will configure Geb to run in SauceLabs/BrowserStack/LambdaTest if the appropriate system property is set, and if not it will use whatever driver that is configured.
This is useful if you want to run the code in a local browser for development.
In theory you could use any system property to pass the browser specification but geb.saucelabs.browser
/geb.browserstack.browser
/geb.lambdatest.browser
are also used by the Geb Gradle plugins, so it’s a good idea to
stick with those property names.
The first parameter passed to the create()
method is a ”browser specification“ and it should be a list of required browser capabilities in Java properties file format:
browserName=«browser name as per values of fields in org.openqa.selenium.remote.BrowserType» platform=«platform as per enum item names in org.openqa.selenium.Platform» version=«version»
Assuming you’re using the following snippet in your GebConfig.groovy
to execute your code via SauceLabs with Firefox 19 on Linux, you would set the geb.saucelabs.browser
system property to:
browserName=firefox platform=LINUX version=19
and to execute it with IE 9 on Vista to:
browserName=internet explorer platform=VISTA version=9
Some browsers like Chrome automatically update to the latest version; for these browsers you don’t need to specify the version as there’s only one, and you would use something like:
browserName=chrome platform=MAC
as the ”browser specification“. For a full list of available browsers, versions and operating systems refer to your cloud provider’s documentation:
Please note that Geb Gradle plugins can set the geb.saucelabs.browser
/geb.browserstack.browser
/geb.lambdatest.browser
system properties for you using the aforementioned format.
Following the browser specification are the username and access key used to identify your account with the cloud provider. The example uses two environment variables to access this information. This is usually the easiest way of passing something secret to your build in open CI services like drone.io or Travis CI if your code is public, but you can use other mechanisms if desired.
You can optionally pass additional configuration settings by providing a Map to the create()
method as the last parameter.
The configuration options available are described in your cloud provider’s documentation:
Finally, there is also an overloaded version of create()
method available that
doesn’t take a string specification and allows you to simply specify all the required capabilities using a map.
This method might be useful if you just want to use the factory, but don’t need the build level parametrization.
14.1.1. SauceLabsDriverFactory
The following is an example of utilizing SauceLabsDriverFactory
in GebConfig.groovy
to configure a driver that will use a browser provided in the SauceLabs cloud.
def sauceLabsBrowser = System.getProperty("geb.saucelabs.browser")
if (sauceLabsBrowser) {
driver = {
def username = System.getenv("GEB_SAUCE_LABS_USER")
assert username
def accessKey = System.getenv("GEB_SAUCE_LABS_ACCESS_PASSWORD")
assert accessKey
new SauceLabsDriverFactory().create(sauceLabsBrowser, username, accessKey)
}
}
By default SauceLabsDriverFactory
creates RemoteWebDriver
instances connected to SauceLabs' US data center.
If you wish to use a different data center then simply pass the host name for the given data center to the constructor.
The below examples shows uses the hostname of the EU data center:
new SauceLabsDriverFactory("ondemand.eu-central-1.saucelabs.com")
14.1.2. BrowserStackDriverFactory
The following is an example of utilizing BrowserStackDriverFactory
in GebConfig.groovy
to configure a driver that will use a browser provided in the BrowserStack cloud.
def browserStackBrowser = System.getProperty("geb.browserstack.browser")
if (browserStackBrowser) {
driver = {
def username = System.getenv("GEB_BROWSERSTACK_USERNAME")
assert username
def accessKey = System.getenv("GEB_BROWSERSTACK_AUTHKEY")
assert accessKey
new BrowserStackDriverFactory().create(browserStackBrowser, username, accessKey)
}
}
If using localIdentifier
support:
def browserStackBrowser = System.getProperty("geb.browserstack.browser")
if (browserStackBrowser) {
driver = {
def username = System.getenv("GEB_BROWSERSTACK_USERNAME")
assert username
def accessKey = System.getenv("GEB_BROWSERSTACK_AUTHKEY")
assert accessKey
def localId = System.getenv("GEB_BROWSERSTACK_LOCALID")
assert localId
new BrowserStackDriverFactory().create(browserStackBrowser, username, accessKey, localId)
}
}
14.1.3. LambdaTestDriverFactory
The following is an example of utilizing LambdaTestDriverFactory
in GebConfig.groovy
to configure a driver that will use a browser provided in the LambdaTest cloud.
def lambdaTestBrowser = System.getProperty("geb.lambdatest.browser")
if (lambdaTestBrowser) {
driver = {
def username = System.getenv("GEB_LAMBDATEST_USERNAME")
assert username
def accessKey = System.getenv("GEB_LAMBDATEST_AUTHKEY")
assert accessKey
new LambdaTestDriverFactory().create(lambdaTestBrowser, username, accessKey)
}
}
If using TunnelIdentifier
support:
def lambdaTestBrowser = System.getProperty("geb.lambdatest.browser")
if (lambdaTestBrowser) {
driver = {
def username = System.getenv("GEB_LAMBDATEST_USERNAME")
assert username
def accessKey = System.getenv("GEB_LAMBDATEST_AUTHKEY")
assert accessKey
def tunnelId = System.getenv("GEB_LAMBDATEST_TUNNELID")
assert localId
new LambdaTestDriverFactory().create(lambdaTestBrowser, username, accessKey, tunnelId)
}
}
14.2. Gradle plugins
For SauceLabs, BrowserStack and LambdaTest, Geb provides a Gradle plugin which simplifies declaring the account and browsers that are desired, as well as configuring a tunnel to allow the cloud provider to
access local applications.
These plugins allow easily creating multiple Test
tasks that will have the appropriate geb.PROVIDER.browser
property set (where PROVIDER is either saucelabs
, browserstack
or lambdatest
).
The value of that property can be then passed in configuration file to SauceLabsDriverFactory
/BrowserStackDriverFactory
/LambdaTestDriverFactory
as the ”browser specification“.
Examples of typical usage are included below.
14.2.1. geb-saucelabs plugin
Following is an example of using the geb-saucelabs Gradle plugin.
import geb.gradle.saucelabs.SauceAccount
apply plugin: "geb-saucelabs" (1)
buildscript { (2)
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath 'org.gebish:geb-gradle:3.4'
}
}
dependencies { (3)
sauceConnect "com.saucelabs:ci-sauce:1.141"
}
sauceLabs {
browsers { (4)
firefox_linux_19
chrome_mac
delegate."internet explorer_vista_9"
nexus4 { (5)
capabilities(
browserName: "android",
platform: "Linux",
version: "4.4",
deviceName: "LG Nexus 4"
)
}
}
task { (6)
maxHeapSize = "512m"
}
additionalTask("quick") { (7)
useJUnit {
includeCategories "com.example.Quick"
}
}
account { (8)
username = System.getenv(SauceAccount.USER_ENV_VAR)
accessKey = System.getenv(SauceAccount.ACCESS_KEY_ENV_VAR)
}
connect { (9)
port = 4444 (10)
additionalOptions = ['--proxy', 'proxy.example.com:8080'] (11)
}
}
1 | Apply the plugin to the build. |
2 | Specify how to resolve the plugin. |
3 | Declare version of SauceConnect to be used as part of the sauceConnect configuration. This will be used by tasks that open a SauceConnect tunnel before
running the generated test tasks which means that the browsers in the cloud will have localhost pointing at the machine running the build. |
4 | Declare that tests should run in 3 different browsers using the shorthand syntax; this will generate the following Test tasks: firefoxLinux19Test , chromeMacTest and
internet explorerVista9Test . |
5 | Explicitly specify the required browser capabilities if the shorthand syntax doesn’t allow you to express all needed capabilities; the example will generate a Test task named nexus4Test . |
6 | Configure all of the generated test tasks; for each of them the closure is run with delegate set to a test task being configured. |
7 | Add an additional test task for each of the browsers with the string passed as the first argument prepended to the task name; the closure passed as the last argument is run with delegate set to the test task being added. |
8 | Pass credentials for SauceConnect. |
9 | Additionally configure SauceConnect if desired. |
10 | Override the port used by SauceConnect, defaults to 4445. |
11 | Pass additional command line options to SauceConnect. |
You can use |
Disabling SauceConnect
The plugin by default manages the lifecycle of an instance of SauceConnect which allows to point the browsers provisioned at SauceLabs at urls which are accessible from localhost but not from the Internet.
If you are pointing the browsers only at urls which are accessible on the Internet and wish to get rid of the overhead associated with opening the tunnel you might want to disable the use of SauceConnect. It can be done in the following way:
sauceLabs {
useTunnel = false
}
14.2.2. geb-browserstack plugin
Following is an example of using the geb-browserstack Gradle plugin.
import geb.gradle.browserstack.BrowserStackAccount
apply plugin: "geb-browserstack" (1)
buildscript { (2)
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath 'org.gebish:geb-gradle:3.4'
}
}
browserStack {
application 'http://localhost:8080' (3)
browsers { (4)
firefox_mac_19
chrome_mac
delegate."internet explorer_windows_9"
nexus4 { (5)
capabilities browserName: "android", platform: "ANDROID", device: "Google Nexus 4"
}
}
task { (6)
maxHeapSize = "512m"
}
additionalTask("quick") { (7)
useJUnit {
includeCategories "com.example.Quick"
}
}
account { (8)
username = System.getenv(BrowserStackAccount.USER_ENV_VAR)
accessKey = System.getenv(BrowserStackAccount.ACCESS_KEY_ENV_VAR)
}
local {
force = true (9)
tunnelReadyMessage = 'You can now access your local server(s) in our remote browser' (10)
}
}
1 | Apply the plugin to the build. |
2 | Specify how to resolve the plugin. |
3 | Specify which urls the BrowserStack Tunnel should be able to access. Multiple applications can be specified. If no applications are specified, the tunnel will not be restricted to particular URLs. |
4 | Declare that tests should run in 3 different browsers using the shorthand syntax; this will generate the following Test tasks: firefoxLinux19Test , chromeMacTest and
internet explorerVista9Test . |
5 | Explicitly specify the required browser capabilities if the shorthand syntax doesn’t allow you to express all needed capabilities; the example will generate a Test task named nexus4Test . |
6 | Configure all of the generated test tasks; for each of them the closure is run with delegate set to a test task being configured. |
7 | Add an additional test task for each of the browsers with the string passed as the first argument prepended to the task name; the closure passed as the last argument is run with delegate set to the test task being added. |
8 | Pass credentials for BrowserStack. |
9 | Configure BrowserStack tunnel to route all traffic via the local machine; this configuration property controls the -forcelocal flag and the default value for it is false . |
10 | Set a custom message searched for in BrowserStack tunnel process output before considering it successfully started - useful if the output of the process has changed and the default message is no longer found. |
It’s also possible to specify location and credentials for the proxy to be used with the BrowserStack Tunnel:
browserStack {
local {
proxyHost = '127.0.0.1'
proxyPort = '8080'
proxyUser = 'user'
proxyPass = 'secret'
}
}
As well as the tunnel id and any other command line options necessary:
browserStack {
local {
id = 'Custom id'
additionalOptions = ['--log-file', '/tmp/browser-stack-local.log']
}
}
You can use |
Disabling BrowserStack Tunnel
The plugin by default manages the lifecycle of a tunnel which allows to point the browsers provisioned at BrowserStack at urls which are accessible from localhost but not from the Internet.
If you are pointing the browsers only at urls which are accessible on the Internet and wish to get rid of the overhead associated with opening the tunnel you might want to disable the use of it. It can be done in the following way:
browserStack {
useTunnel = false
}
14.2.3. geb-lambdatest plugin
Following is an example of using the geb-lambdatest Gradle plugin.
import geb.gradle.lambdatest.LambdaTestAccount
apply plugin: "geb-lambdatest" (1)
buildscript { (2)
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath 'org.gebish:geb-gradle:3.4'
}
}
lambdaTest {
application 'http://localhost:8080' (3)
browsers { (4)
chrome_windows_70 {
capabilities platform: "Windows 10" (5)
}
}
task { (6)
maxHeapSize = "512m"
}
additionalTask("quick") { (7)
useJUnit {
includeCategories "com.example.Quick"
}
}
account { (8)
username = System.getenv(LambdaTestAccount.USER_ENV_VAR)
accessKey = System.getenv(LambdaTestAccount.ACCESS_KEY_ENV_VAR)
}
tunnelOps {
additionalOptions = ['--proxyhost', 'proxy.example.com'] (9)
tunnelReadyMessage = 'Secure connection established, you may start your tests now' (10)
}
}
1 | Apply the plugin to the build. |
2 | Specify how to resolve the plugin. |
3 | Specify which urls the LambdaTest Tunnel should be able to access. Multiple applications can be specified. If no applications are specified, the tunnel will not be restricted to particular URLs. |
4 | The tests would run in chrome on Windows 10 as sample. |
5 | Explicitly specify the required browser capabilities if the shorthand syntax doesn’t allow you to express all needed capabilities. |
6 | Configure all of the generated test tasks; for each of them the closure is run with delegate set to a test task being configured. |
7 | Add an additional test task for each of the browsers with the string passed as the first argument prepended to the task name; the closure passed as the last argument is run with delegate set to the test task being added. |
8 | Pass credentials for LambdaTest. |
9 | Pass additional command line options to LambdaTestTunnel. |
10 | Set a custom message searched for in LambdaTest tunnel process output before considering it successfully started - useful if the output of the process has changed and the default message is no longer found. |
You can use |
Disabling LambdaTest Tunnel
The plugin by default manages the lifecycle of a tunnel which allows to point the browsers provisioned at LambdaTest at urls which are accessible from localhost but not from the Internet.
If you are pointing the browsers only at urls which are accessible on the Internet and wish to get rid of the overhead associated with opening the tunnel you might want to disable the use of it. It can be done in the following way:
lambdaTest {
useTunnel = false
}
Build system & framework integrations
This kind of integration for Geb is typically focused on managing the base URL and reports dir, as build systems tend to be able to provide this configuration (via the build adapter mechanism).
Gradle
Using Geb with Gradle simply involves pulling in the appropriate dependencies, and configuring the base URL and reports dir in the build script if they are necessary.
Below is a valid Gradle build.gradle
file for working with Geb for testing.
apply plugin: "groovy"
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
ext {
gebVersion = "3.4"
seleniumVersion = "3.141.59"
}
dependencies {
// If using Spock, need to depend on geb-spock
testCompile "org.gebish:geb-spock:${gebVersion}"
testCompile "org.spockframework:spock-core:1.3-groovy-2.5"
// If using JUnit, need to depend on geb-junit (3 or 4)
testCompile "org.gebish:geb-junit4:${gebVersion}"
testCompile "junit:junit-dep:4.8.2"
// Need a driver implementation
testCompile "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-firefox-driver:${seleniumVersion}"
testRuntime "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-support:${seleniumVersion}"
}
test {
systemProperties "geb.build.reportsDir": "$reportsDir/geb"
}
There is a Gradle example project available.
Maven
Using Geb with Maven simply involves pulling in the appropriate dependencies, and configuring the base URL and reports dir in the build script if they are necessary.
Below is a valid pom.xml
file for working with Geb for testing (with Spock).
<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/maven-4.0.0.xsd">
<modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
<groupId>org.gebish.example</groupId>
<artifactId>geb-maven-example</artifactId>
<packaging>jar</packaging>
<version>1</version>
<name>Geb Maven Example</name>
<url>http://www.gebish.org</url>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>junit</groupId>
<artifactId>junit</artifactId>
<version>4.8.2</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.spockframework</groupId>
<artifactId>spock-core</artifactId>
<version>1.3-groovy-2.5</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.gebish</groupId>
<artifactId>geb-spock</artifactId>
<version>3.4</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.seleniumhq.selenium</groupId>
<artifactId>selenium-firefox-driver</artifactId>
<version>3.141.59</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.seleniumhq.selenium</groupId>
<artifactId>selenium-support</artifactId>
<version>3.141.59</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.18.1</version>
<configuration>
<includes>
<include>*Spec.*</include>
</includes>
<systemPropertyVariables>
<geb.build.baseUrl>http://google.com/ncr</geb.build.baseUrl>
<geb.build.reportsDir>target/test-reports/geb</geb.build.reportsDir>
</systemPropertyVariables>
</configuration>
</plugin>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.gmaven</groupId>
<artifactId>gmaven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.3</version>
<configuration>
<providerSelection>1.7</providerSelection>
</configuration>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>testCompile</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
</project>
There is a Maven example project available.
IDE support
Geb does not require any special plugins or configuration for use inside an IDE. However, there are some considerations that will be addressed in this chapter.
Execution
Geb scripts can be executed in an IDE if that IDE supports executing Groovy scripts.
All IDEs that support Groovy typically support this.
There are typically only two concerns in the configuration of this: getting the Geb classes on the classpath, and the GebConfig.groovy
file.
Geb tests can be executed in an IDE if that IDE supports Groovy scripts and the testing framework that you are using with Geb.
If you are using JUnit or Spock (which is based on JUnit) this is trivial, as all modern Java IDEs support JUnit.
As far as the IDE is concerned, the Geb test is simply a JUnit test and no special support is required.
As with executing scripts, the IDE must put the Geb classes on the classpath for test execution and the GebConfig.groovy
file must be accessible (typically putting this file at the root of the
test source tree is sufficient).
In both cases, the simplest way to create such an IDE configuration is to use a build tool (such as Gradle or Maven) that supports IDE integration. This will take care of the classpath setup and other concerns.
Authoring assistance (autocomplete and navigation)
This section discusses what kind of authoring assistance can be provided by IDEs and usage patterns that enable better authoring support.
Dynamism and conciseness vs tooling support
Geb heavily embraces the dynamic typing offered by Groovy, to achieve conciseness for the purpose of readability. This immediately reduces the amount of authoring assistance that an IDE can provide when authoring Geb code. This is an intentional compromise. The primary cost in functional/acceptance testing is in the maintenance of the test suite over time. Geb optimizes for this in several ways, one of which being the focus on intention revealing code (which is achieved through conciseness).
That said, if authoring support is a concern for you, read on to learn for details on ways to forsake conciseness in order to improve authoring support.
Strong typing
In order to gain improved authoring support, you must include types in your tests and page objects. Additionally, you must explicitly access the browser and page objects instead of relying on dynamic dispatch.
Here’s an example of idiomatic (untyped) Geb code.
to HomePage
loginPageLink.click()
at LoginPage
username = "user1"
password = "password1"
loginButton.click()
at SecurePage
The same code written with types would look like:
HomePage homePage = browser.to HomePage
homePage.loginPageLink.click()
LoginPage loginPage = browser.at LoginPage
SecurePage securePage = loginPage.login("user1", "password1")
Where the page objects are:
class HomePage extends Page {
Navigator getLoginPageLink() {
$("#loginLink")
}
}
class LoginPage extends Page {
static at = { title == "Login Page" }
Navigator getLoginButton() {
$("input", type: "submit")
}
SecurePage login(String username, String password) {
$(name: "username").value username
$(name: "password").value password
loginButton.click()
browser.at SecurePage
}
}
class SecurePage extends Page {
static at = { title == "Secure Page" }
}
In summary:
-
Use the
browser
object explicitly (made available by the testing adapters) -
Use the page instance returned by the
to()
andat()
methods instead of calling through the browser -
Use methods on the
Page
classes instead of thecontent {}
block and dynamic properties -
If you need to use content definition options like
required:
andwait:
then you can still reference content elements defined using the DSL in methods onPage
andModule
classes as usual, e.g.:
static content = {
async(wait: true) { $("#async") }
}
String asyncText() {
async.text() (1)
}
1 | Wait here for the async definition to return a non-empty Navigator… |
Using this “typed” style is not an all or nothing proposition.
The typing options exist on a spectrum and can be used selectively where/when the cost of the extra “noise” is worth it to achieve better IDE support.
For example, a mix of using the content {}
DSL and methods can easily be used.
The key enabler is to capture the result of the to()
and at()
methods in order to access the page object instance.
Performing assertions as part of an at check
An alternative to tracking current page instance using variables to gain improved authoring support is using at()
methods that take a closure as the last argument.
Each statement in that closure is implicitly asserted and its delegate is set to the page passed as the first argument.
Thanks to using @DelegatesTo
annotation on the closure parameter in the method signature, IDEs which support that annotation understand that calls are delegated to a given page instance and can provide code completion.
The example from the previous section could be rewritten in the following way:
HomePage homePage = browser.to HomePage
homePage.loginPageLink.click()
browser.at(LoginPage) {
login("user1", "password1")
}
at SecurePage
IntelliJ IDEA support
IntelliJ IDEA (since version 12) has special support for authoring Geb code. This is built in to the Groovy support; no additional installations are required.
The support provides:
-
Understanding of implicit browser methods (e.g.
to()
,at()
) in test classes (e.g.extends GebSpec
) -
Understanding of content defined via the Content DSL (within
Page
andModule
classes only) -
Completion in
at {}
andcontent {}
blocks
This effectively enables more authoring support with less explicit type information. The Geb development team would like to thank the good folks at JetBrains for adding this explicit support for Geb to IDEA.
About the project
The Geb home page can be found at http://www.gebish.org.
API reference
The API reference can be found here.
Support & development
Support for Geb is offered on the geb-user@googlegroups.com mailing list, which can be subscribed to here.
Ideas and new features for Geb can be discussed on the geb-dev@googlegroups.com mailing list, which can be subscribed to here.
Credits
Contributors
-
Alexander Zolotov - TestNG Integration
-
Christoph Neuroth - Various fixes and patches
-
Antony Jones - Various fixes and patches, doc improvements
-
Jan-Hendrik Peters - Doc improvements
-
Tomás Lin - Doc improvements
-
Jason Cahoon - Bug fix around text matchers
-
Tomasz Kalkosiński - Doc improvements
-
Rich Douglas Evans - Doc improvements
-
Ian Durkan - Doc improvements
-
Colin Harrington - Doc improvements
-
Bob Herrmann - Doc improvements
-
George T Walters II - Page option support for
withWindow()
-
Craig Atkinson - Doc improvements
-
Andy Duncan - Fail fast when unexpected pages are encountered
-
John Engelman - Grails integration improvements
-
Michael Legart - Grails integration improvements
-
Graeme Rocher - Grails integration improvements
-
Craig Atkinson - Bug fix around unexpected pages, fix for [#422]
-
Ken Geis - Doc improvements
-
Kelly Robinson - Additional configuration parameters for SauceLabs
-
Todd Gerspacher - Doc improvements, Cleaned up settings.gradle
-
David M. Carr - BrowserStack integration
-
Tom Dunstan - Cucumber integration and related documentation
-
Brian Kotek - Doc improvements
-
David W Millar - Doc improvements
-
Ai-Lin Liou - Doc improvements
-
Varun Menon - Selenium By selector support and related documentation, Support navigating to page instances in addition to classes
-
Anders D. Johnson - Doc improvements
-
Hiroyuki Ohnaka - Doc improvements
-
Erik Pragt - Initial migration of the manual to AsciiDoctor
-
Vijay Bolleypally - Various fixes
-
Pierre Hilt -
hasNot()
filtering -
Yotaro Takahashi - Doc improvements
-
Jochen Berger - Better error reporting when trying to set a nonexistent select option
-
Matan Katz - Support for setting the
forcelocal
flag for BrowserStack tunnel -
Victor Parmar - Add configuration option for including cause string representation in message of
WaitTimeoutException
-
Berardino la Torre - Fix incorrect delegation of waitFor() methods
-
Markus Schlichting - Doc fixes
-
Andrey Hitrin - Improvement to character replacing in report file names
-
Leo Fedorov - Support for
reportOnTestFailureOnly
config option for Spock integration -
Chris Byrneham - Ability to specify proxy location and credentials to use with BrowserStack tunnel
-
Aseem Bansal - Doc improvements
-
Tomasz Przybysz - Unwrapping module to its declared type
-
Brian Stewart - Doc improvements
-
Jacob Aae Mikkelsen - Various fixes and improvements
-
Patrick Radtke - Doc improvements
-
Leonard Brünings - Fix for unexpected pages only being checked after at check fails for the expected page
-
Lee Butts - Improved error message when trying to select null on a single-select select element
-
Ricki Runge - Ignore case of tag names passed as part of css selectors to
Navigator.filter()
-
Jesús L. D. Muriel - Doc fixes
-
Jochen Schalanda - Doc
-
Michael Kutz - Addition of
NumberInput
,RangeInput
,UrlInput
,PasswordInput
,ColorInput
,DateTimeLocalInput
,TimeInput
,MonthInput
andWeekInput
-
Alexander Kriegisch - Doc fixes
-
Harley Faggetter - Doc fixes
-
Arpit Gupta - Integration with LambdaTest
-
Jonathan Leitschuh - Configure execution of Gradle Wrapper Validation GitHub Action on the project
-
José Luis Rodríguez Alonso - Website improvements
History
This page lists the high level changes between versions of Geb.
3.4
New features
-
Add support for adding multiple test tasks per browser type to cloud browser gradle plugins. [#597]
Fixes
-
Fix an overflow for large
int
timeouts ingeb.Wait
causingBrowser.pause()
to fail and return instantly. [#605] -
Update the message searched for in BrowserStack tunnel process output before considering it successfully as started after output changes in the latest version. [#607]
-
Update the message searched for in LambdaTest tunnel process output before considering it successfully as started after output changes in the latest version. [#608]
-
Fix detection of 64 bit architecture in Gradle tasks downloading BrowserStack and LambdaTest tunnel binaries. [#610]
Improvements
-
Make BrowserStack and LambdaTest tunnel ready messages configurable. [#611]
3.3
New features
-
Add ability to disable implicit assertions in particular waitFor block. [#578]
-
Add support to provide more information for UnexpectedPageException. [#596]
-
Add integration with LambdaTest. [#603]
-
Add a way to react when an unexpected page is encountered. [#598]
-
Add support for setting network throttling via setNetworkConditions Chrome command. [#602]
Fixes
-
BindingUpdater
is not forwarding methods fromgeb.textmatching.TextMatchingSupport
onto theBrowser
instance. [#601]
3.2
Fixes
-
Unexpected pages are now only checked after checking that none of the pages passed to
Browser.page()
methods taking a list match. [#595] -
Fix global atCheckWaiting in combination with to:[…] leading to potentially long delays. [#594]
-
Fix a MissingMethodException when
Browser.withFrame(Navigator, Class<P>, Closure<T>)
is called. [#591] -
Support accessing
Browser
instance from module base definitions. [#582] -
Fix
withConfirm()
to work when accepting the dialog closes the window. [#568]
3.0
New features
Breaking changes
-
geb.navigator.EmptyNavigator
class has been removed. [#557] -
Signature of the method in
geb.navigator.factory.InnerNavigatorFactory
has been changed. [#557] -
Multiple methods have been moved up from
geb.navigator.Locator
togeb.navigator.BasicLocator
. [#557] -
geb.navigator.NonEmptyNavigator
has been renamed togeb.navigator.DefaultNavigator
. [#557] -
JUnit 3 support has been retired. [#532]
-
Update to Groovy 2.5.6. [#534]
-
Support for Groovy 2.3 has been removed. [#560]
-
Reports are now by default only taken only on test failure and not after every test. [#527]
-
Proxy settings for BrowserStackLocal, tunnel identifier and forcing all traffic through local machine are now configured in a different block when using geb-browserstack Gradle plugin. [#573]
-
Update to Spock 1.3, drop support for Spock 1.0. [#581]
2.3
New features
-
Added form control modules for url, password and number inputs. [#548]
-
Added form control module for color inputs. [#549]
-
Added form control module for datetime-local inputs. [#550]
-
Added form control module for time inputs. [#554]
-
Added form control module for month inputs. [#552]
-
Added form control module for range inputs. [#551]
-
Added form control module for week inputs. [#553]
-
Added
focused()
method onNavigable
which obtains aNavigator
wrapping the active (focused)WebElement
. [#546] -
Ability to require at checkers to be defined even for pages that are implicitly at checked. [#541]
Improvements
-
Add an at() method to geb.Page which always throws MissingMethodException. [#543]
-
Improve signatures of methods in FrameSupport that take page objects to provide autocompletion inside of the closure passed as the last argument. [#540]
-
Resolve properties and methods in the closure passed to withNewWindow() and withWindow() against the browser. [#545]
2.2
New features
-
Make it more convenient to wait on something while reloading the page. [#499]
-
Added
waitCondition
content template option. [#342] -
Added ability to disable use of tunnels in Gradle plugins for BrowserStack and SauceLabs. [#384]
-
Added
pause()
method toBrowser
class as an alternative to setting breakpoints when debugging. [#247] -
Added ability to access names of content defined using the DSL at runtime. [#369]
-
Added ability to configure default values of content DSL template options. [#369]
-
Added ability to configure default values of options passed to
withWindow()
andwithNewWindow()
. [#406] -
Added origin information to
TemplateDerivedPageContent
andPageContentContainer
. [#446] -
Added improved web storage support including management in test integrations. [#472]
Fixes
-
Fix translation of attribute map to css selector when finding elements for attribute value that is a GString. [#525]
-
Fix documentation around calling value() on unchecked checkboxes. [#520]
-
Make additional capabilities passed to cloud driver factory’s
create()
method override the capabilities that are hardcoded for a particular cloud driver provider. [#372] -
Fixed
getCheckedLabel()
onRadioButtons
module to return label text instead ofnull
when a checked radio button is wrapped by a label without afor
attribute. [#530] -
Fix links to manual sections that had non-unique ids. [#535]
Improvements
-
Support calling
GebReportingSpec#report(String)
from fixture methods. [#518] -
Add method for performing assertions as part of an at check. [#405]
-
Document how to configure proxy to be used by the direct download API. [#371]
-
Enable taking reports for all windows if multiple are open. [#401]
-
Describe what constitutes a good at checker in the manual. [#512]
-
Document how to restart the browser mid-test. [#473]
2.1
Breaking changes
-
Actually remove
FileInput#getFile()
which was supposed to be removed for 2.0 but wasn’t. [#503]
2.0
New features
-
Allow specifying the expected number of elements a content definition should return. [#149]
Fixes
-
Improved error message when trying to select null on a single-select select element. [#477]
-
Return a list of results instead of
null
fromnewWindow()
methods taking a window matching specification closure. [#476] -
Ignore case of tag names passed as part of css selectors to
Navigator.filter()
[#482] -
Gracefully handle incorrectly encoded URIs returned from
WebDriver.getCurrentUrl()
when navigating to urls. [#492]
Improvements
-
Change signatures of methods from
FrameSupport
to be more strongly typed. [#470]
Breaking changes
-
Use Java 8 to compile the project. [#502]
-
Remove
FileInput#getFile()
. [#503] -
Build using WebDriver 3.6.0. [#504]
-
Calling
click()
on empty navigators results in aUnsupportedOperationException
. [#501] -
Build using Spock 1.1. [#505]
-
Unchecked checkboxes return
null
as value for consistency with other input types. [#465]
1.1
Improvements
-
Support for selecting Edge as the browser using name in configuration. [#425]
-
Support for using url fragment identifiers when navigating to pages. [#463]
-
Unexpected pages are only checked after at check fails for the expected page. [#450]
-
Support equality checking between all core implementations of
Navigator
, based on comparing collections of web elements wrapped by them. [#459] -
Support using label text to select checkboxes and using collections as value to select multiple checkboxes when dealing a number of checkboxes with the same name. [#460]
Deprecations
-
Grails 2.x plugin has been discontinued. [#456]
1.0
Breaking changes
-
geb.testng.GebTest
andgeb.testng.GebReportingTest
which were deprecated in 0.13.0 have been removed. -
isDisabled()
,isEnabled()
,isReadOnly()
andisEditable()
methods ofNavigator
which were deprecated in 0.12.0 have been removed. -
Loosely typed
module()
andmoduleList()
methods of the content DSL which were deprecated in 0.12.0 have been removed.
0.13.0
New features
-
reportOnTestFailureOnly
config option is now also effective in Spock and JUnit4 integrations. [#92] -
isFocused()
method has been added to theNavigator
class. [#208] -
InvalidPageContent
exception is thrown when a content is defined with a name that will result in that content being not accessible. [#109] [#122] -
Ability to specify proxy location and credentials to use with BrowserStack tunnel. [#419]
Fixes
-
Fix a bug that caused reports for all but the last executed test class in TestNG integration to be wiped out. [#407]
-
Fix a bug preventing using module as a base of another module. [#411]
-
Restore
browser
property ofModule
. [#416] -
Handle setting values of form elements that cause page change or reload when their value changes. [#155]
Improvements
-
Non-ASCII word characters are not longer replaced in report file names. [#399]
-
Change TestNG support to be based on traits. [#412]
-
Add
Navigator.moduleList()
methods as an alternative to the deprecatedmoduleList()
methods available in the content DSL. [#402] -
Add support for using Geb with Selendroid and other Selenium based frameworks for testing non-web applications. [#320]
-
Improve documentation for
Browser.clearCookies()
around what exactly is cleared, add a helper method for removing cookies across multiple domains. [#159] -
Don’t depend on UndefinedAtCheckerException for flow control. [#368]
-
Document that
Navigator.text()
returns the text of the element only if it’s visible. [#403] -
Make implementation of
interact()
less dynamic. [#190] -
Improve documentation for
interact()
. [#207] -
Don’t unnecessarily request tag name and type attribute multiple times when setting text input values. [#417]
-
Improve usefulness of string representation of content elements. [#274]
Deprecations
-
geb.testng.GebTest
andgeb.testng.GebReportingTest
have been deprecated in favour ofgeb.testng.GebTestTrait
andgeb.testng.GebReportingTestTrait
respectively.
Breaking changes
-
Geb is now built with Groovy 2.4.5 and Spock 1.0-groovy-2.4.
-
The following
Navigator
methods now throwSingleElementNavigatorOnlyMethodException
when called on a multi elementNavigator
:hasClass(java.lang.String)
,is(java.lang.String)
,isDisplayed()
,isDisabled()
,isEnabled()
,isReadOnly()
,isEditable()
,tag()
,text()
,getAttribute(java.lang.String)
,attr(java.lang.String)
,classes()
,value()
,click()
,getHeight()
,getWidth()
,getX()
,getY()
,css(java.lang.String)
,isFocused()
. [#284]
0.12.0
New features
-
Support for finding elements using Webdriver’s
By
selectors. [#348] -
Support for navigating to page instances in addition to classes. [#310]
-
Support for using page instances as
page
option value of window switching methods. [#352] -
Support for using page instances together with frame switching methods. [#354]
-
Support for using page instances with
Navigator.click()
methods. [#355] -
Support for using page instances and lists of page instances as
page
option value of content templates. [#356] -
New
Navigator.module(Class<? extends Module>)
andNavigable.module(Class<? extends Module>)
. [#312] -
New
Navigable.module(Module)
andNavigable.module(Module)
. [#311] -
Support for using
interact {}
blocks in modules. [#364] -
Support page level
atCheckWaiting
configuration. [#287] -
Navigator
elements can now also be filtered usinghasNot()
method. [#370] -
Custom implementation of
equals()
andhashCode()
methods have been added to classes implementingNavigator
. [#374] -
Support setting
forcelocal
flag for BrowserStack tunnel. [#385] -
Add configuration option for including cause string representation in message of
WaitTimeoutException
. [#386]
Improvements
-
Using unrecognized content template parameters result in an
InvalidPageContent
exception to make catching typos in them easier. [#377] -
Improve error reporting when no at checkers pass if using multiple candidates for page switching. [#346]
-
Don’t unnecessarily lookup root element for every baseless element lookup using
$()
in context ofNavigable
. [#306] -
Attribute based searches are compiled to CSS selectors where possible. [#280]
-
Attribute based searches using an id, class or name are performed using an appropriate
By
selector where possible. [#333]
Fixes
-
Improved message thrown from Navigator.isDisabled() and Navigator.isReadOnly() when navigator does not contain a form element. [#345]
-
Browser.verifyAtIfPresent() should fail for at checkers returning false when implicit assertions are disabled. [#357]
-
Provide better error reporting when unexpected pages configuration is not a collection that contains classes which extend
Page
. [#270] -
Don’t fail when creating a report and driver’s screenshot taking method returns null. [#292]
-
Classes that can define content should not throw custom exceptions from
propertyMissing()
. [#367] -
“At checkers” of pages passed to
withFrame()
methods are now verified. [#358]
Breaking changes
-
Page.toString()
now returns full page class name instead of its simple name. -
MissingPropertyException
is thrown instead ofUnresolvablePropertyException
when content with a given name is not found on page or module. -
Geb is now built with Groovy 2.3.10 and Spock 1.0-groovy-2.3.
Deprecations
-
module(Class<? extends Module>, Navigator base)
available in content DSL has been deprecated in favour ofNavigator.module(Class<? extends Module>)
and will be removed in a future version of Geb. -
module(Class<? extends Module>, Map args)
available in content DSL has been deprecated in favour ofNavigable.module(Module)
and will be removed in a future version of Geb. -
module(Class<? extends Module>, Navigator base, Map args)
available in content DSL has been deprecated in favour ofNavigator.module(Module)
and will be removed in a future version of Geb. -
all variants of
moduleList()
method available in content DSL have been deprecated in favour of usingNavigator.module()
methods together with acollect()
call and will be removed in a future version of Geb, see chapter on using modules for repeating content for examples [#362] -
isDisabled()
,isEnabled()
,isReadOnly()
andisEditable()
methods ofNavigator
have been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of Geb. These methods are now available on the newFormElement
module class.
Project related changes
-
User mailing list has moved to Google Groups.
-
The Book of Geb has been migrated to Asciidoctor and the examples have been made executable. [#350]
0.10.0
New features
-
New
css()
method onNavigator
that allows to access CSS properties of elements. [#141] -
Added attribute based methods to relative content navigators such as next(), children() etc. [#299]
-
Added signature that accepts
localIdentifier
toBrowserStackDriverFactory.create
. [#332] -
Added
toWait
content definition option which allows specifying that page transition happens asynchronously. [#134] -
Added support for explicitly specifying browser capabilities when using cloud browsers Gradle plugins. [#340]
-
Added an overloaded
create()
method on cloud driver factories that allow specifying browser capabilities in a map and don’t require a string capabilities specification. [#281]
Fixes
-
Allow access to module properties from its content block. [#245]
-
Support setting of elements for WebDriver implementations that return uppercase tag name. [#318]
-
Use native binaries for running BrowserStack tunnel. [#326]
-
Update BrowserStack support to use command-line arguments introduced in tunnel version 3.1. [#332]
-
Fix PermGen memory leak when using groovy script backed configuration. [#335]
-
Don’t fail in
Browser.isAt()
if at check waiting is enabled and it times out. [#337] -
The value passed to
aliases
content option in documentation examples should be a String [#338] -
Added
$()
method on Navigator with all signatures offind()
. [#321] -
geb-saucelabs
plugin now uses a native version of SauceConnect. [#341] -
Don’t modify the predicate map passed to “Navigator.find(Map<String. [#339]
-
Functional tests implemented using JUnit and Geb run twice in Grails 2.3+. [#314]
-
Mention in the manual where snapshot artifacts can be downloaded from. [#305]
-
Document that
withNewWindow()
andwithWindow()
switch page back to the original one. [#279] -
Fix selectors in documentation for manipulating checkboxes. [#268]
Project related changes
-
Updated cucumber integration example to use
cucumber-jvm
instead of the now defunctcuke4duke
. [#324] -
Setup CI for all of the example projects. [#188]
-
Incorporate the example projects into the main build. [#189]
-
Add a test crawling the site in search for broken links. [#327]
-
Document the release process. [#325]
Breaking changes
-
Use Groovy 2.3.6 to build Geb. [#330]
-
Format of browser specification passed to
BrowserStackBrowserFactory.create()
andSauceLabsBrowserFactory.create()
has changed to be a string in Java properties file format defining the required browser capabilities. -
sauceConnect
configuration used withgeb-saucelabs
plugin should now point at a version of 'ci-sauce' artifact from 'com.saucelabs' group.
0.9.3
New features
-
Added
baseNavigatorWaiting
setting to prevent intermittent Firefox driver errors when creating base navigator. [#269] -
Page content classes including
Module
now implementNavigator
interface [#181] -
Added some tests that guard performance by verifying which WebDriver commands are executed [#302]
-
Added BrowserStack integration [#307]
-
Added a shortcut to
Browser
for getting current url [#294] -
Verify pages at checker when passed as an option to open a new window via
withWindow()
andwithNewWindow()
[#278]
Fixes
-
Ignore
atCheckWaiting
setting when checking for unexpected pages. [#267] -
Added missing range variants of find/$ methods. [#283]
-
Migrated
UnableToLoadException
to java. [#263] -
Exception thrown when trying to set value on an invalid element (non form control). [#286]
-
Support for jQuery methods like offset() and position() which return a native Javascript object. [#271]
-
Finding elements when passing ids with spaces in the predicates map to the $() method. [#308]
Breaking changes
-
Removed easyb support. [#277]
-
MissingMethodException
is now thrown when using shortcut for obtaining a navigator based on a control name and the returned navigator is empty. [#239] -
When using SauceLabs integration, the
allSauceTests
task was renamed to`allSauceLabsTests` -
When using SauceLabs integration, the
geb.sauce.browser
system property was renamed togeb.saucelabs.browser
-
Module
now implementsNavigator
instead ofNavigable
soNavigator’s methods can be called on it without having to first call `$()
to get the module’s baseNavigator
.
0.9.2
New features
-
page
andclose
options can be passed towithWindow()
calls, see this manual section for more information. -
Unexpected pages can be specified to fail fast when performing “at” checks. This feature was contributed at a Hackergarten thanks to Andy Duncan. See this manual section for details. [#70]
-
Support for running Geb using SauceLabs provided browsers, see this manual section for details.
-
New
isEnabled()
andisEditable()
methods onNavigator
. -
Support for ephemeral port allocation with Grails integration
-
Compatibility with Grails 2.3
Fixes
-
Default value of
close
option forwithNewWindow()
is set totrue
as specified in the documentation. [#258]
Breaking changes
-
isDisabled()
now throwsUnsupportedOperationException
if called on anEmptyNavigator
or on aNavigator
that contains anything else than a button, input, option, select or textarea. -
isReadOnly()
now throwsUnsupportedOperationException
if called on anEmptyNavigator
or on aNavigator
that contains anything else than an input or a textarea.
0.9.1
Breaking changes
-
Explicitly calling
at()
with a page object will throwUndefinedAtCheckerException
instead of silently passing if the page object does not define an at checker. -
Passing a page with no at checker to
click(List<Class<? extends Page>>)
or as one of the pages into
template option will throwUndefinedAtCheckerException
.
New features
-
Support for dealing with self-signed certificates in Download API using
SelfSignedCertificateHelper
. [#150] -
Connections created when using Download API can be configured globally using
defaultDownloadConfig
configuration option. -
New
atCheckWaiting
configuration option allowing to implictly wrap “at” checkers inwaitFor
calls. [#253]
Fixes
-
containsWord()
andiContainsWord()
now return expected results when matching against text that contains spaces [#254] -
has(Map<String, Object> predicates, String selector)
andhas(Map<String, Object> predicates)
were added to Navigator for consistency withfind()
andfilter()
[#256] -
Also catch WaitTimeoutException when page verification has failed following a
click()
call [#255] -
not(Map<String, Object> predicates, String selector)
andnot(Map<String, Object> predicates)
were added to Navigator for consistency withfind()
andfilter()
[#257] -
Make sure that
NullPointerException
is not thrown for incorrect driver implementations of getting current url without previously driving the browser to a url [#291]
0.9.0
New features
-
New
via()
method that behaves the same way asto()
behaved previously - it sets the page on the browser and does not verify the at checker of that page[#249]. -
It is now possible to provide your own
Navigator
implementations by specifying a customNavigatorFactory
, see this manual section for more information [#96]. -
New variants of
withFrame()
method that allow to switch into frame context and change the page in one go and also automatically change it back to the original page after the call, see [switching pages and frames at once][switch-frame-and-page] in the manual [#213]. -
wait
,page
andclose
options can be passed towithNewWindow()
calls, see this manual section for more information [#167]. -
Improved message of UnresolvablePropertyException to include a hint about forgetting to import the class [#240].
-
Improved signature of
Browser.at()
andBrowser.to()
to return the exact type of the page that was asserted to be at / was navigated to. -
ReportingListener
objects can be registered to observe reporting (see: this manual section)
Fixes
-
Fixed an issue where waitFor would throw a WaitTimeoutException even if the last evaluation before timeout returned a truthy value [#215].
-
Fixed taking screenshots for reporting when the browser is not on a HTML page (e.g. XML file) [#126].
-
Return the last evaluation value for a
(wait: true, required: false)
content instead of always returning null [#216]. -
isAt()
behaves the same asat()
in regards to updating the browser’s page instance to the given page type if its at checker is successful [#227]. -
Handling of
select
elements has been reworked to be far more efficient [#229]. -
Modules support accessing base attributes' values using @attributeName notation [#237].
-
Use of text matchers in module base definitions is supported [#241].
-
Reading of textareas have been updated so that the current value of the text field is returned, instead of the initial [#174].
Breaking changes
-
to(Class<? extends Page>)
method now changes the page on the browser and verifies the at checker of that page in one method call [#1], [#249]; usevia()
if you need the old behaviour -
getAttribute(String)
onNavigator
now returnsnull
for boolean attributes that are not present. -
at()
andto()
methods onBrowser
now return a page instance if they succeed andvia()
method always returns a page instance [#217]. -
withFrame()
calls that don’t take a page argument now change the browser page to what it was before the call, after the call [#222]. -
due to performance improvements duplicate elements are not removed when creating new
Navigator`s anymore; the new `unique()
method onNavigator
can be used to remove duplicates if needed [#223]. -
at(Page)
andisAt(Page)
methods onBrowser
have been removed as they were inconsistent with the rest of the API [#242]. -
Navigator’s
click(Class<? extends Page>)
andto:
content option now verify page after switching to the new one to stay consistent with the new behaviour ofto(Class<? extends Page>)
[#250]. -
Reading an attribute that is not set on a navigator now returns an empty string across all drivers [#251].
0.7.1
New features
-
Geb is now built with Groovy 1.8.6. This was forced to resolve [#194].
0.7.0
New features
-
Added support for indexes and ranges in
moduleList()
method -
Form control shortcuts now also work on page and module content
-
Custom timeout message for
waitFor()
calls -
Navigators can be composed also from content
-
Closure expressions passed to
waitFor()
calls are now transformed so that every statement in them is asserted - this provides better reporting onwaitFor()
timeouts. -
at
closure properties of Page classes are now transformed so that every statement in them is asserted - this provides better reporting on failed at checks -
new
isAt()
method on Browser that behaves likeat()
used to behave before, i.e. does not throw AssertionError but returnsfalse
if at checking fails -
withAlert()
andwithConfirm()
now accept await
option and the possible values are the same as for waiting content
Breaking changes
-
click()
now instructs the browser to click only on the first element the navigator has matched -
All
click()
method variants return the reciever -
Content definitions with
required: false, wait: true
returnnull
and do not throwWaitTimeoutException
if the timeout expires -
Assignment statements are not allowed anymore in closure expressions passed to
waitFor()
calls -
at()
now throws AssertionException if at checking fails instead of returning false
0.6.3
New features
-
Compatibility with Spock 0.6
0.6.2
New features
-
New
interact()
function for mouse and keyboard actions which delegates to the WebDriver Actions class -
New
moduleList()
function for repeating content -
New
withFrame()
method for working with frames -
New
withWindow()
andwithNewWindow()
methods for working with multiple windows -
Added
getCurrentWindow()
andgetAvailableWindows()
methods to browser that delegate to the underlying driver instance -
Content aliasing is now possible using
aliases
parameter in content DSL -
If config script is not found a config class will be used if there is any - this is usefull if you run test using Geb from IDE
-
Drivers are now cached across the whole JVM, which avoids the browser startup cost in some situations
-
Added config option to disable quitting of cached browsers on JVM shutdown
Breaking changes
-
The
Page.convertToPath()
function is now responsible for adding a prefix slash if required (i.e. it’s not added implicitly inPage.getPageUrl()
) [GEB-139]. -
Unchecked checkboxes now report their value as
false
instead of null
0.6.1
New features
-
Compatibility with at least Selenium 2.9.0 (version 0.6.0 of Geb did not work with Selenium 2.5.0 and up)
-
Attempting to set a select to a value that it does not contain now throws an exception
-
The waiting algorithm is now time based instead of number of retries based, which is better for blocks that are not near instant
-
Better support for working with already instantiated pages
Breaking changes
-
Using
<select>
elements with Geb now requires an explicit dependency on an extra WebDriver jar (see the section on installation for more info) -
The
Navigator
classes()
method now returns aList
(instead ofSet
) and guarantees that it will be sorted alphabetically
0.6
New features
-
selenium-common is now a 'provided' scoped dependency of Geb
-
Radio buttons can be selected with their label text as well as their value attribute.
-
Select options can be selected with their text as well as their value attribute.
-
Navigator.getAttribute
returnsnull
rather than the empty string when an attribute is not found. -
The
jquery
property onNavigator
now returns whatever the jQuery method called on it returns. -
All waitFor clauses now treat exceptions raised in the condition as an evaluation failure, instead of propagating the exception
-
Content can be defined with
wait: true
to make Geb implicitly wait for it when it is requested -
Screenshots are now taken when reporting for all drivers that implement the
TakesScreenshot
interface (which is nearly all) -
Added
BindingUpdater
class that can manage a groovy script binding for use with Geb -
Added
quit()
andclose()
methods to browser that delegate to the underlying driver instance -
geb.Browser.drive()
methods now return the usedBrowser
instance -
The underlying WebElements of a Navigator are now retrievable
-
Added $() methods that take one or more Navigator or WebElement objects and returns a new Navigator composed of these objects
-
Added Direct Download API which can be used for directly downloading content (PDFs, CSVs etc.) into your Geb program (not via the browser)
-
Introduced new configuration mechanism for more flexible and environment sensitive configuration of Geb (e.g. driver implementation, base url)
-
Default wait timeout and retry interval is now configurable, and can now also use user configuration presets (e.g. quick, slow)
-
Added a “build adapter” mechanism, making it easier for build systems to take control of relevant configuration
-
The JUnit 3 integration now includes the test method name in the automatically generated reports
-
The reporting support has been rewritten, making it much friendlier to use outside of testing
-
Added the TestNG support (contributed by Alexander Zolotov)
-
Added the
height
,width
,x
andy
properties to navigator objects and modules
Breaking changes
-
Raised minimum Groovy version to 1.7
-
All failed waitFor clauses now throw a
geb.waiting.WaitTimeoutException
instead ofAssertionError
-
Upgraded minimum version requirement of WebDriver to 2.0rc1
-
The
onLoad()
andonUnload()
page methods both have changed their return types fromdef
tovoid
-
The Grails specific testing subclasses have been REMOVED. Use the direct equivalent instead (e.g
geb.spock.GebReportingSpec
instead ofgrails.plugin.geb.GebSpec
) -
The Grails plugin no longer depends on the test integration modules, you need to depend on the one you want manually
-
The
getBaseUrl()
method from testing subclasses has been removed, use the configuration mechanism -
Inputs with no value now report their value as an empty string instead of
null
-
Select elements that are not multiple select enabled no longer report their value as a 1 element list, but now as the value of the selected element (if no selection,
null
is returned)
0.5.1
-
Fixed problem with incorrectly compiled specs and the geb grails module
0.5
New features
-
Navigator objects now implement the Groovy truth (empty == false, non empty == true)
-
Introduced “js” short notation
-
Added “easyb” support (
geb-easyb
) and Grails support -
Page change listening support through
geb.PageChangeListener
-
waitFor()
methods added, making dealing with dynamic pages easier -
Support for
alert()
andconfirm()
dialogs -
Added jQuery integration
-
Reporting integration classes (e.g. GebReportingSpec) now save a screenshot if using the FirefoxDriver
-
Added
displayed
property to navigator objects for determining visibility -
Added
find
as an alias for$
(e.g.find("div.section")
) -
Browser objects now implement the
page(List<Class>)
method that sets the page to the first type whose at-checker matches the page -
The click() methods that take one or more page classes are now available on
Navigator
objects -
Added page lifecycle methods
onLoad()
/onUnload()
Breaking changes
-
Exceptions raised in
drive()
blocks are no longer wrapped withDriveException
-
the
at(Class pageClass)
method no longer requires the existing page instance to be of that class (page will be updated if the given type matches)
0.4
Initial Public Release